I'll answer the question that I think you are asking.
One program can have multiple instances running. Each is a separate process. I'm not aware of any instance count that Linux makes available. So I don't think there is any setting that can be made to get Linux to enforce a maximum number of instances for you.
If user access to the program can be forced to come through a shell script or wrapper program, you have some options.
1) To just give a warning to users invoking the program who have reached or exceeded the number of instances, you could do a shell script that does something like
ps aux | grep TheProgramFileName > $InstanceCount
Then the script would compare to a maximum, and warn the user. But that won't stop anyone.
2) If the goal is to prevent multiple instances, that can be done by a shell script. Refer to single instance and preventing multiple instances.
3) For maximum N instances, see cooperative limiting. But I don't think this can be done in a shell script.