Hello, On Thu, Jul 20, 2023 at 02:34:16PM -0700, Yosry Ahmed wrote: > > Or just create a nesting layer so that there's a cgroup which represents the > > persistent resources and a nested cgroup instance inside representing the > > current instance. > > In practice it is not easy to know exactly which resources are shared > and used by which cgroups, especially in a large dynamic environment. Yeah, that only covers when resource persistence is confined in a known scope. That said, I have a hard time seeing how recharding once after cgroup destruction can be a solution for the situations you describe. What if A touches it once first, B constantly uses it but C only very occasionally and after A dies C ends up owning it due to timing. This is very much possible in a large dynamic environment but neither the initial or final situation is satisfactory. To solve the problems you're describing, you actually would have to guarantee that memory pages are charged to the current majority user (or maybe even spread across current active users). Maybe it can be argued that this is a step towards that but it's a very partial step and at least would need a technically viable direction that this development can follow. On its own, AFAICS, I'm not sure the scope of problems it can actually solve is justifiably greater than what can be achieved with simple nesting. Thanks. -- tejun