On Tue, 19 Apr 2016, Vitaly Kuznetsov wrote: > > I'd personally disagree that we need more and more config options to take > > care of something that an initscript can easily do and most distros > > already have their own initscripts that this can be added to. I don't see > > anything that the config option adds. > > Yes, but why does every distro need to solve the exact same issue by > a distro-specific init script when we can allow setting reasonable > default in kernel? > No, only distros that want to change the long-standing default which is "offline" since they apparently aren't worried about breaking existing userspace. Changing defaults is always risky business in the kernel, especially when it's long standing. If the default behavior is changeable, userspace needs to start testing for that and acting accordingly if it actually wants to default to offline (and there are existing tools that suppose the long-standing default). The end result is that the kernel default doesn't matter anymore, we've just pushed it to userspace to either online or offline at the time of hotplug. > If the config option itself is a problem (though I don't understand why) > we can get rid of it making the default 'online' and keeping the command > line parameter to disable it for cases when something goes wrong but why > not leave an option for those who want it the other way around? > That could break existing userspace that assumes the default is offline; if users are currently hotadding memory and then onlining it when needed rather than immediately, they break. So that's not a possibility. > Other than the above, let's imagine a 'unikernel' scenario when there > are no initscripts and we're in a virtualized environment. We may want to > have memory hotplug there too, but where would we put the 'onlining' > logic? In every userspace we want to run? This doesn't sound right. > Nobody is resisting hotplug notifiers. -- To unsubscribe, send a message with 'unsubscribe linux-mm' in the body to majordomo@xxxxxxxxx. For more info on Linux MM, see: http://www.linux-mm.org/ . Don't email: <a href=mailto:"dont@xxxxxxxxx"> email@xxxxxxxxx </a>