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Date:      Mon, 21 Nov 2011 22:25:36 +0100
From:      Stefan Bethke <stb@lassitu.de>
To:        Adam Vande More <amvandemore@gmail.com>
Cc:        freebsd-hackers@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: Limiting disk I/O by jail or uid?
Message-ID:  <6354F6F2-959D-4451-A434-32C5C7335C25@lassitu.de>
In-Reply-To: <33122B07-5473-4C84-A89D-B4C2F9677BC0@lassitu.de>
References:  <E04BD92A-EFEA-4EB4-BC57-1F07EC040383@lassitu.de> <CA%2BtpaK3J1BCvGLsNZ_LBuYs9ve08UJY=12HH9Ch%2Bb=3wRbqKNg@mail.gmail.com> <CA545615-4337-439F-A8A5-AD7C2B54BC97@lassitu.de> <CA%2BtpaK1utojFPbvCvwQELgyMi2nno6RMc7dCK_3=b_%2Bp24Yy_w@mail.gmail.com> <33122B07-5473-4C84-A89D-B4C2F9677BC0@lassitu.de>

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Am 21.11.2011 um 21:42 schrieb Stefan Bethke:

> Am 21.11.2011 um 21:40 schrieb Adam Vande More:
>=20
>> On Mon, Nov 21, 2011 at 1:58 PM, Stefan Bethke <stb@lassitu.de> =
wrote:
>>=20
>> Interesting, but it doesn't seem to offer limiting the I/O bandwidth =
induced by a process or jail, or assigning different priorities, which =
would need to be implemented in the ZFS or GEOM schedulers, I suppose.
>>=20
>> Limiting CPU has long been the poor man's IO scheduler, and has =
usually worked pretty well for me but has required some trial and error. =
 YMMV=20
>=20
> Good point, I'll give that a try.


Unfortunately, the process I want to limit is not sufficiently CPU bound =
to be limited that way vs. all the other processes.  I guess I'll put in =
a second disk.


Stefan

--=20
Stefan Bethke <stb@lassitu.de>   Fon +49 151 14070811






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