On Wed, 2006-09-20 at 13:49 -0700, Paul Jackson wrote:
I concur with most of the comments (except as noted below)
> Paul M wrote:
> > Even if the resource control portions aren't totally compatible,
> > having two separate process container abstractions in the kernel is
> > sub-optimal
>
> At heart, CKRM (ne Resource Groups) are (well, have been until now)
> different than cpusets.
>
> Cpusets answers the question 'where', and Resource Groups 'how much'.
>
> The fundamental motivation behind cpusets was to be able to enforce
> job isolation. A job can get dedicated use of specified resources,
> -even- if it means those resources are severely underutilized by that
> job.
>
> The fundamental motivation (Chandra or others correct me if I'm wrong)
> of Resource Groups is to improve capacity utilization while limiting
> starvation due to greedy, competing users for the same resources.
>
> Cpusets seeks maximum isolation. Resource Groups seeks maximum
> capacity utilization while preserving guaranteed levels of quality
> of service.
>
> Cpusets are that wall between you and the neighbor you might not
> trust. Resource groups are a large family of modest wealth sitting
> down to share a meal.
I am thinking hard about how to bring guarantee into this picture :).
>
> It seems that cpusets can mimic memory resource groups. I don't
I am little confused w.r.t how cpuset can mimic memory resource groups.
How can cpuset provide support for over commit.
> see how cpusets could mimic other resource groups. But maybe I'm
> just being a dimm bulb.
>
--
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Chandra Seetharaman | Be careful what you choose....
- [email protected] | .......you may get it.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
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