On Tue, Jan 13, 2015 at 03:20:08PM -0800, Greg Thelen wrote: > > On Thu, Jan 08 2015, Johannes Weiner wrote: > > > Introduce the basic control files to account, partition, and limit > > memory using cgroups in default hierarchy mode. > > > > This interface versioning allows us to address fundamental design > > issues in the existing memory cgroup interface, further explained > > below. The old interface will be maintained indefinitely, but a > > clearer model and improved workload performance should encourage > > existing users to switch over to the new one eventually. > > > > The control files are thus: > > > > - memory.current shows the current consumption of the cgroup and its > > descendants, in bytes. > > > > - memory.low configures the lower end of the cgroup's expected > > memory consumption range. The kernel considers memory below that > > boundary to be a reserve - the minimum that the workload needs in > > order to make forward progress - and generally avoids reclaiming > > it, unless there is an imminent risk of entering an OOM situation. > > So this is try-hard, but no-promises interface. No complaints. But I > assume that an eventual extension is a more rigid memory.min which > specifies a minimum working set under which an container would prefer an > oom kill to thrashing. Yes, memory.min would nicely complement memory.max and I wouldn't be opposed to adding it. However, that does require at least some level of cgroup-awareness in the global OOM killer in order to route kills meaningfully according to cgroup configuration, which is mainly why I deferred it in this patch. -- 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>