Guillaume wrote: > The goal of the fork connector is to inform a user space application > that a fork occurs in the kernel. This information (cpu ID, parent PID > and child PID) can be used by several user space applications. It's not > only for accounting. Accounting and fork_connector are two different > things and thus, fork_connector doesn't do the merge of any kinds of > data (and it will never do).
Yes - it is clear that the fork_connector does this - inform user space of fork information <cpu, parent, child>. I'm not saying that fork_connector should merge data; I'm observing that it doesn't, and that this would seem to serve the needs of accounting poorly. Out of curiosity, what are these 'several user space applications?' The only one I know of is this extension to bsd accounting to include capturing parent and child pid at fork. Probably you've mentioned some other uses of fork_connector before here, but I missed it. > The relayfs is done, like Evgeniy said, for large amount of > datas. So I think that it's not suitable for what we want to achieve > with the fork connector. I never claimed that relayfs was appropriate for fork_connector. I'm not trying to tape a rock to Evgeniy's screwdriver. I'm saying that accounting looks like a nail to me, so let us see what rocks and hammers we have in our tool box. -- I won't rest till it's the best ... Programmer, Linux Scalability Paul Jackson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 1.650.933.1373, 1.925.600.0401 - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/