From: Paul Menage <menage@google.com>
To: akpm@linuxfoundation.org, balbir@linux.vnet.ibm.com,
"Serge E. Hallyn" <serue@us.ibm.com>,
Cedric Le Goater <clg@fr.ibm.com>,
"Eric W. Biederman" <ebiederm@xmission.com>,
Pavel
Cc: Nick Piggin <nickpiggin@yahoo.com.au>,
Peter Zijlstra <a.p.zijlstra@chello.nl>,
pj@sgi.com, containers@lists.osdl.org,
linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org
Subject: [PATCH 20/33] memory controller add documentation
Date: Mon, 17 Sep 2007 14:03:27 -0700 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <20070917210429.361229000@menage.corp.google.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: 20070917210307.116234000@menage.corp.google.com
[-- Attachment #1: memory-controller-add-documentation.patch --]
[-- Type: text/plain, Size: 11025 bytes --]
From: Balbir Singh <balbir@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
(container->cgroup renaming by Paul Menage <menage@google.com>)
Signed-off-by: Balbir Singh <balbir@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Paul Menage <menage@google.com>
---
Documentation/controllers/memory.txt | 259 +++++++++++++++++++++++++
1 files changed, 259 insertions(+)
diff -puN /dev/null Documentation/controllers/memory.txt
--- /dev/null
+++ a/Documentation/controllers/memory.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,259 @@
+Memory Controller
+
+Salient features
+
+a. Enable control of both RSS (mapped) and Page Cache (unmapped) pages
+b. The infrastructure allows easy addition of other types of memory to control
+c. Provides *zero overhead* for non memory controller users
+d. Provides a double LRU: global memory pressure causes reclaim from the
+ global LRU; a cgroup on hitting a limit, reclaims from the per
+ cgroup LRU
+
+NOTE: Page Cache (unmapped) also includes Swap Cache pages as a subset
+and will not be referred to explicitly in the rest of the documentation.
+
+Benefits and Purpose of the memory controller
+
+The memory controller isolates the memory behaviour of a group of tasks
+from the rest of the system. The article on LWN [12] mentions some probable
+uses of the memory controller. The memory controller can be used to
+
+a. Isolate an application or a group of applications
+ Memory hungry applications can be isolated and limited to a smaller
+ amount of memory.
+b. Create a cgroup with limited amount of memory, this can be used
+ as a good alternative to booting with mem=XXXX.
+c. Virtualization solutions can control the amount of memory they want
+ to assign to a virtual machine instance.
+d. A CD/DVD burner could control the amount of memory used by the
+ rest of the system to ensure that burning does not fail due to lack
+ of available memory.
+e. There are several other use cases, find one or use the controller just
+ for fun (to learn and hack on the VM subsystem).
+
+1. History
+
+The memory controller has a long history. A request for comments for the memory
+controller was posted by Balbir Singh [1]. At the time the RFC was posted
+there were several implementations for memory control. The goal of the
+RFC was to build consensus and agreement for the minimal features required
+for memory control. The first RSS controller was posted by Balbir Singh[2]
+in Feb 2007. Pavel Emelianov [3][4][5] has since posted three versions of the
+RSS controller. At OLS, at the resource management BoF, everyone suggested
+that we handle both page cache and RSS together. Another request was raised
+to allow user space handling of OOM. The current memory controller is
+at version 6; it combines both mapped (RSS) and unmapped Page
+Cache Control [11].
+
+2. Memory Control
+
+Memory is a unique resource in the sense that it is present in a limited
+amount. If a task requires a lot of CPU processing, the task can spread
+its processing over a period of hours, days, months or years, but with
+memory, the same physical memory needs to be reused to accomplish the task.
+
+The memory controller implementation has been divided into phases. These
+are:
+
+1. Memory controller
+2. mlock(2) controller
+3. Kernel user memory accounting and slab control
+4. user mappings length controller
+
+The memory controller is the first controller developed.
+
+2.1. Design
+
+The core of the design is a counter called the res_counter. The res_counter
+tracks the current memory usage and limit of the group of processes associated
+with the controller. Each cgroup has a memory controller specific data
+structure (mem_cgroup) associated with it.
