Evening all ... One of my servers just crashed with the "pmap_new_proc: u_map allocation failed" ... Looking at a ps of the vmcore file, I find: neptune# awk '{print $11}' /tmp/ps.crash | sort | uniq -c 1 (Xvfb) 1 (aac0aif) 1 (adjkerntz) 1 (analog) 1 (bufdaemon) 4412 (cron) 8 (csh) 84 (ctl_cyrusdb) 3 (ctl_deliver) 1 (emacs) 1 (find) 1 (getty) 1 (grep) 313 (httpd) 37 (imapd) 23 (imapproxy) 15 (inetd) 1 (init) 1 (ipaudit) 5 (java) 194 (lmtpd) 479 (master) 1 (mountd) 1 (mysqld) 1 (named) 5 (nfsd) 7 (nsd8x) 1 (pagedaemon) 13 (perl) 2 (pine) 4 (pipe) 31 (pop3d) 1 (portmap) 280 (postgres) 1 (ps) 4 (python2.1) 34 (qmgr) 1 (rpc.statd) 2 (rsync) 1 (rwhod) 1 (scp) 4 (screen) 14 (sh) 3 (ssh) 61 (sshd) 1 (swapper) 1 (syncer) 40 (syslogd) 18 (tcsh) 11 (timsieved) 1 (upclient) 1 (vmdaemon) 1 (vnlru) 1 COMMAND Is there any way of finding out what jails "owned" those cron jobs *after* the crash? I know I can find out on a running systems using proc/*/status, but what about after the server has crashed? :( On a 'normally running server', I see: neptune# ps aux | grep cron | grep sbin | wc -l 40