Re: cgroup: status-quo and userland efforts

From: Serge Hallyn
Date: Fri Jun 28 2013 - 15:36:22 EST


Quoting Andy Lutomirski (luto@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx):
> On 06/27/2013 11:01 AM, Tejun Heo wrote:
> > AFAICS, having a userland agent which has overall knowledge of the
> > hierarchy and enforcesf structure and limiations is a requirement to
> > make cgroup generally useable and useful. For systemd based systems,
> > systemd serving that role isn't too crazy. It's sure gonna have
> > teeting issues at the beginning but it has all the necessary
> > information to manage workloads on the system.
> >
> > A valid issue is interoperability between systemd and non-systemd
> > systems. I don't have an immediately good answer for that. I wrote
> > in another reply but making cgroup generally available is a pretty new
> > effort and we're still in the process of figuring out what the right
> > constructs and abstractions are. Hopefully, we'll be able to reach a
> > common set of abstractions to base things on top in itme.
> >
>
> The systemd stuff will break my code, too (although the single hierarchy
> by itself won't, I think). I think that the kernel should make whatever
> simple changes are needed so that systemd can function without using
> cgroups at all. That way users of a different cgroup scheme can turn
> off systemd's.
>
> Here was my proposal, which hasn't gotten a clear reply:
>
> http://article.gmane.org/gmane.comp.sysutils.systemd.devel/11424

Neat. I like that proposal.

> I've already sent a patch to make /proc/<pid>/task/<tid>/children
> available regardless of configuration.

-serge
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