Hi Tejun, On Fri, Jan 25, 2019 at 10:28 AM Tejun Heo <tj@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > 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. > Why not make this configurable at the delegation boundary? As you mentioned, there are jobs who want centralized workload manager to watch over their subtrees while there can be jobs which want to monitor their subtree themselves. For example I can have a job which know how to act when one of the children cgroup goes OOM. However if the root of that job goes OOM then the centralized workload manager should do something about it. With this change, how to implement this scenario? How will the central manager differentiates between that a subtree of a job goes OOM or the root of that job? I guess from the discussion it seems like the centralized manager has to traverse that job's subtree to find the source of OOM. Why can't we let the implementation of centralized manager easier by allowing to configure the propagation of these notifications across delegation boundary. thanks, Shakeel