[PATCH v4 0/4] cgroups: support for module-loadable subsystems

Ben Blum bblum at andrew.cmu.edu
Thu Jan 7 00:04:38 PST 2010


On Thu, Jan 07, 2010 at 04:51:17PM +0900, KAMEZAWA Hiroyuki wrote:
> On Thu, 7 Jan 2010 02:48:12 -0500
> Ben Blum <bblum at andrew.cmu.edu> wrote:
> 
> > >  2. Making this to be reasonable value.
> > > #define CGROUP_SUBSYS_COUNT (BITS_PER_BYTE*sizeof(unsigned long))
> > >    I can't find why.
> > 
> > "We limit to this many since cgroupfs_root has subsys_bits to keep track
> > of all of them." should it be less, perhaps?
> 
> It's ok if it's clear that
> "this decistion is done by implementation choice, not by cgroup's nature"

mhm, well, it is the upper limit due to nature, but why it and not a
smaller number is by choice.

> 
> > the memory footprint is not
> > great, it is true, but implementing dynamically sized subsystem tracking
> > data structures requires much cleverer code in many places.
> > 
> yes. I don't request that.

it might be possible to have a config option as CGROUP_EXTRA_SUBSYSTEMS
(with max being 64 or 32) which would add slots for subsystems outside
of the kernel tree, to avoid using up a lot of blank slots in typical
use cases. not entirely sure how to implement it in the scope of the
configuration world, just speculation.

> > >  3. show whehter a subsys is a loadable module or not via /proc/cgroups
> > 
> > with just "y" or "n"? possible, and probably easy. do note that since
> > they are sorted by subsys_id, all the ones above a certain line will be
> > "n" and all below will be "y".
> > 
> yes. 
> 
> #subsys_name    hierarchy       num_cgroups     enabled  module
> cpuset  0       1       1	0
> 
> and 0/1 to show y/n ? (but this cause interface incompatibility...)

well, format should be agreed upon. 1/0 would be consistent with the
rest of the output.

> 
> 
> Thanks,
> -Kame
>    
> 
> 


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