Re: [PATCH 1/2v6] procfs: show hierarchy of pid namespace
From: Richard Weinberger
Date: Wed Nov 05 2014 - 07:51:41 EST
Am 05.11.2014 um 13:41 schrieb Serge E. Hallyn:
> Quoting Richard Weinberger (richard@xxxxxx):
>> Am 05.11.2014 um 11:41 schrieb Chen Hanxiao:
>>> We lack of pid hierarchy information, and this will lead to:
>>> a) we don't know pids' relationship, who is whose child:
>>> /proc/PID/ns/pid only tell us whether two pids live in different ns
>>> b) bring trouble to nested lxc container check/restore/migration
>>> c) bring trouble to pid translation between containers;
>>>
>>> This patch will show the hierarchy of pid namespace
>>> by pidns_hierarchy like:
>>>
>>> [root@localhost ~]#cat /proc/pidns_hierarchy
>>> 18060 18102 1534
>>> 18060 18102 1600
>>> 1550
>>
>> Hmm, what about printing the pid hierarchy in the same way as /proc/self/mountinfo
>> does with mount namespaces?
>> Your current approach is not bad but we should really try to be consistent with existing
>> sources of information.
>
> Good point. How would you structure it to make it look mor elike mountinfo?
> Adding the pidns inode number (in place of a mount sequence number) might be
> useful, but it sounds like you have a more concrete idea?
Just list <init_PID> <parent_of_init_PID>. This way we have exactly one
information record per line and always exactly two columns to parse.
e.g.
[root@localhost ~]#cat /proc/pidns_hierarchy
1550 1
18060 1
18102 18060
1534 18102
1600 18102
>> This function allocates memory per PID. If we have lots of PIDs, how does this scale?
>> I'd go so far and say this can be a DoS'able issue if the pidns_hierarchy file is opened multiple times...
>
> It's not per pid, but per init-pid. For non-reaper pids he bails and continue
> through the loop a few lines above. This still may be DOS-able if users don't
> have kmem restrictions to prevent a ton of pid namespaces, but then the
> namespaces themselves will take a lot more memory than the representation here.
Ah, I've overlooked that fact. If it is per init-pid it is not that bad. :-)
Thanks,
//richard
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