[Devel] Re: [RFC] [PATCH 0/3] containers: introduction

Serge E. Hallyn serue at us.ibm.com
Fri Jan 12 10:29:24 PST 2007


Quoting Paul Menage (menage at google.com):
> On 1/11/07, Serge E. Hallyn <serue at us.ibm.com> wrote:
> >
> > That's what's holding me back here - I'm still not sure whether
> > to proceed with a separate implementation, proceed with the
> > current implementation of Paul's containers, or wait for an
> > update from Paul responding to your feedback.
> 
> I think that having just a single process-grouping infrastructure in
> the kernel, rather than separate ones for CPUsets, virtual servers,
> BeanCounters, ResGroups, etc, is definitely something we should aim
> for, provided that the requirements for virtual servers aren't too
> different to those for other users.

I agree, so long as "provided requirements aren't too different" is
replaced by "provided there is commonality to be merged." Differences in
lifetime rules and fs behavior could make it pounding a round peg into
a square hole...

> I've been thinking about how the container_clone() function would need
> to work. Essentially, the sequence would be something like the
> following:
> 
> 1) do_fork() or sys_unshare() see that some ns_proxy bits have
> changed, and call container_clone(&nsproxy_subsys)

There will be another possibility.

We were thinking that each container directory would have a file
representing each namespace in the nsproxy.  To enter only a few
namespaces out of an existing namespace container, then, you could
create a directory for a new namespace container, link the namespaces
you want out of other containers, then enter the container (presumably
by doing 'echo (container_path) > /proc/$$/ns_container)'

So in some ways that's actually closer to what you currently have
than the default container creation rules.

> In container_clone():
> 
> 2) Check that the ns_proxy container subsystem was bound to some
> hierarchy; if not, find an unused hierarchy and bind ns_proxy
> subsystem to it. (Or fail with -EBUSY if there are no free container
> subsystems). By the end of this step, ns_proxy is bound to hierarchy
> H.
> 
> 3) Create a new subcontainer of the current process' container in
> hierarchy H. This will involve some VFS manipulation, since normally
> container creation operations are as part of a mkdir operation, but
> shouldn't be too tricky.
> 
> 4) Move the current process (or possibly the new child process in the
> case of do_fork() ) into that container. (This doesn't affect the
> container mappings of the current or child process in any hierarchies
> other than H).
> 
> So in general if you wanted to combine ns_proxy isolation and resource
> isolation, you'd mount an instance of containerfs that bound both the
> ns_proxy subsystem and any resource controllers that you wanted, prior
> to creating any virtual servers.

That does sound useful.

> Alternatively you could have a
> separate hierarchy for the resource controllers and manually move the
> new virtual server's root process into the appropriate resource
> control container.

Boy, I really would like for you and Eric to work out your differences :)
so this could make its way into -mm (or be rejected, but hopefully not).
That would make basing the namespace-fs on your containers much easier...

thanks,
-serge



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