man: reword StartupCPUShares= description

Now that we have two options described in the same paragraph, we cannot
use singular anymore.
This commit is contained in:
Zbigniew Jędrzejewski-Szmek 2014-05-24 18:02:16 -04:00
parent 68dd0956ef
commit b9acccb3c9
1 changed files with 13 additions and 11 deletions

View File

@ -119,22 +119,24 @@ along with systemd; If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
<listitem>
<para>Assign the specified CPU time share weight to the
processes executed. Takes an integer value. This controls
the <literal>cpu.shares</literal> control group attribute,
which defaults to 1024. For details about this control group
attribute, see <ulink
processes executed. Those options take an integer value and
control the <literal>cpu.shares</literal> control group
attribute, which defaults to 1024. For details about this
control group attribute, see <ulink
url="https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/scheduler/sched-design-CFS.txt">sched-design-CFS.txt</ulink>.
The available CPU time is split up among all units within one
slice relative to their CPU time share weight.</para>
The available CPU time is split up among all units within
one slice relative to their CPU time share weight.</para>
<para>While <varname>StartupCPUShares=</varname> only
applies to the startup phase of the system,
<varname>CPUShares=</varname> applies to the later runtime
of the system, and if the former is not set also to the
startup phase. This allows priorizing specific services at
boot-up differently than during runtime.</para>
<varname>CPUShares=</varname> applies to normal runtime of
the system, and if the former is not set also to the startup
phase. Using <varname>StartupCPUShares=</varname> allows
priorizing specific services at boot-up differently than
during normal runtime.</para>
<para>Implies <literal>CPUAccounting=true</literal>.</para>
<para>Those options imply
<literal>CPUAccounting=true</literal>.</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>