Difference between revisions of "Pm.max requests"
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{{lc}} | {{lc}} | ||
; The number of requests each child process should execute before respawning. | ; The number of requests each child process should execute before respawning. | ||
− | ; This can be useful to work around memory leaks in 3rd party libraries. For | + | ; This can be useful to work around [[memory leaks]] in 3rd party libraries. For |
; endless request processing specify '0'. Equivalent to PHP_FCGI_MAX_REQUESTS. | ; endless request processing specify '0'. Equivalent to PHP_FCGI_MAX_REQUESTS. | ||
; Default Value: 0 | ; Default Value: 0 |
Revision as of 06:34, 23 September 2022
; The number of requests each child process should execute before respawning. ; This can be useful to work around memory leaks in 3rd party libraries. For ; endless request processing specify '0'. Equivalent to PHP_FCGI_MAX_REQUESTS. ; Default Value: 0 ;pm.max_requests = 500
PHP pm
See also
- PHP-fpm,
/etc/php/7.*/fpm/pool.d/, pm., pm.max_children
- PHP,
php-fpm, www.conf
,php -i
, PHP sessions, symfony,fastcgi_pass
,sessionclean (shell script)
,phpsessionclean.service (systemd service),phpquery
,php.ini
,/var/log/php*
, PECL,php --help
, PHPUnit, Laravel, PHP framework, Composer,phpbrew, Xdebug, php --version
, PHP Fatal error, Hello, World! (php)]
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