Re: [PATCH v6 2/3] cgroups: allow a cgroup subsystem to reject a fork
From: Tejun Heo
Date: Thu Mar 26 2015 - 11:02:52 EST
Hello,
On Fri, Mar 27, 2015 at 01:38:54AM +1100, Aleksa Sarai wrote:
> The issue I can see with passing around an opaque pointer to fork() is that you
> have a random private (void **) argument that is completely useless if you
> don't use can_fork(). This is why I think we should call the reapply_fork()
Just pass NULL? I really don't like having another callback. pre and
post do make sense because the operation is essentially a transaction.
The problem with adding additional callbacks is that they aren't
essential and as such arbitrary to a certain degree. reapply_fork or
whatnot may fit this case but may not others, so let's please stick
with what the logic dictates to be essential.
> callback if the association changes [we could call it something else if you
> like, since reapply_fork() is a pids-specific name -- what about switch_fork(),
> reassoc_fork(), re_fork() or something to show that it's a callback if the
> association changes?] (the subsystem can decide if they want to ignore it / if
> they don't want to touch it) and we deal with pinning / dropping the ref of the
> css_set for the current task inside the cgroup_* callbacks. That way, we don't
> start messing around with post-fork() callbacks that aren't related to the new
> conditional stuff.
You can't pin css_set from inside cgroup callbacks. It's a construct
which in general shouldn't be accessible outside cgroup core.
> I mean, if you want to have a random, completely unused and essentially
> vestigial argument to ss->fork() [if you don't use the new can_fork() callbacks
> (and actually care about storing private data)] then I can just write that. It
> just looks like a weird callback API imho.
It's an opaque token from pre. If a subsys doesn't have pre, it's
NULL. I don't see anything weird about that, so let's please go that
way.
Thanks.
--
tejun
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