Re: [PATCH v4] sched: automated per session task groups

From: Vivek Goyal
Date: Wed Dec 01 2010 - 09:56:32 EST


On Wed, Dec 01, 2010 at 06:57:48AM +0100, Mike Galbraith wrote:

[..]
>
> > - I am doing some testing with the patch and w.r.t. cgroup interface some
> > things don't seem right.
> >
> > I have applied your patch and enabled CONFIG_AUTO_GROUP. Now I boot
> > into the kernel and open a new ssh connection to the machine.
> >
> > # echo $$
> > 3555
> > # cat /proc/3555/autogroup
> > /autogroup-63 nice 0
> >
> > IIUC, task 3555 has been moved into an autogroup. Now I mount the cpu
> > controller and this task is visible in root cgroup.
> >
> > # mount -t cgroup -o cpu none /cgroup/cpu
> > # cat /cgroup/cpu/tasks | grep 3555
> > 3555
> >
> > First of all this gives user a wrong impression that task 3555 is in
> > root cgroup.
>
> It is in the root cgroup. It is not in the root autogroup is not
> auto-cgroups group.
>
> > Now I create a child group test1 and move the task there and also change
> > the weight/shares of the cgroup to 10240.
> >
> > # mkdir test1
> > # echo 3555 > test1/tasks
> > # echo 10240 > test1/cpu.shares
> > # cat /proc/3555/cgroup
> > 3:cpu:/test1
> > # cat /proc/3555/autogroup
> > /autogroup-63 nice 0
> >
> > So again, user will think that task is in cgroup test1 and is being
> > controlled by the respective weight but that's not the case.
>
> It is the case here.
>
> PID USER PR NI VIRT RES SHR S %CPU %MEM TIME+ P COMMAND
> 7573 root 20 0 7996 340 256 R 50 0.0 3:35.86 3 pert
> 7572 root 20 0 7996 340 256 R 50 0.0 9:21.68 3 pert
> ...
> marge:/cgroups/test # echo 7572 > tasks
> marge:/cgroups/test # echo 4096 > cpu.shares
>
> PID USER PR NI VIRT RES SHR S %CPU %MEM TIME+ P COMMAND
> 7572 root 20 0 7996 340 256 R 80 0.0 10:06.92 3 pert
> 7573 root 20 0 7996 340 256 R 20 0.0 4:05.80 3 pert
>
> When you move a task into a cgroup, it still has an autogroup
> association, as all tasks (processes actually) do, but it's not used.

Ok, so I got confused with the fact that after moving a task into a
cgroup it is still associated with an autogroup.

So IIUC, if a task is in root cgroup, then it would not necessarily be driven
by cpu.shares of root cgroup (as task could be in its own autogroup). But
if I move the task into a non-root cgroup, then it will for sure be
subjected to rules imposed by non-root cgroup cpu.shares. That's not too
bad.

Thanks
Vivek
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