+
+2.2. Accounting
+
+ +--------------------+
+ | mem_cgroup |
+ | (res_counter) |
+ +--------------------+
+ / ^ \
+ / | \
+ +---------------+ | +---------------+
+ | mm_struct | |.... | mm_struct |
+ | | | | |
+ +---------------+ | +---------------+
+ |
+ + --------------+
+ |
+ +---------------+ +------+--------+
+ | page +----------> page_cgroup|
+ | | | |
+ +---------------+ +---------------+
+
+ (Figure 1: Hierarchy of Accounting)
+
+
+Figure 1 shows the important aspects of the controller
+
+1. Accounting happens per cgroup
+2. Each mm_struct knows about which cgroup it belongs to
+3. Each page has a pointer to the page_cgroup, which in turn knows the
+ cgroup it belongs to
+
+The accounting is done as follows: mem_cgroup_charge() is invoked to setup
+the necessary data structures and check if the cgroup that is being charged
+is over its limit. If it is then reclaim is invoked on the cgroup.
+More details can be found in the reclaim section of this document.
+If everything goes well, a page meta-data-structure called page_cgroup is
+allocated and associated with the page. This routine also adds the page to
+the per cgroup LRU.
+
+2.2.1 Accounting details
+
+All mapped pages (RSS) and unmapped user pages (Page Cache) are accounted.
+RSS pages are accounted at the time of page_add_*_rmap() unless they've already
+been accounted for earlier. A file page will be accounted for as Page Cache;
+it's mapped into the page tables of a process, duplicate accounting is carefully
+avoided. Page Cache pages are accounted at the time of add_to_page_cache().
+The corresponding routines that remove a page from the page tables or removes
+a page from Page Cache is used to decrement the accounting counters of the
+cgroup.
+
+2.3 Shared Page Accounting
+
+Shared pages are accounted on the basis of the first touch approach. The
+cgroup that first touches a page is accounted for the page. The principle
+behind this approach is that a cgroup that aggressively uses a shared
+page will eventually get charged for it (once it is uncharged from
+the cgroup that brought it in -- this will happen on memory pressure).
+
+2.4 Reclaim
+
+Each cgroup maintains a per cgroup LRU that consists of an active
+and inactive list. When a cgroup goes over its limit, we first try
+to reclaim memory from the cgroup so as to make space for the new
+pages that the cgroup has touched. If the reclaim is unsuccessful,
+an OOM routine is invoked to select and kill the bulkiest task in the
+cgroup.
+
+The reclaim algorithm has not been modified for cgroups, except that
+pages that are selected for reclaiming come from the per cgroup LRU
+list.
+
+2. Locking
+
+The memory controller uses the following hierarchy
+
+1. zone->lru_lock is used for selecting pages to be isolated
+2. mem->lru_lock protects the per cgroup LRU
+3. lock_page_cgroup() is used to protect page->page_cgroup
+
+3. User Interface
+
+0. Configuration
+
+a. Enable CONFIG_CGROUPS
+b. Enable CONFIG_RESOURCE_COUNTERS
+c. Enable CONFIG_CGROUP_MEM_CONT
+
+1. Prepare the cgroups
+# mkdir -p /cgroups
+# mount -t cgroup none /cgroups -o memory
+
+2. Make the new group and move bash into it
+# mkdir /cgroups/0
+# echo $$ > /cgroups/0/tasks
+
+Since now we're in the 0 cgroup,
+We can alter the memory limit:
+# echo -n 6000 > /cgroups/0/memory.limit
+
+We can check the usage:
+# cat /cgroups/0/memory.usage
+25
+
+The memory.failcnt field gives the number of times that the cgroup limit was
+exceeded.
+
+4. Testing
+
+Balbir posted lmbench, AIM9, LTP and vmmstress results [10] and [11].
+Apart from that v6 has been tested with several applications and regular
+daily use. The controller has also been tested on the PPC64, x86_64 and
+UML platforms.
+
+4.1 Troubleshooting
+
+Sometimes a user might find that the application under a cgroup is
+terminated. There are several causes for this:
+
+1. The cgroup limit is too low (just too low to do anything useful)
+2. The user is using anonymous memory and swap is turned off or too low
+
+A sync followed by echo 1 > /proc/sys/vm/drop_caches will help get rid of
+some of the pages cached in the cgroup (page cache pages).
+
+4.2 Task migration
+
+When a task migrates from one cgroup to another, it's charge is not
+carried forward. The pages allocated from the original cgroup still
+remain charged to it, the charge is dropped when the page is freed or
+reclaimed.
