X-Git-Url: https://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/ucgi/~ianmdlvl/git?a=blobdiff_plain;f=man%2Fsystemd.resource-control.xml;h=a51e600ebb38f9488e8c8495467d15c95eb23412;hb=2ad7561f9f658f8dee168a76654c7d918e2260c7;hp=e923b6da867cf1363a13a725bb8e25174792b157;hpb=5556b5fe41173107a67dbe875fbd916a46e52a02;p=elogind.git
diff --git a/man/systemd.resource-control.xml b/man/systemd.resource-control.xml
index e923b6da8..a51e600eb 100644
--- a/man/systemd.resource-control.xml
+++ b/man/systemd.resource-control.xml
@@ -105,8 +105,11 @@ along with systemd; If not, see .
Turn on CPU usage accounting for this unit. Takes a
boolean argument. Note that turning on CPU accounting for
one unit might also implicitly turn it on for all units
- contained in the same slice and for all its parent slices and
- the units contained therein.
+ contained in the same slice and for all its parent slices
+ and the units contained therein. The system default for this
+ setting maybe controlled with
+ DefaultCPUAccounting= in
+ systemd-system.conf5.
@@ -132,8 +135,10 @@ along with systemd; If not, see .
Turn on process and kernel memory accounting for this
unit. Takes a boolean argument. Note that turning on memory
accounting for one unit might also implicitly turn it on for
- all units contained in the same slice and for all its parent
- slices and the units contained therein.
+ all its parent slices. The system default for this setting
+ maybe controlled with
+ DefaultMemoryAccounting= in
+ systemd-system.conf5.
@@ -164,8 +169,11 @@ along with systemd; If not, see .
Turn on Block IO accounting for this unit. Takes a
boolean argument. Note that turning on block IO accounting
for one unit might also implicitly turn it on for all units
- contained in the same slice and all for its parent slices and
- the units contained therein.
+ contained in the same slice and all for its parent slices
+ and the units contained therein. The system default for this
+ setting maybe controlled with
+ DefaultBlockIOAccounting= in
+ systemd-system.conf5.
@@ -267,12 +275,16 @@ along with systemd; If not, see .
followed by a device group name, as listed in
/proc/devices. The latter is useful to
whitelist all current and future devices belonging to a
- specific device group at once. Examples:
- /dev/sda5 is a path to a device node,
- referring to an ATA or SCSI block
+ specific device group at once. The device group is matched
+ according to file name globbing rules, you may hence use the
+ * and ?
+ wildcards. Examples: /dev/sda5 is a
+ path to a device node, referring to an ATA or SCSI block
device. char-pts and
char-alsa are specifiers for all pseudo
- TTYs and all ALSA sound devices, respectively.
+ TTYs and all ALSA sound devices,
+ respectively. char-cpu/* is a specifier
+ matching all CPU related device groups.