Re: [PATCH 7/8] cgroups: Add a task counter subsystem

From: Oleg Nesterov
Date: Tue Aug 09 2011 - 11:15:22 EST


On 07/29, Frederic Weisbecker wrote:
>
> +static int task_counter_can_attach_task(struct cgroup *cgrp, struct cgroup *old_cgrp,
> + struct task_struct *tsk)
> +{
> + struct res_counter *res = cgroup_task_counter_res(cgrp);
> + struct res_counter *old_res = cgroup_task_counter_res(old_cgrp);
> + struct res_counter *limit_fail_at;
> +
> + common_ancestor = res_counter_common_ancestor(res, old_res);
> +
> + return res_counter_charge_until(res, common_ancestor, 1, &limit_fail_at);
> +}
>
> ...
>
> +static void task_counter_attach_task(struct cgroup *cgrp, struct cgroup *old_cgrp,
> + struct task_struct *tsk)
> +{
> + res_counter_uncharge_until(cgroup_task_counter_res(old_cgrp), common_ancestor, 1);
> +}

This doesn't look right or I missed something.

What if tsk exits in between? Afaics this can happen with both
cgroup_attach_task() and cgroup_attach_proc().

Let's look at cgroup_attach_task(). Suppose that
task_counter_can_attach_task() succeeds and charges the new cgrp,
Then cgroup_task_migrate() returns -ESRCH. Who will uncharge the
new cgrp?


cgroup_attach_proc() is different, it calls cgroup_task_migrate()
after ->attach_task(). Cough.

In this case old_cgrp can be uncharged twice, no? And again, nobody
will uncharge the new cgrp?



->attach_task() can be skipped if cgrp == oldcgrp... Probably this
is fine, in this case can_attach_task() shouldn't actually charge.


> @@ -1295,6 +1295,10 @@ static struct task_struct *copy_process(unsigned long clone_flags,
> p->group_leader = p;
> INIT_LIST_HEAD(&p->thread_group);
>
> + retval = cgroup_task_counter_fork(p);
> + if (retval)
> + goto bad_fork_free_pid;
> +

Well, imho this is not good. You are adding yet another cgroup hook.
Why you can not reuse cgroup_fork_callbacks() ?

Yes, it returns void. Can't we chane ->fork() to return the error and
make it boolean?

Better yet,

- cgroup_fork_callbacks(p);
- cgroup_callbacks_done = 1;
+ failed_ss = cgroup_fork_callbacks(p);
+ if (failed_ss)
+ goto bad_fork_free_pid;

...

- cgroup_exit(p, cgroup_callbacks_done);
+ cgroup_exit(p, failed_ss);

What do you think?

Oleg.

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