On 4/12/23 21:55, Waiman Long wrote:
On 4/12/23 21:17, Tejun Heo wrote:
Hello, Waiman.
On Wed, Apr 12, 2023 at 08:55:55PM -0400, Waiman Long wrote:
Sounds a bit contrived. Does it need to be something defined in the
root
cgroup?
Yes, because we need to take away the isolated CPUs from the
effective cpus
of the root cgroup. So it needs to start from the root. That is also
why we
have the partition rule that the parent of a partition has to be a
partition
root itself. With the new scheme, we don't need a special cgroup to
hold the
I'm following. The root is already a partition root and the cgroupfs
control
knobs are owned by the parent, so the root cgroup would own the first
level
cgroups' cpuset.cpus.reserve knobs. If the root cgroup wants to
assign some
CPUs exclusively to a first level cgroup, it can then set that cgroup's
reserve knob accordingly (or maybe the better name is
cpuset.cpus.exclusive), which will take those CPUs out of the root
cgroup's
partition and give them to the first level cgroup. The first level
cgroup
then is free to do whatever with those CPUs that now belong
exclusively to
the cgroup subtree.
I am OK with the cpuset.cpus.reserve name, but not that much with the
cpuset.cpus.exclusive name as it can get confused with cgroup v1's
cpuset.cpu_exclusive. Of course, I prefer the cpuset.cpus.isolated
name a bit more. Once an isolated CPU gets used in an isolated
partition, it is exclusive and it can't be used in another isolated
partition.
Since we will allow users to set cpuset.cpus.reserve to whatever value
they want. The distribution of isolated CPUs is only valid if the cpus
are present in its parent's cpuset.cpus.reserve and all the way up to
the root. It is a bit expensive, but it should be a relatively rare
operation.
I now have a slightly different idea of how to do that. We already have
an internal cpumask for partitioning - subparts_cpus. I am thinking
about exposing it as cpuset.cpus.reserve. The current way of creating
subpartitions will be called automatic reservation and require a direct
parent/child partition relationship. But as soon as a user write
anything to it, it will break automatic reservation and require manual
reservation going forward.
In that way, we can keep the old behavior, but also support new use
cases. I am going to work on that.
Cheers,
Longman