On Thursday 03 March 2011, Kirill A. Shutsemov wrote: > task_get_effective_timer_slack() returns timer slack value to be used > to configure per-task timers. It can be equal or higher than task's > timer slack value. > > For now task_get_effective_timer_slack() returns timer_slack_ns of the > task. Timer slack cgroup controller will implement a bit more > sophisticated logic. Some time ago, there was a discussion about a method for automatically determining timer slack values, and I think nobody ever implemented it. The idea was to penalize tasks that have timers expiring a lot, typically a sign of programs that were not written with power consumption in mind. I think that could be nicely combined with your patch. Instead of setting the effective timer slack for the entire control group, you could set a target value that is applied only to tasks that have their timers expire frequently. When a timer expires for a task, you increase the effective slack up to the maximum, and when you set up a timer, you decrease it again. The amount by which the effective slack gets changed can depend on how long ago the last timer expired. Does this make sense to you? Arnd _______________________________________________ Containers mailing list Containers@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.linux-foundation.org/mailman/listinfo/containers