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The Linux kernel supports the following overcommit handling modes

0	-	Heuristic overcommit handling. Obvious overcommits of
		address space are refused. Used for a typical system. It
		ensures a seriously wild allocation fails while allowing
		overcommit to reduce swap usage.  root is allowed to 
		allocate slighly more memory in this mode. This is the 
		default.

1	-	Always overcommit. Appropriate for some scientific
		applications.

2	-	Don't overcommit. The total address space commit
		for the system is not permitted to exceed swap + a
		configurable percentage (default is 50) of physical RAM.
		Depending on the percentage you use, in most situations
		this means a process will not be killed while accessing
		pages but will receive errors on memory allocation as
		appropriate.

The overcommit policy is set via the sysctl `vm.overcommit_memory'.

The overcommit percentage is set via `vm.overcommit_ratio'.

The current overcommit limit and amount committed are viewable in
/proc/meminfo as CommitLimit and Committed_AS respectively.

Gotchas
-------

The C language stack growth does an implicit mremap. If you want absolute
guarantees and run close to the edge you MUST mmap your stack for the 
largest size you think you will need. For typical stack usage this does
not matter much but it's a corner case if you really really care

In mode 2 the MAP_NORESERVE flag is ignored. 


How It Works
------------

The overcommit is based on the following rules

For a file backed map
	SHARED or READ-only	-	0 cost (the file is the map not swap)
	PRIVATE WRITABLE	-	size of mapping per instance

For an anonymous or /dev/zero map
	SHARED			-	size of mapping
	PRIVATE READ-only	-	0 cost (but of little use)
	PRIVATE WRITABLE	-	size of mapping per instance

Additional accounting
	Pages made writable copies by mmap
	shmfs memory drawn from the same pool

Status
------

o	We account mmap memory mappings
o	We account mprotect changes in commit
o	We account mremap changes in size
o	We account brk
o	We account munmap
o	We report the commit status in /proc
o	Account and check on fork
o	Review stack handling/building on exec
o	SHMfs accounting
o	Implement actual limit enforcement

To Do
-----
o	Account ptrace pages (this is hard)