问题
The following code is supposed to make 100,000 threads:
/* compile with: gcc -lpthread -o thread-limit thread-limit.c */
/* originally from: http://www.volano.com/linuxnotes.html */
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <pthread.h>
#include <string.h>
#define MAX_THREADS 100000
int i;
void run(void) {
sleep(60 * 60);
}
int main(int argc, char *argv[]) {
int rc = 0;
pthread_t thread[MAX_THREADS];
printf("Creating threads ...\n");
for (i = 0; i < MAX_THREADS && rc == 0; i++) {
rc = pthread_create(&(thread[i]), NULL, (void *) &run, NULL);
if (rc == 0) {
pthread_detach(thread[i]);
if ((i + 1) % 100 == 0)
printf("%i threads so far ...\n", i + 1);
}
else
{
printf("Failed with return code %i creating thread %i (%s).\n",
rc, i + 1, strerror(rc));
// can we allocate memory?
char *block = NULL;
block = malloc(65545);
if(block == NULL)
printf("Malloc failed too :( \n");
else
printf("Malloc worked, hmmm\n");
}
}
sleep(60*60); // ctrl+c to exit; makes it easier to see mem use
exit(0);
}
This is running on a 64bit machine with 32GB of RAM; Debian 5.0 installed, all stock.
- ulimit -s 512 to keep the stack size down
- /proc/sys/kernel/pid_max set to 1,000,000 (by default, it caps out at 32k pids).
- ulimit -u 1000000 to increase max processes (don't think this matters at all)
- /proc/sys/kernel/threads-max set to 1,000,000 (by default, it wasn't set at all)
Running this spits out the following:
65500 threads so far ...
Failed with return code 12 creating thread 65529 (Cannot allocate memory).
Malloc worked, hmmm
I'm certainly not running out of ram; I can even launch several more of these programs all running at the same time and they all start their 65k threads.
(Please refrain from suggesting I not try to launch 100,000+ threads. This is simple testing of something which should work. My current epoll-based server has roughly 200k+ connections at all times and various papers would suggest that threads just might be a better option. - Thanks :) )
回答1:
pilcrow's mention of /proc/sys/vm/max_map_count
is right on track; raising this value allows more threads to be opened; not sure of the exact formula involved, but a 1mil+ value allows for some 300k+ threads.
(For anyone else experimenting with 100k+ threads, do look at pthread_create's mmap issues... making new threads gets really slow really fast when lower memory is used up.)
回答2:
One possible issue is the local variable thread
in the main program. I think that pthread_t would be 8 bytes on your 64-bit machine (assuming 64-bit build). That would be 800,000 bytes on the stack. Your stack limit of 512K would be a problem I think. 512K / 8 = 65536, which is suspiciously near the number of threads you are creating. You might try dynamically allocating that array instead of putting it on the stack.
回答3:
This might help set the stack size in the program to the smallest it can go (if that's not enough you pick):
/* compile with: gcc -lpthread -o thread-limit thread-limit.c */
/* originally from: http://www.volano.com/linuxnotes.html */
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <pthread.h>
#include <string.h>
#define MAX_THREADS 100000
int i;
void run(void) {
sleep(60 * 60);
}
int main(int argc, char *argv[]) {
int rc = 0;
pthread_t thread[MAX_THREADS];
pthread_attr_t thread_attr;
pthread_attr_init(&thread_attr);
pthread_attr_setstacksize(&thread_attr, PTHREAD_STACK_MIN);
printf("Creating threads ...\n");
for (i = 0; i < MAX_THREADS && rc == 0; i++) {
rc = pthread_create(&(thread[i]), &thread_attr, (void *) &run, NULL);
if (rc == 0) {
pthread_detach(thread[i]);
if ((i + 1) % 100 == 0)
printf("%i threads so far ...\n", i + 1);
}
else
{
printf("Failed with return code %i creating thread %i (%s).\n",
rc, i + 1, strerror(rc));
// can we allocate memory?
char *block = NULL;
block = malloc(65545);
if(block == NULL)
printf("Malloc failed too :( \n");
else
printf("Malloc worked, hmmm\n");
}
}
sleep(60*60); // ctrl+c to exit; makes it easier to see mem use
exit(0);
}
additionally you could add a call like this: pthread_attr_setguardsize(&thread_attr, 0);
just after the call to pthread_attr_setstacksize()
but then you'd loose stack overrun detection entirely, and it'd only save you 4k of address space and zero actual memory.
回答4:
Are you trying to search for a formula to calculate max threads possible per process?
Linux implements max number of threads per process indirectly!!
number of threads = total virtual memory / (stack size*1024*1024)
Thus, the number of threads per process can be increased by increasing total virtual memory or by decreasing stack size. But, decreasing stack size too much can lead to code failure due to stack overflow while max virtual memory is equals to the swap memory.
Check you machine:
Total Virtual Memory: ulimit -v
(default is unlimited, thus you need to increase swap memory to increase this)
Total Stack Size: ulimit -s
(default is 8Mb)
Command to increase these values:
ulimit -s newvalue
ulimit -v newvalue
*Replace new value with the value you want to put as limit.
References:
http://dustycodes.wordpress.com/2012/02/09/increasing-number-of-threads-per-process/
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/3521485/nptl-caps-maximum-threads-at-65528