On 09/13/2012 09:48 PM, Tejun Heo wrote:Hello, Glauber.
On Thu, Sep 13, 2012 at 03:53:56PM +0400, Glauber Costa wrote:Here is where the Kconfig option comes to play. If we do it in the
kernel, userspace doesn't have to do anything. I spoke with Lennart and
Kay, and at least from a systemd PoV, they would much rather not provide
a hack in userspace for a file that is scheduled to go away in any case
- which I personally believe is a fair request.
It is a default, so the effect for the user is the same: After the
machine boots, use_hierarchy = 1, and he can still flip to 0 for some time.
Alright, let's go Kconfig. Let's just make sure that the transitional
nature is clearly labeled and the fact that the default config will
generate a warning when nested cgroups are created in memcg. We can
then coordinate the flip with distros. Can you please repost the
Kconfig patch?
Just wait a bit. If you are merging your earlier patch, I'd like to take
that in consideration. In that case, I'd rebase.
Setting mark on a parent should be reflected on all its children w/o
their own explicit settings.
That is clear, and better behavior than we have today. What I mean, is
that by setting its own marking, the child can pretty much "escape" the
group.
The ideal solution - from this point of view only - would be to have
more than one marking, and mark with all the way down to the root. So if
you have an iptables rule to match one marking, it still applies to the
kids. And you can still have extra markings.
I am not sure this is feasible, though, in which case your solution
could be a good compromise. But please let's aim for it.
I don't think it supports multiple tags. If that's possible, it would
be nice but I don't think it's a must.
It is not about "it supports", but more about "can it support?"
But I honestly can't answer this question. net_cls people need to
come and tell us about it.