On 03/09/2012 03:20 PM, Jeff Liu wrote:
Hello,
Disk quota feature has been asked at LXC list from time to time.
Given that the project quota has already implemented in XFS for a long time, and it was also in progress for EXT4.
So the major idea is to assign one or more project IDs(or tree ID?) to container, but leaving quota setup via cgroup
config files, so all the tasks running at container could have project quota constraints applied.
I'd like to post an initial patch sets here, the stupid implements is very simple and even crash me
in some cases, sorry! But I would like to submit it to get more feedback to make sure I am going down
the right road. :)
Let me introduce it now.
1. Setup project quota on XFS(enabled pquota) firstly.
For example, the "project100" is configured on "/xfs/quota_test" directory.
$ cat /etc/projects
100:/xfs/quota_test
$ cat /etc/projid
project100:100
$ sudo xfs_quota -x -c 'report -p'
Project quota on /xfs (/dev/sda7)
Blocks
Project ID Used Soft Hard Warn/Grace
---------- --------------------------------------------------
project100 0 0 0 00 [--------]
2. Mount cgroup on /cgroup.
cgroup on /cgroup type cgroup (rw)
After that, there will have a couple of quota.XXXX files presented at /cgroup.
$ ls -l /cgroup/quota.*
--w------- 1 root root 0 Mar 9 18:27 /cgroup/quota.activate
--w------- 1 root root 0 Mar 9 18:27 /cgroup/quota.add_project
-r--r--r-- 1 root root 0 Mar 9 18:27 /cgroup/quota.all
--w------- 1 root root 0 Mar 9 18:27 /cgroup/quota.block_limit_in_bytes
--w------- 1 root root 0 Mar 9 18:27 /cgroup/quota.deactivate
--w------- 1 root root 0 Mar 9 18:27 /cgroup/quota.inode_limit
-r--r--r-- 1 root root 0 Mar 9 18:27 /cgroup/quota.projects
--w------- 1 root root 0 Mar 9 18:27 /cgroup/quota.remove_project
--w------- 1 root root 0 Mar 9 18:27 /cgroup/quota.reset_block_limit_in_bytes
--w------- 1 root root 0 Mar 9 18:27 /cgroup/quota.reset_inode_limit
3. To assign a project ID to container, just echo it to quota.add_project as:
echo "project100:100"> /cgroup/quota.add_project
To get a short list of the current projects assigned to container, user can check quota.projects,
# cat /cgroup/quota.projects
Project ID (project100:100) status: off
The totally quota info can be check against quota.all, it will show something like below:
# cat /cgroup/quota.all
Project ID (project100:100) status: off
block_soft_limit 9223372036854775807
block_hard_limit 9223372036854775807
block_max_usage 0
block_usage 0
inode_soft_limit 9223372036854775807
inode_hard_limit 9223372036854775807
inode_max_usage 0
inode_usage 0
Note that about "status: off", by default, a new assigned project will in OFF state, user could
turn it on by echo the project ID to quota.activate as below:
# echo 100> /cgroup/quota.activate
# cat /cgroup/quota.all
Project ID (project100:100) status: on *now status changed.*
block_soft_limit 9223372036854775807
block_hard_limit 9223372036854775807
block_max_usage 0
block_usage 0
inode_soft_limit 9223372036854775807
inode_hard_limit 9223372036854775807
inode_max_usage 0
inode_usage 0
But it will do nothing since without quota setup.
4. To configure quota via cgroup, user need to interact with quota.inode_limit and quota.block_limit_in_bytes.
For now, I only add a simple inode quota check to XFS, it looks something like below:
# echo "100 2:4">> /cgroup/quota.inode_limit
# cat /cgroup/quota.all
Project ID (project100:100) status: on
block_soft_limit 9223372036854775807
block_hard_limit 9223372036854775807
block_max_usage 0
block_usage 0
inode_soft_limit 2
inode_hard_limit 4
inode_max_usage 0
inode_usage 0
# for ((i=0; i< 6; i++)); do touch xfs/quota_test/test.$i; done
Project ID (project100:100) status: on
block_soft_limit 9223372036854775807
block_hard_limit 9223372036854775807
block_max_usage 0
block_usage 0
inode_soft_limit 2
inode_hard_limit 4
inode_max_usage 4
inode_usage 4
Sorry again, above steps crashed me sometimes for now, it works just for demo purpose. :)
Any criticism and suggestions are welcome!
When I started reading through this, I had one question in mind:
"Why cgroups?"
After I read it, I have one question in mind:
"Why cgroups?"
It really seems like the wrong interface for that. Specially since you
doesn't seem to be doing anything really clever to divide the charges,
etc. You are basically using cgroups as an interface to configure
quotas. And I see no reason whatsoever to do it. Quotas already have a
very well-defined interface.
In summary, I don't see how creating a new cgroup will do us any good
here, specially if we're doing it just for the configuration interface.
There are two pieces of the puzzle for container-quota: An outer quota,
that the box admin applies to that container as a whole, and a container
quota, that the container admin can apply to its user.
The outer quota does not need any relation with cgroups at all!
As a matter of fact, we already have this feature, you just don't
realize it: if you assume you have project quota, we just need to
configure the project to start at the subtree the container starts.
so, for instance, if you have:
/root/lxc-root/
Then you create a project quota ontop of it, and you're done.
What we really need here, is a way to have a privileged user inside a
container to create normal quotas (user, group) that he can configure,
and have this quota be always smaller than, say, a project quota defined
for the container from the outside. But cgroups is hardly the interface,
or place, for that: Usually, the processes inside the container won't
have access to their cgroups. They will contain the limits they are
entitled to, and we don't won't the processes to change that at will. So
tying it to cgroups does not solve the fundamental problem, which is how
we have the container admin to set up quotas...
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