Hastily read around in the related issue-threads and seems like on it’s own the vm.max_map_count doesn’t do much… as long as apps behave. It’s some sort of “guard rail” which prevents processes of getting too many “maps”. Still kinda unclear what these maps are and what happens is a process gets to have excessive amounts.
According to kernel-doc/Documentation/sysctl/vm.txt:
This file contains the maximum number of memory map areas a process may have. Memory map areas are used as a side-effect of calling malloc, directly by mmap and mprotect, and also when loading shared libraries.
While most applications need less than a thousand maps, certain programs, particularly malloc debuggers, may consume lots of them, e.g., up to one or two maps per allocation.
The default value is 65530.
Lowering the value can lead to problematic application behavior because the system will return out of memory errors when a process reaches the limit. The upside of lowering this limit is that it can free up lowmem for other kernel uses.
Raising the limit may increase the memory consumption on the server. There is no immediate consumption of the memory, as this will be used only when the software requests, but it can allow a larger application footprint on the server.
So, on the risk of higher memory usage, application can go wroom-wroom? That’s my takeaway from this.
My read is that it matters for servers where a large number of allocations could indicate a bug/denial of service, so it’s better to crash the process.
That’s not relevant on a gaming system, since you want one process to be able to use all the resources.
On one hand, I’d assume Valve knows what they’re doing, but also setting the value that high seems like it’s effectively removing the guardrail alltogether. Is that safe, also what is the worst that can happen if an app starts using maps in the billions?
It changed it for playing “the finals” some weeks ago to fix a crash. I havent had any issues with my system since then so it really might just be some value that never changed because nothing needed it.
What I always wonder with things like this, what is the downside? There must be a reason why that value was set lower.
Hastily read around in the related issue-threads and seems like on it’s own the vm.max_map_count doesn’t do much… as long as apps behave. It’s some sort of “guard rail” which prevents processes of getting too many “maps”. Still kinda unclear what these maps are and what happens is a process gets to have excessive amounts.
That said: https://access.redhat.com/solutions/99913
So, on the risk of higher memory usage, application can go wroom-wroom? That’s my takeaway from this.
edit: ofc. I pasted the wrong link first. derrr.
edit: Suse’s documentation has some info about the effects of this setting: https://www.suse.com/support/kb/doc/?id=000016692
My read is that it matters for servers where a large number of allocations could indicate a bug/denial of service, so it’s better to crash the process.
That’s not relevant on a gaming system, since you want one process to be able to use all the resources.
Just checked and the steam deck has it set to 2147483642. My gentoo systems are 65530.
On one hand, I’d assume Valve knows what they’re doing, but also setting the value that high seems like it’s effectively removing the guardrail alltogether. Is that safe, also what is the worst that can happen if an app starts using maps in the billions?
OOM killer is what happens. But that can happen with the default setting as well.
It changed it for playing “the finals” some weeks ago to fix a crash. I havent had any issues with my system since then so it really might just be some value that never changed because nothing needed it.
also want to know, i increased this value by a lot for gaming and have been using it ever since with no visible repercussions.