On 3/9/07, Srivatsa Vaddagiri <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > 1. What is the fundamental unit over which resource-management is > applied? Individual tasks or individual containers? > > /me thinks latter.
Yes > In which case, it makes sense to stick > resource control information in the container somewhere. Yes, that's what all my patches have been doing. > 2. Regarding space savings, if 100 tasks are in a container (I dont know > what is a typical number) -and- lets say that all tasks are to share > the same resource allocation (which seems to be natural), then having > a 'struct container_group *' pointer in each task_struct seems to be not > very efficient (simply because we dont need that task-level granularity of > managing resource allocation). I think you should re-read my patches. Previously, each task had N pointers, one for its container in each potential hierarchy. The container_group concept means that each task has 1 pointer, to a set of container pointers (one per hierarchy) shared by all tasks that have exactly the same set of containers (in the various different hierarchies). It doesn't give task-level granularity of resource management (unless you create a separate container for each task), it just gives a space saving. > > 3. This next leads me to think that 'tasks' file in each directory doesnt make > sense for containers. In fact it can lend itself to error situations (by > administrator/script mistake) when some tasks of a container are in one > resource class while others are in a different class. > > Instead, from a containers pov, it may be usefull to write > a 'container id' (if such a thing exists) into the tasks file > which will move all the tasks of the container into > the new resource class. This is the same requirement we > discussed long back of moving all threads of a process into new > resource class. I think you need to give a more concrete example and use case of what you're trying to propose here. I don't really see what advantage you're getting. Paul ------------------------------------------------------------------------- Take Surveys. Earn Cash. Influence the Future of IT Join SourceForge.net's Techsay panel and you'll get the chance to share your opinions on IT & business topics through brief surveys-and earn cash http://www.techsay.com/default.php?page=join.php&p=sourceforge&CID=DEVDEV _______________________________________________ ckrm-tech mailing list https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/ckrm-tech