Robert Love writes:
> On Mon, 2001-12-10 at 03:33, Albert D. Cahalan wrote:
>> It looks like you are limiting the number of CPUs to sizeof(long).
>> Must you? Using "%lx" would be better in any case. Considering that
>> you may outgrow the format, maybe this info doesn't belong in the
>> /proc/*/stat files at all. For "ps" usage, a simple flag to indicate
>> if the process is locked to a CPU would be OK. There are 3 cases
>> of interest:
>
> We already limit it... we use cpus_allowed and cpus_runnable which are
> unsigned long.
Those can be changed without screwing up user code. You need to
be very careful about what you put in /proc, because user apps
will come to rely on whatever you choose.
Look at what happened with signals in /proc/*/stat. They were
originally reported as "%lu", just like you did. Then the kernel
was extended to support more than 32 signals on 32-bit hardware.
The format was briefly changed to be 16 hex chars, but this
broke lots of stuff. So now /proc/*/stat just reports the low
numbered signals as it did before, and /proc/*/status has the
rest of the signals.
So let's predict:
Around 2.5.42, IBM will have 60-way x86 or 80-way ppc64.
Then the kernel will be hacked to report a hex string of
arbitrary length, and user apps will die left and right.
Somebody will then hack things back to decimal, reporting
only the low sizeof(long)*8 processors in /proc/*/stat.
Any additional processors may be found as a hex string in
/proc/*/status, with the /proc/*/stat data useless on a
system with very many processors.
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This archive was generated by hypermail 2b29 : Sat Dec 15 2001 - 21:00:17 EST