The POSIX.2 standard specifies certain system limits that you can access
through sysconf
that apply to utility behavior rather than the
behavior of the library or the operating system.
The GNU C Library defines macros for these limits, and sysconf
returns values for them if you ask; but these values convey no
meaningful information. They are simply the smallest values that
POSIX.2 permits.
int
BC_BASE_MAX ¶The largest value of obase
that the bc
utility is
guaranteed to support.
int
BC_DIM_MAX ¶The largest number of elements in one array that the bc
utility
is guaranteed to support.
int
BC_SCALE_MAX ¶The largest value of scale
that the bc
utility is
guaranteed to support.
int
BC_STRING_MAX ¶The largest number of characters in one string constant that the
bc
utility is guaranteed to support.
int
COLL_WEIGHTS_MAX ¶The largest number of weights that can necessarily be used in defining the collating sequence for a locale.
int
EXPR_NEST_MAX ¶The maximum number of expressions that can be nested within parentheses
by the expr
utility.
int
LINE_MAX ¶The largest text line that the text-oriented POSIX.2 utilities can support. (If you are using the GNU versions of these utilities, then there is no actual limit except that imposed by the available virtual memory, but there is no way that the library can tell you this.)
int
EQUIV_CLASS_MAX ¶The maximum number of weights that can be assigned to an entry of the
LC_COLLATE
category ‘order’ keyword in a locale definition.
The GNU C Library does not presently support locale definitions.