GoToSocial/vendor/github.com/cilium/ebpf/internal/cpu.go
Daniele Sluijters acc333c40b
[feature] Inherit resource limits from cgroups (#1336)
When GTS is running in a container runtime which has configured CPU or
memory limits or under an init system that uses cgroups to impose CPU
and memory limits the values the Go runtime sees for GOMAXPROCS and
GOMEMLIMIT are still based on the host resources, not the cgroup.

At least for the throttling middlewares which use GOMAXPROCS to
configure their queue size, this can result in GTS running with values
too big compared to the resources that will actuall be available to it.

This introduces 2 dependencies which can pick up resource contraints
from the current cgroup and tune the Go runtime accordingly. This should
result in the different queues being appropriately sized and in general
more predictable performance. These dependencies are a no-op on
non-Linux systems or if running in a cgroup that doesn't set a limit on
CPU or memory.

The automatic tuning of GOMEMLIMIT can be disabled by either explicitly
setting GOMEMLIMIT yourself or by setting AUTOMEMLIMIT=off. The
automatic tuning of GOMAXPROCS can similarly be counteracted by setting
GOMAXPROCS yourself.
2023-01-17 20:59:04 +00:00

63 lines
1.4 KiB
Go

package internal
import (
"fmt"
"io/ioutil"
"strings"
"sync"
)
var sysCPU struct {
once sync.Once
err error
num int
}
// PossibleCPUs returns the max number of CPUs a system may possibly have
// Logical CPU numbers must be of the form 0-n
func PossibleCPUs() (int, error) {
sysCPU.once.Do(func() {
sysCPU.num, sysCPU.err = parseCPUsFromFile("/sys/devices/system/cpu/possible")
})
return sysCPU.num, sysCPU.err
}
func parseCPUsFromFile(path string) (int, error) {
spec, err := ioutil.ReadFile(path)
if err != nil {
return 0, err
}
n, err := parseCPUs(string(spec))
if err != nil {
return 0, fmt.Errorf("can't parse %s: %v", path, err)
}
return n, nil
}
// parseCPUs parses the number of cpus from a string produced
// by bitmap_list_string() in the Linux kernel.
// Multiple ranges are rejected, since they can't be unified
// into a single number.
// This is the format of /sys/devices/system/cpu/possible, it
// is not suitable for /sys/devices/system/cpu/online, etc.
func parseCPUs(spec string) (int, error) {
if strings.Trim(spec, "\n") == "0" {
return 1, nil
}
var low, high int
n, err := fmt.Sscanf(spec, "%d-%d\n", &low, &high)
if n != 2 || err != nil {
return 0, fmt.Errorf("invalid format: %s", spec)
}
if low != 0 {
return 0, fmt.Errorf("CPU spec doesn't start at zero: %s", spec)
}
// cpus is 0 indexed
return high + 1, nil
}