Hi, Apologies for the delay - I've just got to looking at the procfs tarball.
> It's for the moment very experimental, it's a prototype: > http://lxc.sourceforge.net/download/procfs/procfs.tar.gz > > IMO, the code is easy to follow. > > The fuse in mounted in the container but the code expect to share the > rootfs. > It needs access to /dev/fuse, and the group mounted. One side effect seems to be that if no memory limits are set you'll get the default setting for memory.limit_in_bytes rather than the amount of ram in the system in /proc/meminfo. I can easily fix that, and implement some other files like cpuinfo. Before I dive in however; In the readme you mention; "This code is *not* intended to be integrated to lxc, at least under this form, fuse is too heavy and forks too much, for this reason a single daemon on the host is better." Would you mind expanding on that? Do you have something specific in mind? The current way of mounting fuse somewhere else (/tmp/dir) and doing a bind mount of /tmp/dir back over /proc seems a little clumsy. If there's a better way, either a daemon on the host, or a kernel module, I'll happily start down that road given a couple of hints. Andy Andrew Phillips Head of Systems www.lmax.com Office: +44 203 1922509 Mobile: +44 (0)7595 242 900 LMAX | Level 2, Yellow Building | 1 Nicholas Road | London | W11 4AN The information in this e-mail and any attachment is confidential and is intended only for the named recipient(s). The e-mail may not be disclosed or used by any person other than the addressee, nor may it be copied in any way. If you are not a named recipient please notify the sender immediately and delete any copies of this message. Any unauthorized copying, disclosure or distribution of the material in this e-mail is strictly forbidden. Any view or opinions presented are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of the company. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Download Intel® Parallel Studio Eval Try the new software tools for yourself. Speed compiling, find bugs proactively, and fine-tune applications for parallel performance. See why Intel Parallel Studio got high marks during beta. http://p.sf.net/sfu/intel-sw-dev _______________________________________________ Lxc-users mailing list Lxc-users@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/lxc-users