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Operating Systems Solaris Questions regarding CPU cores vs rctl limit Post 303034890 by Peasant on Thursday 9th of May 2019 01:25:48 AM
Old 05-09-2019
No. You will need to create a pset with wanted cpu cores and alocate that to specific zone or zones to compliant as far as i recall.

Lets say for simplicity you have 10 zones, 1 global zone and 9 zones
9 zones have 1 vcpu share (including global), while 1 zone has 2 vcpu share.

This means that in only in the case of cpu pressure, say 100%, kernel will guarantee each zone 10% of resources (1 cpu share) and one zone (2 cpu shares) will get 20% of cpu resources.
Not cores per se, but compute power using FSS scheduler.

For instance, all zones are mostly idle using total of 10% cpu, any zone will able to use rest of cpu time, as long there is no competition for cpu time.
Only under cpu pressure the scheduler will kick in to alocate time per ratio (1:1:1:1:1:1:1:1:1:2 = 100) to ensure quality of service per shares configuration.

When using psets allocated to zones, a zone will have dedicated cores defined in pset and no other zone will able to use those cores.
And you will be compliant as oracle hard partition, if that didn't change in the meantime...

Hope that helps.
Regards
Peasant.
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CPUSET(3)						   BSD Library Functions Manual 						 CPUSET(3)

NAME
cpuset_create, cpuset_destroy, cpuset_zero, cpuset_set, cpuset_clr, cpuset_isset, cpuset_size -- dynamic CPU sets SYNOPSIS
#include <sched.h> cpuset_t * cpuset_create(void); void cpuset_destroy(cpuset_t *set); void cpuset_zero(cpuset_t *set); int cpuset_set(cpuid_t cpu, cpuset_t *set); int cpuset_clr(cpuid_t cpu, cpuset_t *set); int cpuset_isset(cpuid_t cpu, const cpuset_t *set); size_t cpuset_size(const cpuset_t *set); DESCRIPTION
This section describes the functions used to create, set, use and destroy the dynamic CPU sets. This API can be used with the POSIX threads, see pthread(3) and affinity(3). The ID of the primary CPU in the system is 0. FUNCTIONS
cpuset_create() Allocates and initializes a clean CPU-set. Returns the pointer to the CPU-set, or NULL on failure. cpuset_destroy(set) Destroy the CPU-set specified by set. cpuset_zero(set) Makes the CPU-set specified by set clean, that is, memory is initialized to zero bytes, and none of the CPUs set. cpuset_set(cpu, set) Sets the CPU specified by cpu in set. Returns zero on success, and -1 if cpu is invalid. cpuset_clr(cpu, set) Clears the CPU specified by cpu in the CPU-set set. Returns zero on success, and -1 if cpu is invalid. cpuset_isset(cpu, set) Checks if CPU specified by cpu is set in the CPU-set set. Returns the positive number if set, zero if not set, and -1 if cpu is invalid. cpuset_size(set) Returns the size in bytes of CPU-set specified by set. SEE ALSO
affinity(3), pset(3), sched(3), schedctl(8), kcpuset(9) HISTORY
The dynamic CPU sets appeared in NetBSD 5.0. BSD
November 2, 2011 BSD
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