Commit d151a23d authored by Stephen Kitt's avatar Stephen Kitt Committed by Jonathan Corbet
Browse files

docs: clean up sysctl/kernel: titles, version



This cleans up a few titles with extra colons, and removes the
reference to kernel 2.2. The docs don't yet cover *all* of 5.10 or
5.11, but I think they're close enough. Most entries are documented,
and have been checked against current kernels.

Signed-off-by: default avatarStephen Kitt <steve@sk2.org>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20201208074922.30359-1-steve@sk2.org


Signed-off-by: default avatarJonathan Corbet <corbet@lwn.net>
parent 301de546
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+7 −7
Original line number Diff line number Diff line
@@ -14,7 +14,7 @@ For general info and legal blurb, please look in :doc:`index`.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------

This file contains documentation for the sysctl files in
``/proc/sys/kernel/`` and is valid for Linux kernel version 2.2.
``/proc/sys/kernel/``.

The files in this directory can be used to tune and monitor
miscellaneous and general things in the operation of the Linux
@@ -1095,8 +1095,8 @@ Enables/disables scheduler statistics. Enabling this feature
incurs a small amount of overhead in the scheduler but is
useful for debugging and performance tuning.

sched_util_clamp_min:
=====================
sched_util_clamp_min
====================

Max allowed *minimum* utilization.

@@ -1106,8 +1106,8 @@ It means that any requested uclamp.min value cannot be greater than
sched_util_clamp_min, i.e., it is restricted to the range
[0:sched_util_clamp_min].

sched_util_clamp_max:
=====================
sched_util_clamp_max
====================

Max allowed *maximum* utilization.

@@ -1117,8 +1117,8 @@ It means that any requested uclamp.max value cannot be greater than
sched_util_clamp_max, i.e., it is restricted to the range
[0:sched_util_clamp_max].

sched_util_clamp_min_rt_default:
================================
sched_util_clamp_min_rt_default
===============================

By default Linux is tuned for performance. Which means that RT tasks always run
at the highest frequency and most capable (highest capacity) CPU (in