On Mon, Sep 03, 2012 at 07:46:51PM +0400, Glauber Costa wrote:
> Here is a new attempt to lay down a path that will allow us to deprecate
> the non-hierarchical mode of operation from memcg.  Unlike what I posted
> before, I am making this behavior conditional on a Kconfig option.
> Vanilla users will see no change in behavior unless they don't
> explicitly set this option to on.

There are too many negatives in this sentence - it is not only
unclear, but appears to be incorrect.  I think you should delete
'don't'.

[...]
> --- a/init/Kconfig
> +++ b/init/Kconfig
> @@ -726,6 +726,24 @@ config MEMCG_SWAP
>         if boot option "swapaccount=0" is set, swap will not be accounted.
>         Now, memory usage of swap_cgroup is 2 bytes per entry. If swap page
>         size is 4096bytes, 512k per 1Gbytes of swap.
> +
> +config MEMCG_HIERARCHY_DEFAULT
> +     bool "Hierarchical memcg"
> +     depends on MEMCG
> +     default n
> +     help
> +       The memory controller has two modes of accounting: hierarchical and
> +       flat. Hierarchical accounting will charge pages all the way towards a
> +       group's parent while flat hierarchy will threat all groups as children

typo: 'threat' should be 'treat'

> +       of the root memcg, regardless of their positioning in the tree.
> +
> +       Use of flat hierarchies is highly discouraged, but has been the
> +       default for performance reasons for quite some time. Setting this flag
> +       to on will make hierarchical accounting the default. It is still
> +       possible to set it back to flat by writing 0 to the file
> +       memory.use_hierarchy, albeit discouraged. Distributors are encouraged
> +       to set this option.
[...]

I don't think that 'default n' is effective encouragement!

Ben.

-- 
Ben Hutchings
We get into the habit of living before acquiring the habit of thinking.
                                                              - Albert Camus
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