yumkam@xxxxxxxxx (Yuriy M. Kaminskiy) writes: > Akshay Adiga <akshay.adiga@xxxxxxxxx> > writes: > >> I want to run a command which looks something like this : >> >> taskset -c 10 ycsb -p "redis_host=1234" >> >> The actual command is : >> >> ycsb -p "redis_host=1234" >> >> But argument -p "redis_host=1234" is taken by taskset as it argument >> and throws an error : Failed to set pid 0's affinity: >> >> -p "redis_host=1234" is an argument to ycsb command. shell/tasket >> misunderstands that and takes it as an argument for taskset. >> >> Is there a work around for this? > > Normally, such problem are solved by inserting `--` before your command; > however, taskset have somewhat unusual parsing of arguments (-c is not > an "option with argument", but the flag), so it will be > > taskset -c -- 10 ycsb -p "redis_host=1234" Hmm... actually, on which util-linux and libc version this is on? This should work even without -- (and it works for me [on util-linux 2.25.2 and glibc 2.19; and on util-linux git master branch too), note `getopt ... "+` in taskset.c and `man 3 getopt_long` on meaning (getopt should stop parsing on first non-option argument, in your case `ycsb`). And do your system have 10 cpu's/cores/whatever? Because if I specify cpu number larger than present, taskset gives exactly this error: $ taskset -c 100 echo -p foobar taskset: failed to set pid 0's affinity: Invalid argument This may be confused as "incorrect argument parsing", but it is not ("pid 0" is just means it tries to apply affinity to itself, it is not misparsed "foobar"); with existing cpu number everything works: $ taskset -c 1 echo -p foobar -p foobar $ taskset -c -- 1 echo -p foobar -p foobar (That said, taskset and chrt argument parsing is a bit unusual and may be confusing) -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe util-linux" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html