sticky bit
Dennis L. Mumaugh
dlm at cuuxb.ATT.COM
Tue Jan 10 11:58:39 AEST 1989
In article <14750 at cisunx.UUCP> jcbst3 at unix.cis.pittsburgh.edu
(James C. Benz) writes:
I would like to know if:
1) this will really help speed things up
Yes, under the right conditions on a machine that does swapping.
On a system like ATT System V Release 3.1 which has demand paging
with sector aligned a.out files the improvement isn't measurable.
2) if there are any security problems or potential problems
Yes, I know of one security attack on older releases of UNIX.
Also, the file system having the sticky text cannot generally by
unmounted, the file cannot be remove or unlinked. Some sticky
text files cannot be debugged. The above comments are version
and vendor specific and may not be true on your system.
3) is there a limit to how much can be stored in the swap
space (of course!) and is there a way of increasing it if
necessary
On most ATT paging systems swap can be increased on the fly if
spare disk partions are available. Of course, Parkinson's Law
applies.
4) any other dangers like system crashes, lock up, etc you
can think of
Getting too smart and having too many sticky texts will hurt.
Increasing memory is better, increasing buffer cache works better
with paging.
--
=Dennis L. Mumaugh
Lisle, IL ...!{att,lll-crg}!cuuxb!dlm OR cuuxb!dlm at arpa.att.com
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