Steffen Weiberle wrote:
Jerry Jelinek wrote On 08/01/06 09:32,:

That is just not correct. Using FSS on the one zone that has the dedicated
pset doesn't have any impact since those processes are not contending
with any other zone's processes for cpu resources.  However, there is no
reason you cannot use FSS for the other zones, and the global zone, to control
their access to the rest of the shared cpu resources.


This suggests that if zones are not bound to a pool, they can be limited via FSS. But aren't they technically bound to the default resource pool?

By default, yes. But you can assign each zone to a non-default pool - see the man page for zonecfg.

If so, and I have more than one zone bound to a non-default resource pool, can I use FSS to limit the zones' interaction on that pool?

Yes, you can use FSS to guarantee a minimum portion of a *pool's* CPU capacity to a Container.


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Jeff VICTOR              Sun Microsystems            jeff.victor @ sun.com
OS Ambassador            Sr. Technical Specialist
Solaris 10 Zones FAQ:    http://www.opensolaris.org/os/community/zones/faq
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