doc: cgroups: Remove unwanted references to systemd

The non-systemd configurations do not create system neither user
control groups.  The title of the diagram referenced systemd too.

Signed-off-by: Miguel Ángel Arruga Vivas <rosen644835@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>
This commit is contained in:
Miguel Ángel Arruga Vivas 2019-11-04 15:55:22 +01:00 committed by Michal Privoznik
parent 98f931de7c
commit ddcb33bdc0

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@ -155,24 +155,17 @@ $ROOT
named <code>$VMNAME.libvirt-{qemu,lxc}</code>. Each consumer is associated
with exactly one partition, which also have a corresponding cgroup usually
named <code>$PARTNAME.partition</code>. The exceptions to this naming rule
are the three top level default partitions, named <code>/system</code> (for
system services), <code>/user</code> (for user login sessions) and
<code>/machine</code> (for virtual machines and containers). By default
every consumer will of course be associated with the <code>/machine</code>
partition.
is the top level default partition for virtual machines and containers
<code>/machine</code>.
</p>
<p>
Given this, a possible systemd cgroups layout involving 3 qemu guests,
Given this, a possible non-systemd cgroups layout involving 3 qemu guests,
3 lxc containers and 2 custom child slices, would be:
</p>
<pre>
$ROOT
|
+- system
| |
| +- libvirtd.service
|
+- machine
|