+
+4.3 Removing a cgroup
+
+A cgroup can be removed by rmdir, but as discussed in sections 4.1 and 4.2, a
+cgroup might have some charge associated with it, even though all
+tasks have migrated away from it. If some pages are still left, after following
+the steps listed in sections 4.1 and 4.2, check the Swap Cache usage in
+/proc/meminfo to see if the Swap Cache usage is showing up in the
+cgroups memory.usage counter. A simple test of swapoff -a and swapon -a
+should free any pending Swap Cache usage.
+
+4.4 Choosing what to account -- Page Cache (unmapped) vs RSS (mapped)?
+
+The type of memory accounted by the cgroup can be limited to just
+mapped pages by writing "1" to memory.control_type field
+
+echo -n 1 > memory.control_type
+
+5. TODO
+
+1. Add support for accounting huge pages (as a separate controller)
+2. Improve the user interface to accept/display memory limits in KB or MB
+ rather than pages (since page sizes can differ across platforms/machines).
+3. Make cgroup lists per-zone
+4. Make per-cgroup scanner reclaim not-shared pages first
+5. Teach controller to account for shared-pages
+6. Start reclamation when the limit is lowered
+7. Start reclamation in the background when the limit is
+ not yet hit but the usage is getting closer
+8. Create per zone LRU lists per cgroup
+
+Summary
+
+Overall, the memory controller has been a stable controller and has been
+commented and discussed quite extensively in the community.
+
+References
+
+1. Singh, Balbir. RFC: Memory Controller, http://lwn.net/Articles/206697/
+2. Singh, Balbir. Memory Controller (RSS Control),
+ http://lwn.net/Articles/222762/
+3. Emelianov, Pavel. Resource controllers based on process cgroups
+ http://lkml.org/lkml/2007/3/6/198
+4. Emelianov, Pavel. RSS controller based on process cgroups (v2)
+ http://lkml.org/lkml/2007/4/9/74
+5. Emelianov, Pavel. RSS controller based on process cgroups (v3)
+ http://lkml.org/lkml/2007/5/30/244
+6. Menage, Paul. Control Groups v10, http://lwn.net/Articles/236032/
+7. Vaidyanathan, Srinivasan, Control Groups: Pagecache accounting and control
+ subsystem (v3), http://lwn.net/Articles/235534/
+8. Singh, Balbir. RSS controller V2 test results (lmbench),
+ http://lkml.org/lkml/2007/5/17/232
+9. Singh, Balbir. RSS controller V2 AIM9 results
+ http://lkml.org/lkml/2007/5/18/1
+10. Singh, Balbir. Memory controller v6 results,
+ http://lkml.org/lkml/2007/8/19/36
+11. Singh, Balbir. Memory controller v6, http://lkml.org/lkml/2007/8/17/69
+12. Corbet, Jonathan, Controlling memory use in cgroups,
+ http://lwn.net/Articles/243795/
_
--
WARNING: multiple messages have this Message-ID (diff)
From: Paul Menage <menage@google.com>
To: akpm@linuxfoundation.org, balbir@linux.vnet.ibm.com,
"Serge E. Hallyn" <serue@us.ibm.com>,
Cedric Le Goater <clg@fr.ibm.com>,
"Eric W. Biederman" <ebiederm@xmission.com>,
Pavel Emelianov <xemul@openvz.org>,
David Rientjes <rientjes@google.com>,
Vaidyanathan Srinivasan <svaidy@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Cc: Nick Piggin <nickpiggin@yahoo.com.au>,
Peter Zijlstra <a.p.zijlstra@chello.nl>,
pj@sgi.com, containers@lists.osdl.org,
linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org
Subject: [PATCH 20/33] memory controller add documentation
Date: Mon, 17 Sep 2007 14:03:27 -0700 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <20070917210429.361229000@menage.corp.google.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: 20070917210307.116234000@menage.corp.google.com
[-- Attachment #1: memory-controller-add-documentation.patch --]
[-- Type: text/plain, Size: 11025 bytes --]
From: Balbir Singh <balbir@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
(container->cgroup renaming by Paul Menage <menage@google.com>)
Signed-off-by: Balbir Singh <balbir@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Paul Menage <menage@google.com>
---
Documentation/controllers/memory.txt | 259 +++++++++++++++++++++++++
1 files changed, 259 insertions(+)
diff -puN /dev/null Documentation/controllers/memory.txt
--- /dev/null
+++ a/Documentation/controllers/memory.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,259 @@
+Memory Controller
+
+Salient features
+
+a. Enable control of both RSS (mapped) and Page Cache (unmapped) pages
+b. The infrastructure allows easy addition of other types of memory to control
+c. Provides *zero overhead* for non memory controller users
+d. Provides a double LRU: global memory pressure causes reclaim from the
+ global LRU; a cgroup on hitting a limit, reclaims from the per
+ cgroup LRU
+
+NOTE: Page Cache (unmapped) also includes Swap Cache pages as a subset
+and will not be referred to explicitly in the rest of the documentation.
