diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'kernel/cgroup.c')
-rw-r--r-- | kernel/cgroup.c | 22 |
1 files changed, 11 insertions, 11 deletions
diff --git a/kernel/cgroup.c b/kernel/cgroup.c index bcc7a6e8e3c..2c5cccbe12e 100644 --- a/kernel/cgroup.c +++ b/kernel/cgroup.c @@ -489,7 +489,7 @@ static struct css_set *find_css_set( * Any task can increment and decrement the count field without lock. * So in general, code holding cgroup_mutex can't rely on the count * field not changing. However, if the count goes to zero, then only - * attach_task() can increment it again. Because a count of zero + * cgroup_attach_task() can increment it again. Because a count of zero * means that no tasks are currently attached, therefore there is no * way a task attached to that cgroup can fork (the other way to * increment the count). So code holding cgroup_mutex can safely @@ -520,17 +520,17 @@ static struct css_set *find_css_set( * The task_lock() exception * * The need for this exception arises from the action of - * attach_task(), which overwrites one tasks cgroup pointer with + * cgroup_attach_task(), which overwrites one tasks cgroup pointer with * another. It does so using cgroup_mutexe, however there are * several performance critical places that need to reference * task->cgroup without the expense of grabbing a system global * mutex. Therefore except as noted below, when dereferencing or, as - * in attach_task(), modifying a task'ss cgroup pointer we use + * in cgroup_attach_task(), modifying a task'ss cgroup pointer we use * task_lock(), which acts on a spinlock (task->alloc_lock) already in * the task_struct routinely used for such matters. * * P.S. One more locking exception. RCU is used to guard the - * update of a tasks cgroup pointer by attach_task() + * update of a tasks cgroup pointer by cgroup_attach_task() */ /** @@ -1194,7 +1194,7 @@ static void get_first_subsys(const struct cgroup *cgrp, * Call holding cgroup_mutex. May take task_lock of * the task 'pid' during call. */ -static int attach_task(struct cgroup *cgrp, struct task_struct *tsk) +int cgroup_attach_task(struct cgroup *cgrp, struct task_struct *tsk) { int retval = 0; struct cgroup_subsys *ss; @@ -1287,7 +1287,7 @@ static int attach_task_by_pid(struct cgroup *cgrp, char *pidbuf) get_task_struct(tsk); } - ret = attach_task(cgrp, tsk); + ret = cgroup_attach_task(cgrp, tsk); put_task_struct(tsk); return ret; } @@ -2514,7 +2514,7 @@ out: * - Used for /proc/<pid>/cgroup. * - No need to task_lock(tsk) on this tsk->cgroup reference, as it * doesn't really matter if tsk->cgroup changes after we read it, - * and we take cgroup_mutex, keeping attach_task() from changing it + * and we take cgroup_mutex, keeping cgroup_attach_task() from changing it * anyway. No need to check that tsk->cgroup != NULL, thanks to * the_top_cgroup_hack in cgroup_exit(), which sets an exiting tasks * cgroup to top_cgroup. @@ -2625,7 +2625,7 @@ static struct file_operations proc_cgroupstats_operations = { * A pointer to the shared css_set was automatically copied in * fork.c by dup_task_struct(). However, we ignore that copy, since * it was not made under the protection of RCU or cgroup_mutex, so - * might no longer be a valid cgroup pointer. attach_task() might + * might no longer be a valid cgroup pointer. cgroup_attach_task() might * have already changed current->cgroups, allowing the previously * referenced cgroup group to be removed and freed. * @@ -2704,8 +2704,8 @@ void cgroup_post_fork(struct task_struct *child) * attach us to a different cgroup, decrementing the count on * the first cgroup that we never incremented. But in this case, * top_cgroup isn't going away, and either task has PF_EXITING set, - * which wards off any attach_task() attempts, or task is a failed - * fork, never visible to attach_task. + * which wards off any cgroup_attach_task() attempts, or task is a failed + * fork, never visible to cgroup_attach_task. * */ void cgroup_exit(struct task_struct *tsk, int run_callbacks) @@ -2845,7 +2845,7 @@ int cgroup_clone(struct task_struct *tsk, struct cgroup_subsys *subsys) } /* All seems fine. Finish by moving the task into the new cgroup */ - ret = attach_task(child, tsk); + ret = cgroup_attach_task(child, tsk); mutex_unlock(&cgroup_mutex); out_release: |