On 31/05/18 10:26, Peter Zijlstra wrote: > On Thu, May 31, 2018 at 04:12:34PM +0800, Zefan Li wrote: > > On 2018/5/31 9:25, Zefan Li wrote: > > > Hi Waiman, > > > > > > On 2018/5/30 21:46, Waiman Long wrote: > > >> It was found that the cpuset.cpus could contain CPUs that are not listed > > >> in their parent's cpu list as shown by the command sequence below: > > >> > > >> # echo "+cpuset" >cgroup.subtree_control > > >> # mkdir g1 > > >> # echo 0-5 >g1/cpuset.cpus > > >> # mkdir g1/g11 > > >> # echo "+cpuset" > g1/cgroup.subtree_control > > >> # echo 6-11 >g1/g11/cpuset.cpus > > >> # grep -R . g1 | grep "\.cpus" > > >> g1/cpuset.cpus:0-5 > > >> g1/cpuset.cpus.effective:0-5 > > >> g1/g11/cpuset.cpus:6-11 > > >> g1/g11/cpuset.cpus.effective:0-5 > > >> > > >> As the intersection of g11's cpus and that of g1 is empty, the effective > > >> cpus of g11 is just that of g1. The check in update_cpumask() is now > > >> corrected to make sure that cpus in a child cpus must be a subset of > > >> its parent's cpus. The error "write error: Invalid argument" will now > > >> be reported in the above case. > > >> > > > > > > We made the distinction between user-configured CPUs and effective CPUs > > > in commit 7e88291beefbb758, so actually it's not a bug. > > > > > > > I remember the original reason is to support restoration of the original > > cpu after cpu offline->online. We use user-configured CPUs to remember > > if the cpu should be restored in the cpuset after it's onlined. > > AFAICT you can do that and still have the child a subset of the parent, > no? Plus this is not hotplug, but a user decision. It could make sense to keep .cpus unmodified after hotplug events, but does it make sense to let the user be able to choose cpus outside the parent domain? -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe cgroups" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html