Re: CPU Hotplug: Hotplug Script And SIGPWR
From: Andy Lutomirski
Date: Tue Jan 20 2004 - 12:52:53 EST
Tim Hockin wrote:
On Tue, Jan 20, 2004 at 05:43:59PM +1100, Nick Piggin wrote:
I think the sanest thing for a CPU removal is to migrate everything off the
processor in question, move unrunnable tasks into TASK_UNRUNNABLE state,
then notify /sbin/hotplug. The hotplug script can then find and handle the
unrunnable tasks. No SIGPWR grossness needed.
Seems less robust and more ad hoc than SIGPWR, however.
Disagree. SIGPWR will kill any process that doesn't catch it. That's
policy. It seems more robust to let the hotplug script decide what to do.
If it wants to kill each unrunnable task with SIGPWR, it can. But if it
wants to let them live, it can.
This seems like a problem that a lot of power-management issues have.
(At some point, linux may want to suspend itself after inactivity. Both
RT tasks and some interactive tasks may want to supress that.) Why not
add a SIGPM signal, which is only sent if handles, and which indicates
that PM event is happening. Give usermode some method of responding to
it (e.g. handler returns a value, or a new syscall), and let
/sbin/hotplug handle events for tasks that either ignore the signal or
responded that they were uninterested. This seems be close to optimal
for every case I can think of.
--Andy
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