+
+Benefits and Purpose of the memory controller
+
+The memory controller isolates the memory behaviour of a group of tasks
+from the rest of the system. The article on LWN [12] mentions some probable
+uses of the memory controller. The memory controller can be used to
+
+a. Isolate an application or a group of applications
+ Memory hungry applications can be isolated and limited to a smaller
+ amount of memory.
+b. Create a cgroup with limited amount of memory, this can be used
+ as a good alternative to booting with mem=XXXX.
+c. Virtualization solutions can control the amount of memory they want
+ to assign to a virtual machine instance.
+d. A CD/DVD burner could control the amount of memory used by the
+ rest of the system to ensure that burning does not fail due to lack
+ of available memory.
+e. There are several other use cases, find one or use the controller just
+ for fun (to learn and hack on the VM subsystem).
+
+1. History
+
+The memory controller has a long history. A request for comments for the memory
+controller was posted by Balbir Singh [1]. At the time the RFC was posted
+there were several implementations for memory control. The goal of the
+RFC was to build consensus and agreement for the minimal features required
+for memory control. The first RSS controller was posted by Balbir Singh[2]
+in Feb 2007. Pavel Emelianov [3][4][5] has since posted three versions of the
+RSS controller. At OLS, at the resource management BoF, everyone suggested
+that we handle both page cache and RSS together. Another request was raised
+to allow user space handling of OOM. The current memory controller is
+at version 6; it combines both mapped (RSS) and unmapped Page
+Cache Control [11].
+
+2. Memory Control
+
+Memory is a unique resource in the sense that it is present in a limited
+amount. If a task requires a lot of CPU processing, the task can spread
+its processing over a period of hours, days, months or years, but with
+memory, the same physical memory needs to be reused to accomplish the task.
+
+The memory controller implementation has been divided into phases. These
+are:
+
+1. Memory controller
+2. mlock(2) controller
+3. Kernel user memory accounting and slab control
+4. user mappings length controller
+
+The memory controller is the first controller developed.
+
+2.1. Design
+
+The core of the design is a counter called the res_counter. The res_counter
+tracks the current memory usage and limit of the group of processes associated
+with the controller. Each cgroup has a memory controller specific data
+structure (mem_cgroup) associated with it.
+
+2.2. Accounting
+
+ +--------------------+
+ | mem_cgroup |
+ | (res_counter) |
+ +--------------------+
+ / ^ \
+ / | \
+ +---------------+ | +---------------+
+ | mm_struct | |.... | mm_struct |
+ | | | | |
+ +---------------+ | +---------------+
+ |
+ + --------------+
+ |
+ +---------------+ +------+--------+
+ | page +----------> page_cgroup|
+ | | | |
+ +---------------+ +---------------+
+
+ (Figure 1: Hierarchy of Accounting)
+
+
+Figure 1 shows the important aspects of the controller
+
+1. Accounting happens per cgroup
+2. Each mm_struct knows about which cgroup it belongs to
+3. Each page has a pointer to the page_cgroup, which in turn knows the
+ cgroup it belongs to
+
+The accounting is done as follows: mem_cgroup_charge() is invoked to setup
+the necessary data structures and check if the cgroup that is being charged
+is over its limit. If it is then reclaim is invoked on the cgroup.
+More details can be found in the reclaim section of this document.
+If everything goes well, a page meta-data-structure called page_cgroup is
+allocated and associated with the page. This routine also adds the page to
+the per cgroup LRU.
