Re: [PATCH] [request for inclusion] Realtime LSM

From: utz lehmann
Date: Thu Jan 13 2005 - 22:36:33 EST


On Fri, 2005-01-14 at 13:42 +1100, Con Kolivas wrote:
> utz lehmann wrote:
> > On Fri, 2005-01-14 at 13:08 +1100, Con Kolivas wrote:
> >
> >>utz lehmann wrote:
> >>>Just an idea. What about throttling runaway RT tasks?
> >>>If the system spend more than 98% in RT tasks for 5s consider this as a
> >>>_fatal error_. Print an error message and throttle RT tasks by inserting
> >>>ticks where only SCHED_OTHER tasks allowed. For a limit of 98% this
> >>>means one SCHED_OTHER only tick all 50 ticks.
> >>>
> >>>The limit and timeout should be configurable and of course it can be
> >>>disabled.
> >>>
> >>>I know this is against RT task preempt all SCHED_OTHER but this is only
> >>>for a fatal system state to be able to recover sanely. A locked up
> >>>machine is is the worse alternative.
> >>
> >>There is a patch in -mm currently designed to use a sysrq key
> >>combination which converts all real time tasks to sched normal to save
> >>you if you desire in a lockup situation. We do want to preserve RT
> >>scheduling behaviour at all times without caveats for privileged users.
> >
> >
> > The sysrq is already in 2.6.10. I had to use it the last days a few
> > times. But it does help if you have no access to the console.
> >
> > The RT throttling idea is not to change the behavior in normal
> > conditions. It's only for a fatal system state. If you have a runaway RT
> > task you can't guarantee the system is work properly anyway. It's
> > blocking vital kernel threads, filesystems, swap, keyboard, ...
>
> I understand fully your concern. If such a thing were to be introduced
> it would have to be disabled by default. Since I'm looking at
> implementing such throttling for user RT tasks, it should be trivial to
> add it to other RT tasks, and have 100% as the default cpu limit. How
> does that sound?

Sounds good.-)
The kernel should have 100% limit (disable) as default. Users and
distros can change it to a sane value for there needs.


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