You can dmesg|grep cgroup to see it works..
Sounds like
rquiss@Karata-Laptop ~ $ dmesg|grep cgroup
Initializing cgroup subsys cpuset
Initializing cgroup subsys cpu
allocated 41943040 bytes of page_cgroup
please try 'cgroup_disable=memory' option if you don't want memory cgroups
Initializing cgroup subsys ns
Initializing cgroup subsys cpuacct
Initializing cgroup subsys memory
Initializing cgroup subsys devices
Initializing cgroup subsys freezer
Initializing cgroup subsys blkio


2011/4/11 Philip Webb <purs...@ca.inter.net>

> I have enabled cgroups in kernel 2.6.38 , but am not sure how they work.
> There's nothing in the docs in  /usr/src/linux
> & a search via 'make menuconfig' shows nothing suggestive.
> Does the kernel automatically set them up once they're enabled
> or does the user have to do something to define them ? -- anyone know ?
>
> --
> ========================,,============================================
> SUPPORT     ___________//___,   Philip Webb
> ELECTRIC   /] [] [] [] [] []|   Cities Centre, University of Toronto
> TRANSIT    `-O----------O---'   purslowatchassdotutorontodotca
>
>
>

Reply via email to