+
+2.2.1 Accounting details
+
+All mapped pages (RSS) and unmapped user pages (Page Cache) are accounted.
+RSS pages are accounted at the time of page_add_*_rmap() unless they've already
+been accounted for earlier. A file page will be accounted for as Page Cache;
+it's mapped into the page tables of a process, duplicate accounting is carefully
+avoided. Page Cache pages are accounted at the time of add_to_page_cache().
+The corresponding routines that remove a page from the page tables or removes
+a page from Page Cache is used to decrement the accounting counters of the
+cgroup.
+
+2.3 Shared Page Accounting
+
+Shared pages are accounted on the basis of the first touch approach. The
+cgroup that first touches a page is accounted for the page. The principle
+behind this approach is that a cgroup that aggressively uses a shared
+page will eventually get charged for it (once it is uncharged from
+the cgroup that brought it in -- this will happen on memory pressure).
+
+2.4 Reclaim
+
+Each cgroup maintains a per cgroup LRU that consists of an active
+and inactive list. When a cgroup goes over its limit, we first try
+to reclaim memory from the cgroup so as to make space for the new
+pages that the cgroup has touched. If the reclaim is unsuccessful,
+an OOM routine is invoked to select and kill the bulkiest task in the
+cgroup.
+
+The reclaim algorithm has not been modified for cgroups, except that
+pages that are selected for reclaiming come from the per cgroup LRU
+list.
+
+2. Locking
+
+The memory controller uses the following hierarchy
+
+1. zone->lru_lock is used for selecting pages to be isolated
+2. mem->lru_lock protects the per cgroup LRU
+3. lock_page_cgroup() is used to protect page->page_cgroup
+
+3. User Interface
+
+0. Configuration
+
+a. Enable CONFIG_CGROUPS
+b. Enable CONFIG_RESOURCE_COUNTERS
+c. Enable CONFIG_CGROUP_MEM_CONT
+
+1. Prepare the cgroups
+# mkdir -p /cgroups
+# mount -t cgroup none /cgroups -o memory
+
+2. Make the new group and move bash into it
+# mkdir /cgroups/0
+# echo $$ > /cgroups/0/tasks
+
+Since now we're in the 0 cgroup,
+We can alter the memory limit:
+# echo -n 6000 > /cgroups/0/memory.limit
+
+We can check the usage:
+# cat /cgroups/0/memory.usage
+25
+
+The memory.failcnt field gives the number of times that the cgroup limit was
+exceeded.
+
+4. Testing
+
+Balbir posted lmbench, AIM9, LTP and vmmstress results [10] and [11].
+Apart from that v6 has been tested with several applications and regular
+daily use. The controller has also been tested on the PPC64, x86_64 and
+UML platforms.
+
+4.1 Troubleshooting
+
+Sometimes a user might find that the application under a cgroup is
+terminated. There are several causes for this:
+
+1. The cgroup limit is too low (just too low to do anything useful)
+2. The user is using anonymous memory and swap is turned off or too low
+
+A sync followed by echo 1 > /proc/sys/vm/drop_caches will help get rid of
+some of the pages cached in the cgroup (page cache pages).
+
+4.2 Task migration
+
+When a task migrates from one cgroup to another, it's charge is not
+carried forward. The pages allocated from the original cgroup still
+remain charged to it, the charge is dropped when the page is freed or
+reclaimed.
+
+4.3 Removing a cgroup
+
+A cgroup can be removed by rmdir, but as discussed in sections 4.1 and 4.2, a
+cgroup might have some charge associated with it, even though all
+tasks have migrated away from it. If some pages are still left, after following
+the steps listed in sections 4.1 and 4.2, check the Swap Cache usage in
+/proc/meminfo to see if the Swap Cache usage is showing up in the
+cgroups memory.usage counter. A simple test of swapoff -a and swapon -a
+should free any pending Swap Cache usage.
+
+4.4 Choosing what to account -- Page Cache (unmapped) vs RSS (mapped)?
+
+The type of memory accounted by the cgroup can be limited to just
+mapped pages by writing "1" to memory.control_type field
+
+echo -n 1 > memory.control_type
+
+5. TODO
+
+1. Add support for accounting huge pages (as a separate controller)
+2. Improve the user interface to accept/display memory limits in KB or MB
+ rather than pages (since page sizes can differ across platforms/machines).
