On Sun, 22 Jun 2014 03:04, Stefan Brüns
On Saturday 21 June 2014 19:36:21 Yamaban wrote:
On Sat, 21 Jun 2014 16:37, Stefan Brüns
wrote: On Saturday 21 June 2014 12:53:31 Carlos E. R. wrote:
On 2014-06-21 05:12, Jan Engelhardt wrote: <snip> [sarcasm] Yeah, suuuuper handy. and ohhh sooo weeelll documented. -- NOT ! [/sarcasm]
man systemd.resource-control man systemd.scope man systemd.slice
Eitherway, a tool that allows to limit cpu, disk-io, net-io, and mem in one go is not available in default repo ATM. (e.g. [limit-tool-name] \ -c [cpu-limits:cores,percentage,nice] -d [disk-io-limits] \ -n [net-io-limits] -m [mem-limits] <command and args to run>])
man systemd-run
My rant is pointed to the fact that there is no such tool for easy usage (one tool, one man-page, and done). For that we would need a successor for nice and ionice as shown above. To use systemd in any way, kind, or shape you need to study at least 5 man-pages, 4 blogs, 3 wiki, and be a regular at a in-depth mailing list to accomplish anything that does not blow up into your face at least on the first try. For "systemd-run" you need at least systemd version 209. (found at https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Systemd/User) It is not available prior to that, so OSS 13.1 and prior is out. The information which version of systemd includes which command with what exact ability is very well hidden from casual search. FYI: http://software.opensuse.org/package/systemd still shows: openSUSE Factory official release 44 Base:System 210 Something is "not really right" in generating the "official release" line. - Yamaban.