It doesn't sound like there's a single root cause. Yes, allowing for higher stacking expands the buffer, but proper coordination could have kept the buffer from hitting capacity in the first place, and is necessary to prevent the new, bigger buffer from filling up as well.
As best I can tell, there's a memory leak, and we've "solved" it by doubling our RAM. We need to fix the leak before we hit deadlock again.
As best I can tell, there's a memory leak, and we've "solved" it by doubling our RAM. We need to fix the leak before we hit deadlock again.