mirror of
https://github.com/ilyakooo0/nixpkgs.git
synced 2024-12-30 23:34:12 +03:00
74 lines
2.8 KiB
XML
74 lines
2.8 KiB
XML
<chapter xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook"
|
||
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
|
||
xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude"
|
||
version="5.0"
|
||
xml:id="sec-cgroups">
|
||
|
||
<title>Control Groups</title>
|
||
|
||
<para>To keep track of the processes in a running system, systemd uses
|
||
<emphasis>control groups</emphasis> (cgroups). A control group is a
|
||
set of processes used to allocate resources such as CPU, memory or I/O
|
||
bandwidth. There can be multiple control group hierarchies, allowing
|
||
each kind of resource to be managed independently.</para>
|
||
|
||
<para>The command <command>systemd-cgls</command> lists all control
|
||
groups in the <literal>systemd</literal> hierarchy, which is what
|
||
systemd uses to keep track of the processes belonging to each service
|
||
or user session:
|
||
|
||
<screen>
|
||
$ systemd-cgls
|
||
├─user
|
||
│ └─eelco
|
||
│ └─c1
|
||
│ ├─ 2567 -:0
|
||
│ ├─ 2682 kdeinit4: kdeinit4 Running...
|
||
│ ├─ <replaceable>...</replaceable>
|
||
│ └─10851 sh -c less -R
|
||
└─system
|
||
├─httpd.service
|
||
│ ├─2444 httpd -f /nix/store/3pyacby5cpr55a03qwbnndizpciwq161-httpd.conf -DNO_DETACH
|
||
│ └─<replaceable>...</replaceable>
|
||
├─dhcpcd.service
|
||
│ └─2376 dhcpcd --config /nix/store/f8dif8dsi2yaa70n03xir8r653776ka6-dhcpcd.conf
|
||
└─ <replaceable>...</replaceable>
|
||
</screen>
|
||
|
||
Similarly, <command>systemd-cgls cpu</command> shows the cgroups in
|
||
the CPU hierarchy, which allows per-cgroup CPU scheduling priorities.
|
||
By default, every systemd service gets its own CPU cgroup, while all
|
||
user sessions are in the top-level CPU cgroup. This ensures, for
|
||
instance, that a thousand run-away processes in the
|
||
<literal>httpd.service</literal> cgroup cannot starve the CPU for one
|
||
process in the <literal>postgresql.service</literal> cgroup. (By
|
||
contrast, it they were in the same cgroup, then the PostgreSQL process
|
||
would get 1/1001 of the cgroup’s CPU time.) You can limit a service’s
|
||
CPU share in <filename>configuration.nix</filename>:
|
||
|
||
<programlisting>
|
||
systemd.services.httpd.serviceConfig.CPUShares = 512;
|
||
</programlisting>
|
||
|
||
By default, every cgroup has 1024 CPU shares, so this will halve the
|
||
CPU allocation of the <literal>httpd.service</literal> cgroup.</para>
|
||
|
||
<para>There also is a <literal>memory</literal> hierarchy that
|
||
controls memory allocation limits; by default, all processes are in
|
||
the top-level cgroup, so any service or session can exhaust all
|
||
available memory. Per-cgroup memory limits can be specified in
|
||
<filename>configuration.nix</filename>; for instance, to limit
|
||
<literal>httpd.service</literal> to 512 MiB of RAM (excluding swap):
|
||
|
||
<programlisting>
|
||
systemd.services.httpd.serviceConfig.MemoryLimit = "512M";
|
||
</programlisting>
|
||
|
||
</para>
|
||
|
||
<para>The command <command>systemd-cgtop</command> shows a
|
||
continuously updated list of all cgroups with their CPU and memory
|
||
usage.</para>
|
||
|
||
</chapter>
|