jasonlitka wrote:
Yeah, but what I'm asking is, what possible use could this group have of more resources than is available on a single box like I described?
As the number of members grows, we should expect the number of
simultaneous users to grow as well. Clearly, (say) 500 simultaneous instances of bash (and whatever task the user happens to be running at that time) over ssh require more resources than 50.
Quote:
You've been vague about what you're actually trying to do so I can't say more than that.
It's a multiuser system. People log in, and do stuff with the shell. Just like you might do on your home PC linux system, except it's multiple people at once rather than just you--in other words, the sort of stuff Unix (and other timesharing systems) were built for.