+3. Make cgroup lists per-zone
+4. Make per-cgroup scanner reclaim not-shared pages first
+5. Teach controller to account for shared-pages
+6. Start reclamation when the limit is lowered
+7. Start reclamation in the background when the limit is
+ not yet hit but the usage is getting closer
+8. Create per zone LRU lists per cgroup
+
+Summary
+
+Overall, the memory controller has been a stable controller and has been
+commented and discussed quite extensively in the community.
+
+References
+
+1. Singh, Balbir. RFC: Memory Controller, http://lwn.net/Articles/206697/
+2. Singh, Balbir. Memory Controller (RSS Control),
+ http://lwn.net/Articles/222762/
+3. Emelianov, Pavel. Resource controllers based on process cgroups
+ http://lkml.org/lkml/2007/3/6/198
+4. Emelianov, Pavel. RSS controller based on process cgroups (v2)
+ http://lkml.org/lkml/2007/4/9/74
+5. Emelianov, Pavel. RSS controller based on process cgroups (v3)
+ http://lkml.org/lkml/2007/5/30/244
+6. Menage, Paul. Control Groups v10, http://lwn.net/Articles/236032/
+7. Vaidyanathan, Srinivasan, Control Groups: Pagecache accounting and control
+ subsystem (v3), http://lwn.net/Articles/235534/
+8. Singh, Balbir. RSS controller V2 test results (lmbench),
+ http://lkml.org/lkml/2007/5/17/232
+9. Singh, Balbir. RSS controller V2 AIM9 results
+ http://lkml.org/lkml/2007/5/18/1
+10. Singh, Balbir. Memory controller v6 results,
+ http://lkml.org/lkml/2007/8/19/36
+11. Singh, Balbir. Memory controller v6, http://lkml.org/lkml/2007/8/17/69
+12. Corbet, Jonathan, Controlling memory use in cgroups,
+ http://lwn.net/Articles/243795/
_
--
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2007-09-17 21:03 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 82+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2007-09-17 21:03 [PATCH 00/33] Rename "Task Containers" to "Control Groups" Paul Menage
2007-09-17 21:03 ` Paul Menage
2007-09-17 21:03 ` [PATCH 01/33] task containersv11 basic task container framework Paul Menage
2007-09-17 21:03 ` Paul Menage
2007-09-17 21:03 ` [PATCH 02/33] task containersv11 basic task container framework fix Paul Menage
2007-09-17 21:03 ` Paul Menage
2007-09-17 21:03 ` [PATCH 03/33] task containersv11 add tasks file interface Paul Menage
2007-09-17 21:03 ` Paul Menage
2007-10-03 8:09 ` Paul Jackson
2007-10-03 15:16 ` Paul Menage
2007-10-03 17:51 ` Paul Jackson
2007-10-03 18:15 ` Paul Menage
2007-10-04 2:46 ` Paul Jackson
2007-10-04 2:53 ` Paul Menage
2007-10-04 2:55 ` Paul Jackson
2007-09-17 21:03 ` [PATCH 04/33] task containersv11 add fork exit hooks Paul Menage
2007-09-17 21:03 ` Paul Menage
2007-09-17 21:03 ` [PATCH 05/33] task containersv11 add container_clone interface Paul Menage
2007-09-17 21:03 ` Paul Menage
2007-09-17 21:03 ` [PATCH 06/33] task containersv11 add procfs interface Paul Menage
2007-09-17 21:03 ` Paul Menage
2007-09-17 21:03 ` [PATCH 07/33] task containersv11 shared container subsystem group arrays Paul Menage
2007-09-17 21:03 ` Paul Menage
2007-09-17 21:03 ` [PATCH 08/33] task containersv11 shared container subsystem group arrays avoid lockdep warning Paul Menage
2007-09-17 21:03 ` Paul Menage
2007-09-17 21:03 ` [PATCH 09/33] task containersv11 shared container subsystem group arrays include fix Paul Menage
2007-09-17 21:03 ` Paul Menage
2007-09-17 21:03 ` [PATCH 10/33] task containersv11 automatic userspace notification of idle containers Paul Menage
