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The 60 MB worker estimate was optimistic for plugin-heavy WordPress
and WooCommerce stacks. Concrete measurement on alphaone 2026-06-01:
Container memory : 1024 MiB (later 2048 MiB)
Pool sized by formula : pm.max_children = (1024-100)/60 = 15
Actual per-worker RSS : ~193 MB (anon+file+shmem from kernel OOM dumps)
Worst-case peak : 15 × 193 MB ≈ 2.9 GB
That math put traffic-burst peak demand well over the container cap,
producing 1,586 cumulative oom_kills across alphaone's two containers
over 18 days and intermittent fork-starvation for unrelated tenants
on the host.
128 MB is a more realistic baseline: closer to actual WP+Woo+page-
builder worker footprint, still conservative enough that lighter
sites continue to get reasonable concurrency. The matrix at common
container tiers:
Tier (MiB) | old children | new children | new peak demand
256 | 2 (floored) | 2 (floored) | ~256 MB
512 | 6 | 3 | ~384 MB
768 | 11 | 5 | ~640 MB
1024 | 15 | 7 | ~896 MB
2048 | 15 (capped*) | 15 | ~1.9 GB
(* old formula returned 32 at 2 GiB but production containers were
booted at lower tiers and never recalculated; see whp01 audit.)
Existing containers keep their boot-time pm.max_children until they
are recreated — this change only affects new containers. Customers
or operators can override per-container via FPM_MAX_CHILDREN env.
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