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- // Copyright 2020 The Prometheus Authors
- // Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
- // you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
- // You may obtain a copy of the License at
- //
- // http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
- //
- // Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
- // distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
- // WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
- // See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
- // limitations under the License.
- package procfs
- import (
- "bufio"
- "bytes"
- "fmt"
- "strconv"
- "strings"
- "github.com/prometheus/procfs/internal/util"
- )
- // Cgroup models one line from /proc/[pid]/cgroup. Each Cgroup struct describes the placement of a PID inside a
- // specific control hierarchy. The kernel has two cgroup APIs, v1 and v2. v1 has one hierarchy per available resource
- // controller, while v2 has one unified hierarchy shared by all controllers. Regardless of v1 or v2, all hierarchies
- // contain all running processes, so the question answerable with a Cgroup struct is 'where is this process in
- // this hierarchy' (where==what path on the specific cgroupfs). By prefixing this path with the mount point of
- // *this specific* hierarchy, you can locate the relevant pseudo-files needed to read/set the data for this PID
- // in this hierarchy
- //
- // Also see http://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man7/cgroups.7.html
- type Cgroup struct {
- // HierarchyID that can be matched to a named hierarchy using /proc/cgroups. Cgroups V2 only has one
- // hierarchy, so HierarchyID is always 0. For cgroups v1 this is a unique ID number
- HierarchyID int
- // Controllers using this hierarchy of processes. Controllers are also known as subsystems. For
- // Cgroups V2 this may be empty, as all active controllers use the same hierarchy
- Controllers []string
- // Path of this control group, relative to the mount point of the cgroupfs representing this specific
- // hierarchy
- Path string
- }
- // parseCgroupString parses each line of the /proc/[pid]/cgroup file
- // Line format is hierarchyID:[controller1,controller2]:path.
- func parseCgroupString(cgroupStr string) (*Cgroup, error) {
- var err error
- fields := strings.SplitN(cgroupStr, ":", 3)
- if len(fields) < 3 {
- return nil, fmt.Errorf("%w: 3+ fields required, found %d fields in cgroup string: %s", ErrFileParse, len(fields), cgroupStr)
- }
- cgroup := &Cgroup{
- Path: fields[2],
- Controllers: nil,
- }
- cgroup.HierarchyID, err = strconv.Atoi(fields[0])
- if err != nil {
- return nil, fmt.Errorf("%w: hierarchy ID: %q", ErrFileParse, cgroup.HierarchyID)
- }
- if fields[1] != "" {
- ssNames := strings.Split(fields[1], ",")
- cgroup.Controllers = append(cgroup.Controllers, ssNames...)
- }
- return cgroup, nil
- }
- // parseCgroups reads each line of the /proc/[pid]/cgroup file.
- func parseCgroups(data []byte) ([]Cgroup, error) {
- var cgroups []Cgroup
- scanner := bufio.NewScanner(bytes.NewReader(data))
- for scanner.Scan() {
- mountString := scanner.Text()
- parsedMounts, err := parseCgroupString(mountString)
- if err != nil {
- return nil, err
- }
- cgroups = append(cgroups, *parsedMounts)
- }
- err := scanner.Err()
- return cgroups, err
- }
- // Cgroups reads from /proc/<pid>/cgroups and returns a []*Cgroup struct locating this PID in each process
- // control hierarchy running on this system. On every system (v1 and v2), all hierarchies contain all processes,
- // so the len of the returned struct is equal to the number of active hierarchies on this system.
- func (p Proc) Cgroups() ([]Cgroup, error) {
- data, err := util.ReadFileNoStat(p.path("cgroup"))
- if err != nil {
- return nil, err
- }
- return parseCgroups(data)
- }
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