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The easiest way is to disable swap and then see what is killed by the OOM killer.
Disagree, oom likes to kill random processes, not just the ones consuming memory.
OOM usually kills the biggest processes. This might not be the process requesting more memory at the time the OOM killer becomes active but it is always a process consuming a lot of memory, never a small one (unless there are only small ones).
I've had oom kill ssh or mysql because tomcat is a piece of shit. It's not always correct.
The OOM killer kills processes, not the kernel. You might be thinking of a kernel panic.