On Mon, 19 Feb 2007 12:20:26 +0530 Balbir Singh <balbir@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
This patch sets up the basic controller infrastructure on top of the
containers infrastructure. Two files are provided for monitoring
and control memctlr_usage and memctlr_limit.
The patches use the identifier "memctlr" a lot. It is hard to remember,
and unpronounceable. Something like memcontrol or mem_controller or
memory_controller would be more typical.
...
+ BUG_ON(!mem);
+ if ((buffer = kmalloc(nbytes + 1, GFP_KERNEL)) == 0)
+ return -ENOMEM;
Please prefer to do
buffer = kmalloc(nbytes + 1, GFP_KERNEL);
if (buffer == NULL)
reutrn -ENOMEM;
ie: avoid the assign-and-test-in-the-same-statement thing. This affects
the whole patchset.
Also, please don't compare pointers to literal zero like that. It makes me
get buried it patches to convert it to "NULL". I think this is a sparse
thing.
+ buffer[nbytes] = 0;
+ if (copy_from_user(buffer, userbuf, nbytes)) {
+ ret = -EFAULT;
+ goto out_err;
+ }
+
+ container_manage_lock();
+ if (container_is_removed(cont)) {
+ ret = -ENODEV;
+ goto out_unlock;
+ }
+
+ limit = simple_strtoul(buffer, NULL, 10);
+ /*
+ * 0 is a valid limit (unlimited resource usage)
+ */
+ if (!limit && strcmp(buffer, "0"))
+ goto out_unlock;
+
+ spin_lock(&mem->lock);
+ mem->counter.limit = limit;
+ spin_unlock(&mem->lock);
The patches do this a lot: a single atomic assignment with a
pointless-looking lock/unlock around it. It's often the case that this
idiom indicates a bug, or needless locking. I think the only case where it
makes sense is when there's some other code somewhere which is doing
spin_lock(&mem->lock);
...
use1(mem->counter.limit);
...
use2(mem->counter.limit);
...
spin_unlock(&mem->lock);
where use1() and use2() expect the two reads of mem->counter.limit to
return the same value.
Is that the case in these patches? If not, we might have a problem in
there.
+
+static ssize_t memctlr_read(struct container *cont, struct cftype *cft,
+ struct file *file, char __user *userbuf,
+ size_t nbytes, loff_t *ppos)
+{
+ unsigned long usage, limit;
+ char usagebuf[64]; /* Move away from stack later */
+ char *s = usagebuf;
+ struct memctlr *mem = memctlr_from_cont(cont);
+
+ spin_lock(&mem->lock);
+ usage = mem->counter.usage;
+ limit = mem->counter.limit;
+ spin_unlock(&mem->lock);
+
+ s += sprintf(s, "usage %lu, limit %ld\n", usage, limit);
+ return simple_read_from_buffer(userbuf, nbytes, ppos, usagebuf,
+ s - usagebuf);
+}
This output is hard to parse and to extend. I'd suggest either two
separate files, or multi-line output:
usage: %lu kB
limit: %lu kB
and what are the units of these numbers? Page counts? If so, please don't
do that: it requires appplications and humans to know the current kernel's
page size.
+static struct cftype memctlr_usage = {
+ .name = "memctlr_usage",
+ .read = memctlr_read,
+};
+
+static struct cftype memctlr_limit = {
+ .name = "memctlr_limit",
+ .write = memctlr_write,
+};
+
+static int memctlr_populate(struct container_subsys *ss,
+ struct container *cont)
+{
+ int rc;
+ if ((rc = container_add_file(cont, &memctlr_usage)) < 0)
+ return rc;
+ if ((rc = container_add_file(cont, &memctlr_limit)) < 0)
Clean up the first file here?
+ return rc;
+ return 0;
+}
+
+static struct container_subsys memctlr_subsys = {
+ .name = "memctlr",
+ .create = memctlr_create,
+ .destroy = memctlr_destroy,
+ .populate = memctlr_populate,
+};
+
+int __init memctlr_init(void)
+{
+ int id;
+
+ id = container_register_subsys(&memctlr_subsys);
+ printk("Initializing memctlr version %s, id %d\n", version, id);
+ return id < 0 ? id : 0;
+}
+
+module_init(memctlr_init);