On 2013/9/27 10:13, Dhaval Giani wrote:
> On Thu, Sep 26, 2013 at 9:43 PM, Weng Meiling
> <wengmeiling.w...@huawei.com> wrote:
>> On 2013/9/27 9:20, Dhaval Giani wrote:
>>> On Thu, Sep 26, 2013 at 9:05 PM, Weng Meiling
>>> <wengmeiling.w...@huawei.com> wrote:
>>>> Hi Ivana,
>>>>
>>>>        what do you think about this question ?
>>>>
>>>> Thanks!
>>>> Weng Meiling
>>>>
>>>> On 2013/9/3 9:25, Weng Meiling wrote:
>>>>> Hi Ivana,
>>>>>
>>>>>         what do you think about this question ?
>>>>>
>>>>> Thanks!
>>>>> Weng Meiling
>>>>>
>>>>> On 2013/8/9 9:54, Weng Meiling wrote:
>>>>>>
>>>>>> From: Weng Meiling <wengmeiling.w...@huawei.com>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Any line starting with '#' in cgconfig.conf is considered a comment
>>>>>> and is ignored. But in cgrules.conf, no matter where the character
>>>>>> '#' is, it will be replace with '\0'. So the similar rules get
>>>>>> different results as following:
>>>>>>
>>>>>> the rule:
>>>>>> *%   cpu     test
>>>>>>
>>>>>> all process will go to cpu's test cgroup, but thr rule:
>>>>>> *#   cpu     test
>>>>>>
>>>
>>> Clearly this rule is invalid. So yes, I would expect cgrules to fail.
>>> (What to do with all processes for all users). I think the behavior is
>>> just fine.
>>>
>>> Dhaval
>>>
>>>
>> yeah, but what do you think the different behaviour between
>> the two similar rules? the '*#' is invalid because the '#'
>> means a comment, right?
>>
> 
> The two rules are *not* similar. They have specific meanings. The #
> means, everything following this character on this line is to be
> ignored. Which leaves with just "*". This by itself is invalid,and
> therefore the program returns an invalid rule. I am not sure why you
> are confusing the two.
> 
It's because in cgconfig.conf the '#' means a comment just when it's in the
starting of a line. So I just think the two configs(cgconfig.conf and 
cgrules.conf)
should have the same behaviour. As mentioned above, maybe they are different.

Thanks!

> Thanks!
> Dhaval
> 
>


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