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When the directory structure of your Node.js application (not library!) has some depth, you end up with a lot of annoying relative paths in your require calls like:
Dealing with the Linux OOM Killer at the program level
Do this in cases when you dont want to change the os-level settings, but only want to disable the OOM killer for a single process. This is useful when youre on a shared machine/server.
The OOM killer uses the process level metric called oom_score_adj to decide if/when to kill a process.
This file is present in /proc/$pid/oom_score_adj. The oom_score_adj can vary from -1000 to 1000, by default it is 0.
You can add a large negative score to this file to reduce the probability of your process getting picked and terminated by OOM killer.
When you set it to -1000, it can use 100% memory and still avoid getting terminated by OOM killer.
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