One possibility is that you have reached your user limit for the number of open files.
I believe that every Process/Thread consumes one or more file descriptors.
For example, when this occurs for your user then "no" shell command will work, since shell commands fork off a process to execute (you see errors like "-bash: fork: retry: Resource temporarily unavailable")
I hit this issue and found that only the current user was unable to spawn procs... other users were uneffected.
To resolve, up your ulimit -n (max files open) setting... details follow.
You can see your user limits with the command:
ulimit -a
Up your max file limit with the following:
ulimit -n 65536
Here is what I have right now:
$ ulimit -a
core file size (blocks, -c) 0
data seg size (kbytes, -d) unlimited
scheduling priority (-e) 0
file size (blocks, -f) unlimited
pending signals (-i) 256797
max locked memory (kbytes, -l) 64
max memory size (kbytes, -m) unlimited
open files (-n) 75000
pipe size (512 bytes, -p) 8
POSIX message queues (bytes, -q) 819200
real-time priority (-r) 0
stack size (kbytes, -s) 10240
cpu time (seconds, -t) unlimited
max user processes (-u) 100000
virtual memory (kbytes, -v) unlimited
file locks (-x) unlimited
To see all the explicit limits for your system:
cat /etc/security/limits.conf
Please note: I'm using Oracle Linux 6.3 - results may differ slightly between distros.
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