systemd.cgroup systemd Developer Lennart Poettering lennart@poettering.net systemd.cgroup 5 systemd.cgroup Cgroup configuration unit settings slice.slice, scope.scope, service.service, socket.socket, mount.mount, swap.swap Description Unit configuration files for services, slices, scopes, sockets, mount points, and swap devices share a subset of configuration options which configure the control group settings for spawned processes. This man page lists the configuration options shared by those six unit types. See systemd.unit5 for the common options of all unit configuration files, and systemd.slice5, systemd.scope5, systemd.service5, systemd.socket5, systemd.mount5, and systemd.swap5 for more information on the specific unit configuration files. The execution-specific configuration options are configured in the [Slice], [Scope], [Service], [Socket], [Mount], or [Swap] sections, depending on the unit type. Options Units of the types listed above can have settings for cgroup configuration: CPUAccounting= Turn on CPU usage accounting for this unit. BlockIOAccounting= Turn on Block IO bandwidth accounting for this unit. MemoryAccounting= Turn on process and kernel memory accounting for this unit. CPUShares=weight Assign the specified overall CPU time share weight to the processes executed. Takes an integer value. This controls the cpu.shares control group attribute, which defaults to 1024. For details about this control group attribute, see sched-design-CFS.txt. Implies CPUAccounting=true. MemoryLimit=bytes MemorySoftLimit=bytes Specify the hard and soft limits on maximum memory usage of the executed processes. The "hard" limit specifies how much process and kernel memory can be used by tasks in this unit, when there is no memory contention. If the kernel detects memory contention, memory reclaim will be performed until the memory usage is within the "soft" limit. Takes a memory size in bytes. If the value is suffixed with K, M, G or T, the specified memory size is parsed as Kilobytes, Megabytes, Gigabytes, or Terabytes (with the base 1024), respectively. This controls the memory.limit_in_bytes and memory.soft_limit_in_bytes control group attributes. For details about these control group attributes, see memory.txt. Implies MemoryAccounting=true. BlockIOWeight=weight Set the default overall block IO weight for the executed processes. Takes a single weight value (between 10 and 1000) to set the default block IO weight. This controls the blkio.weight control group attribute, which defaults to 1000. For details about this control group attribute, see blkio-controller.txt. BlockIODeviceWeight=device weight Set the per-device overall block IO weight for the executed processes. Takes a space-separated pair of a file path and a weight value to specify the device specific weight value, between 10 and 1000. (Example: "/dev/sda 500"). The file path may be specified as path to a block device node or as any other file in which case the backing block device of the file system of the file is determined. This controls the blkio.weight_device control group attribute, which defaults to 1000. Use this option multiple times to set weights for multiple devices. For details about this control group attribute, see blkio-controller.txt. BlockIOReadBandwidth=device bytes BlockIOWriteBandwidth=device bytes Set the per-device overall block IO bandwidth limit for the executed processes. Takes a space-separated pair of a file path and a bandwidth value (in bytes per second) to specify the device specific bandwidth. The file path may be a path to a block device node, or as any other file in which case the backing block device of the file system of the file is used. If the bandwidth is suffixed with K, M, G, or T, the specified bandwidth is parsed as Kilobytes, Megabytes, Gigabytes, or Terabytes, respectively (Example: "/dev/disk/by-path/pci-0000:00:1f.2-scsi-0:0:0:0 5M"). This controls the blkio.read_bps_device and blkio.write_bps_device control group attributes. Use this option multiple times to set bandwidth limits for multiple devices. For details about these control group attributes, see blkio-controller.txt. DeviceAllow= Control access to specific device nodes by the executed processes. Takes two space-separated strings: a device node path (such as /dev/null) followed by a combination of r, w, m to control reading, writing, or creation of the specific device node by the unit (mknod), respectively. This controls the devices.allow and devices.deny control group attributes. For details about these control group attributes, see devices.txt. DevicePolicy=auto|closed|strict Control the policy for allowing device access: means to only allow types of access that are explicitly specified. in addition, allows access to standard pseudo devices including /dev/null, /dev/zero, /dev/full, /dev/random, and /dev/urandom. in addition, allows access to all devices if no explicit DeviceAllow= is present. This is the default. See Also systemd1, systemd.unit5, systemd.service5, systemd.slice5, systemd.scope5, systemd.socket5, systemd.mount5, systemd.swap5, systemd.directives7, The documentation for control groups and specific controllers in the Linux kernel: cgroups.txt, cpuacct.txt, memory.txt, blkio-controller.txt.