2007-09-17 21:03 ` Paul Menage
2007-09-17 21:03 ` [PATCH 11/33] task containersv11 make cpusets a client of containers Paul Menage
2007-09-17 21:03 ` Paul Menage
2007-10-04 9:53 ` Paul Jackson
2007-10-04 15:16 ` Paul Menage
2007-10-04 17:31 ` Paul Jackson
[not found] ` <6599ad830710040816p63108ab1vb8547b9600b9e659-JsoAwUIsXosN+BqQ9rBEUg@public.gmane.org>
2007-10-04 17:32 ` Paul Jackson
2007-10-04 17:32 ` Paul Jackson
2007-09-17 21:03 ` [PATCH 12/33] task containersv11 example cpu accounting subsystem Paul Menage
2007-09-17 21:03 ` Paul Menage
2007-09-17 21:03 ` [PATCH 13/33] task containersv11 simple task container debug info subsystem Paul Menage
2007-09-17 21:03 ` Paul Menage
2007-09-17 21:03 ` [PATCH 14/33] task-containersv11-basic-task-container-framework-containers-fix-refcount-bug Paul Menage
2007-09-17 21:03 ` Paul Menage
2007-09-17 21:03 ` [PATCH 15/33] task-containersv11-add-container_clone-interface-cgroups-fix-refcount-bug Paul Menage
2007-09-17 21:03 ` Paul Menage
2007-09-17 21:03 ` [PATCH 16/33] add containerstats v3 Paul Menage
2007-09-17 21:03 ` Paul Menage
2007-09-17 21:03 ` [PATCH 17/33] add containerstats v3 fix Paul Menage
2007-09-17 21:03 ` Paul Menage
2007-09-17 21:03 ` [PATCH 18/33] containers implement namespace tracking subsystem Paul Menage
2007-09-17 21:03 ` Paul Menage
2007-09-17 21:03 ` [PATCH 19/33] containers implement namespace tracking subsystem fix order of container subsystems in init kconfig Paul Menage
2007-09-17 21:03 ` Paul Menage
2007-09-17 21:03 ` Paul Menage [this message]
2007-09-17 21:03 ` [PATCH 20/33] memory controller add documentation Paul Menage
[not found] ` <20070917210429.361229000-B63HFAS8fGlSzHKm+aFRNNkmqwFzkYv6@public.gmane.org>
2007-09-18 16:53 ` Randy Dunlap
2007-09-18 16:53 ` Randy Dunlap
2007-09-17 21:03 ` [PATCH 21/33] memory controller resource counters v7 Paul Menage
2007-09-17 21:03 ` Paul Menage
2007-09-17 21:03 ` [PATCH 22/33] memory controller resource counters v7 fix Paul Menage
2007-09-17 21:03 ` Paul Menage
2007-09-17 21:03 ` [PATCH 23/33] memory controller containers setup v7 Paul Menage
2007-09-17 21:03 ` Paul Menage
2007-09-17 21:03 ` [PATCH 24/33] memory controller accounting " Paul Menage
2007-09-17 21:03 ` Paul Menage
2007-09-17 21:03 ` [PATCH 25/33] memory controller memory accounting v7 Paul Menage
2007-09-17 21:03 ` Paul Menage
2007-09-17 21:03 ` [PATCH 26/33] memory controller task migration v7 Paul Menage
2007-09-17 21:03 ` Paul Menage
2007-09-17 21:03 ` [PATCH 27/33] memory controller add per container lru and reclaim v7 Paul Menage
2007-09-17 21:03 ` Paul Menage
2007-09-17 21:03 ` [PATCH 28/33] memory controller add per container lru and reclaim v7 fix Paul Menage
2007-09-17 21:03 ` Paul Menage
2007-09-17 21:03 ` [PATCH 29/33] memory controller oom handling v7 Paul Menage
2007-09-17 21:03 ` Paul Menage
2007-09-17 21:03 ` [PATCH 30/33] memory controller add switch to control what type of pages to limit v7 Paul Menage
2007-09-17 21:03 ` Paul Menage
2007-09-17 21:03 ` [PATCH 31/33] memory controller make page_referenced container aware v7 Paul Menage
2007-09-17 21:03 ` Paul Menage
2007-09-17 21:03 ` [PATCH 32/33] memory-controller-improve-user-interface Paul Menage
2007-09-17 21:03 ` Paul Menage
2007-09-17 21:03 ` [PATCH 33/33] memory-controller-make-charging-gfp-mask-aware Paul Menage
2007-09-17 21:03 ` Paul Menage
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