table of contents
SCHEDULER(9) | Kernel Developer's Manual | SCHEDULER(9) |
NAME¶
curpriority_cmp
,
maybe_resched
,
resetpriority
, roundrobin
,
roundrobin_interval
,
sched_setup
, schedclock
,
schedcpu
, setrunnable
,
updatepri
— perform
round-robin scheduling of runnable processes
SYNOPSIS¶
#include
<sys/param.h>
#include <sys/proc.h>
int
curpriority_cmp
(struct
proc *p);
void
maybe_resched
(struct
thread *td);
void
propagate_priority
(struct
proc *p);
void
resetpriority
(struct
ksegrp *kg);
void
roundrobin
(void
*arg);
int
roundrobin_interval
(void);
void
sched_setup
(void
*dummy);
void
schedclock
(struct
thread *td);
void
schedcpu
(void
*arg);
void
setrunnable
(struct
thread *td);
void
updatepri
(struct
thread *td);
DESCRIPTION¶
Each process has three different priorities stored in struct proc: p_usrpri, p_nativepri, and p_priority.
The p_usrpri member is the user priority of the process calculated from a process' estimated CPU time and nice level.
The p_nativepri
member is the saved priority used by
propagate_priority
().
When a process obtains a mutex, its priority is saved in
p_nativepri. While it holds the mutex, the process's
priority may be bumped by another process that blocks on the mutex. When the
process releases the mutex, then its priority is restored to the priority
saved in p_nativepri.
The p_priority member is the actual priority of the process and is used to determine what runqueue(9) it runs on, for example.
The
curpriority_cmp
()
function compares the cached priority of the currently running process with
process p. If the currently running process has a
higher priority, then it will return a value less than zero. If the current
process has a lower priority, then it will return a value greater than zero.
If the current process has the same priority as p,
then curpriority_cmp
() will return zero. The cached
priority of the currently running process is updated when a process resumes
from tsleep(9) or returns to userland in
userret
()
and is stored in the private variable curpriority.
The
maybe_resched
()
function compares the priorities of the current thread and
td. If td has a higher priority
than the current thread, then a context switch is needed, and
KEF_NEEDRESCHED
is set.
The
propagate_priority
()
looks at the process that owns the mutex p is blocked
on. That process's priority is bumped to the priority of
p if needed. If the process is currently running, then
the function returns. If the process is on a runqueue(9),
then the process is moved to the appropriate runqueue(9)
for its new priority. If the process is blocked on a mutex, its position in
the list of processes blocked on the mutex in question is updated to reflect
its new priority. Then, the function repeats the procedure using the process
that owns the mutex just encountered. Note that a process's priorities are
only bumped to the priority of the original process p,
not to the priority of the previously encountered process.
The
resetpriority
()
function recomputes the user priority of the ksegrp kg
(stored in kg_user_pri) and calls
maybe_resched
() to force a reschedule of each thread
in the group if needed.
The
roundrobin
()
function is used as a timeout(9) function to force a
reschedule every sched_quantum ticks.
The
roundrobin_interval
()
function simply returns the number of clock ticks in between reschedules
triggered by roundrobin
(). Thus, all it does is
return the current value of sched_quantum.
The
sched_setup
()
function is a SYSINIT(9) that is called to start the
callout driven scheduler functions. It just calls the
roundrobin
() and schedcpu
()
functions for the first time. After the initial call, the two functions will
propagate themselves by registering their callout event again at the
completion of the respective function.
The
schedclock
()
function is called by
statclock
()
to adjust the priority of the currently running thread's ksegrp. It updates
the group's estimated CPU time and then adjusts the priority via
resetpriority
().
The
schedcpu
()
function updates all process priorities. First, it updates statistics that
track how long processes have been in various process states. Secondly, it
updates the estimated CPU time for the current process such that about 90%
of the CPU usage is forgotten in 5 * load average seconds. For example, if
the load average is 2.00, then at least 90% of the estimated CPU time for
the process should be based on the amount of CPU time the process has had in
the last 10 seconds. It then recomputes the priority of the process and
moves it to the appropriate runqueue(9) if necessary.
Thirdly, it updates the %CPU estimate used by utilities such as
ps(1) and top(1) so that 95% of the CPU
usage is forgotten in 60 seconds. Once all process priorities have been
updated, schedcpu
() calls
vmmeter
()
to update various other statistics including the load average. Finally, it
schedules itself to run again in hz clock ticks.
The
setrunnable
()
function is used to change a process's state to be runnable. The process is
placed on a runqueue(9) if needed, and the swapper process
is woken up and told to swap the process in if the process is swapped out.
If the process has been asleep for at least one run of
schedcpu
(), then updatepri
()
is used to adjust the priority of the process.
The
updatepri
()
function is used to adjust the priority of a process that has been asleep.
It retroactively decays the estimated CPU time of the process for each
schedcpu
() event that the process was asleep.
Finally, it calls resetpriority
() to adjust the
priority of the process.
SEE ALSO¶
BUGS¶
The curpriority variable really should be
per-CPU. In addition, maybe_resched
() should compare
the priority of chk with that of each CPU, and then
send an IPI to the processor with the lowest priority to trigger a
reschedule if needed.
Priority propagation is broken and is thus disabled by default. The p_nativepri variable is only updated if a process does not obtain a sleep mutex on the first try. Also, if a process obtains more than one sleep mutex in this manner, and had its priority bumped in between, then p_nativepri will be clobbered.
November 3, 2000 | Debian |