Hello, Michal. On Fri, Jan 25, 2019 at 06:37:13PM +0100, Michal Hocko wrote: > > What if a user wants to monitor any ooms in the subtree tho, which is > > a valid use case? > > How is that information useful without know which memcg the oom applies > to? For example, a workload manager watching over a subtree for a job with nested memory limits set by the job itself. It wants to take action (reporting and possibly other remediative actions) when something goes wrong in the delegated subtree but isn't involved in how the subtree is configured inside. > > If local event monitoring is useful and it can be, > > let's add separate events which are clearly identifiable to be local. > > Right now, it's confusing like hell. > > From a backward compatible POV it should be a new interface added. That sure is an option for use cases like above but it has the downside of carrying over the confusing interface into the indefinite future. Again, I'd like to point back at how we changed the accounting write and trim accounting because the benefits outweighted the risks. > Please note that I understand that this might be confusing with the rest > of the cgroup APIs but considering that this is the first time somebody > is actually complaining and the interface is "production ready" for more > than three years I am not really sure the situation is all that bad. cgroup2 uptake hasn't progressed that fast. None of the major distros or container frameworks are currently shipping with it although many are evaluating switching. I don't think I'm too mistaken in that we (FB) are at the bleeding edge in terms of adopting cgroup2 and its various new features and are hitting these corner cases and oversights in the process. If there are noticeable breakages arising from this change, we sure can backpaddle but I think the better course of action is fixing them up while we can. Thanks. -- tejun