Re: [RFC] Per-thread getrusage

From: Sripathi Kodi
Date: Mon Jan 28 2008 - 03:24:13 EST


Hi Andrew,

On Monday 28 January 2008 11:22, Andrew Morton wrote:
> On Thu, 17 Jan 2008 13:57:05 +0530 Vinay Sridhar
<vinay@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> > Hi All,
> >
> > Last year, there was discussion about per-thread getrusage by
> > adding RUSAGE_THREAD flag to getrusage(). Please refer to the
> > thread http://lkml.org/lkml/2007/4/4/308. Ulrich had suggested that
> > we should design a better user-space API. Specifically, we need a
> > pthread_getrusage interface in the thread library, which accepts
> > pthread_t, converts pthread_t into the corresponding tid and passes
> > it down to the syscall.
> >
> > There are two ways to implement this in the kernel:
> > 1) Introduce an additional parameter 'tid' to sys_getrusage() and
> > put code in glibc to handle getrusage() and pthread_getrusage()
> > calls correctly.
> > 2) Introduce a new system call to handle pthread_getrusage() and
> > leave sys_getrusage() untouched.
> >
> > We implemented the second idea above, simply because it avoids
> > touching any existing code. We have implemented a new syscall,
> > thread_getrusage() and we have exposed pthread_getrusage() API to
> > applications.
> >
> > Could you please share your thoughts on this? Does the approach
> > look alright? The code is hardly complete. It is just a prototype
> > that works on IA32 at the moment.
> >
> > ...
> >
> > +asmlinkage long sys_thread_getrusage(int tid, struct rusage __user
> > *ru);
>
> What happens if `tid' refers to a thread in a different pid
> namespace?

The code was only meant to be a base for discussions. It surely needs
work. Our idea for the final version was to be able to read a thread's
rusage from another thread strictly within the same process. The idea
came from applications that need a cost enforcement mechanism. Having a
mechanism for a thread to read it's own usage is essential. If there is
a way to read other threads' rusage, it is even better.

Does Roland's patch (http://lkml.org/lkml/2008/1/18/589) look good to go
in, provided Ulrich's comment (http://lkml.org/lkml/2008/1/19/15) is
addressed?

Thanks,
Sripathi.
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