sched_setscheduler, sched_getscheduler -
set and get scheduling algorithm/parameters
R sched_setscheduler ()
sets both the scheduling policy and the associated parameters for the
process identified by
pid.
If
pid equals zero, the
scheduler of the calling process will be set.
The interpretation of
the parameter
param depends on the selected policy.
Currently, the
following three scheduling policies are supported under Linux:
R SCHED_FIFO ,
R SCHED_RR ,
R SCHED_OTHER ,
and
R SCHED_BATCH ;
their respective semantics are described below.
R sched_getscheduler ()
queries the scheduling policy currently applied to the process
identified by
pid.
If
pid equals zero, the policy of the
calling process will be retrieved.
Scheduling Policies
The scheduler is the kernel part that decides which runnable process
will be executed by the CPU next.
The Linux scheduler offers three
different scheduling policies, one for normal processes and two for
real-time applications.
A static priority value
sched_priority
is assigned to each process and this value can be changed only via
system calls.
Conceptually, the scheduler maintains a list of runnable
processes for each possible
sched_priority value, and
sched_priority can have a value in the range 0 to 99.
In order
to determine the process that runs next, the Linux scheduler looks for
the non-empty list with the highest static priority and takes the
process at the head of this list.
The scheduling policy determines for
each process, where it will be inserted into the list of processes
with equal static priority and how it will move inside this list.
SCHED_OTHER is the default universal time-sharing scheduler
policy used by most processes.
SCHED_BATCH is intended for "batch" style execution of processes.
SCHED_FIFO and
SCHED_RR are
intended for special time-critical applications that need precise
control over the way in which runnable processes are selected for
execution.
Processes scheduled with
SCHED_OTHER or
SCHED_BATCH
must be assigned the static priority 0.
Processes scheduled under
SCHED_FIFO or
SCHED_RR can have a static priority in the range 1 to 99.
The system calls
sched_get_priority_min(2)
and
sched_get_priority_max(2)
can be used to find out the valid
priority range for a scheduling policy in a portable way on all
POSIX.1-2001 conforming systems.
All scheduling is preemptive: If a process with a higher static
priority gets ready to run, the current process will be preempted and
returned into its wait list.
The scheduling policy only determines the
ordering within the list of runnable processes with equal static
priority.
SCHED_FIFO: First In-First Out scheduling
SCHED_FIFO can only be used with static priorities higher than
0, which means that when a
SCHED_FIFO processes becomes runnable,
it will always immediately preempt any currently running
SCHED_OTHER or
SCHED_BATCH process.
SCHED_FIFO is a simple scheduling
algorithm without time slicing.
For processes scheduled under the
SCHED_FIFO policy, the following rules are applied: A
SCHED_FIFO process that has been preempted by another process of
higher priority will stay at the head of the list for its priority and
will resume execution as soon as all processes of higher priority are
blocked again.
When a
SCHED_FIFO process becomes runnable, it
will be inserted at the end of the list for its priority.
A call to
R sched_setscheduler ()
or
sched_setparam(2)
will put the
SCHED_FIFO (or
SCHED_RR) process identified by
pid at the start of the list if it was runnable.
As a consequence, it may preempt the currently running process if
it has the same priority.
(POSIX.1-2001 specifies that the process should go to the end
of the list.)
A process calling
sched_yield(2)
will be
put at the end of the list.
No other events will move a process
scheduled under the
SCHED_FIFO policy in the wait list of
runnable processes with equal static priority.
A
SCHED_FIFO
process runs until either it is blocked by an I/O request, it is
preempted by a higher priority process, or it calls
sched_yield(2).
SCHED_RR: Round Robin scheduling
SCHED_RR is a simple enhancement of
SCHED_FIFO.
Everything
described above for
SCHED_FIFO also applies to
SCHED_RR,
except that each process is only allowed to run for a maximum time
quantum.
If a
SCHED_RR process has been running for a time
period equal to or longer than the time quantum, it will be put at the
end of the list for its priority.
A
SCHED_RR process that has
been preempted by a higher priority process and subsequently resumes
execution as a running process will complete the unexpired portion of
its round robin time quantum.
The length of the time quantum can be
retrieved using
sched_rr_get_interval(2).
SCHED_OTHER: Default Linux time-sharing scheduling
SCHED_OTHER can only be used at static priority 0.
SCHED_OTHER is the standard Linux time-sharing scheduler that is
intended for all processes that do not require special static priority
real-time mechanisms.
The process to run is chosen from the static
priority 0 list based on a dynamic priority that is determined only
inside this list.
The dynamic priority is based on the nice level (set
by
nice(2)
or
setpriority(2))
and increased for
each time quantum the process is ready to run, but denied to run by
the scheduler.
This ensures fair progress among all
SCHED_OTHER
processes.
SCHED_BATCH: Scheduling batch processes
(Since Linux 2.6.16.)
SCHED_BATCH can only be used at static priority 0.
This policy is similar to
SCHED_OTHER, except that
this policy will cause the scheduler to always assume
that the process is CPU-intensive.
Consequently, the scheduler will apply a small scheduling
penalty so that this process is mildly disfavored in scheduling
decisions.
This policy is useful for workloads that are non-interactive,
but do not want to lower their nice value,
and for workloads that want a deterministic scheduling policy without
interactivity causing extra preemptions (between the workload's tasks).
Privileges and resource limits
In Linux kernels before 2.6.12, only privileged
(CAP_SYS_NICE)
processes can set a non-zero static priority.
The only change that an unprivileged process can make is to set the
SCHED_OTHER
policy, and this can only be done if the effective user ID of the caller of
R sched_setscheduler ()
matches the real or effective user ID of the target process
(i.e., the process specified by
R pid )
whose policy is being changed.
Since Linux 2.6.12, the
RLIMIT_RTPRIO
resource limit defines a ceiling on an unprivileged process's
priority for the
SCHED_RR
and
R SCHED_FIFO
policies.
If an unprivileged process has a non-zero
RLIMIT_RTPRIO
soft limit, then it can change its scheduling policy and priority,
subject to the restriction that the priority cannot be set to a
value higher than the
RLIMIT_RTPRIO
soft limit.
If the
RLIMIT_RTPRIO
soft limit is 0, then the only permitted change is to lower the priority.
Subject to the same rules,
another unprivileged process can also make these changes,
as long as the effective user ID of the process making the change
matches the real or effective user ID of the target process.
See
getrlimit(2)
for further information on
R RLIMIT_RTPRIO .
Privileged
(CAP_SYS_NICE)
processes ignore this limit; as with older kernels,
they can make arbitrary changes to scheduling policy and priority.
Response time
A blocked high priority process waiting for the I/O has a certain
response time before it is scheduled again.
The device driver writer
can greatly reduce this response time by using a "slow interrupt"
interrupt handler.
Miscellaneous
Child processes inherit the scheduling algorithm and parameters across a
fork(2).
The scheduling algorithm and parameters are preserved across
execve(2).
Memory locking is usually needed for real-time processes to avoid
paging delays, this can be done with
mlock(2)
or
mlockall(2).
As a non-blocking end-less loop in a process scheduled under
SCHED_FIFO or
SCHED_RR will block all processes with lower
priority forever, a software developer should always keep available on
the console a shell scheduled under a higher static priority than the
tested application.
This will allow an emergency kill of tested
real-time applications that do not block or terminate as expected.
POSIX systems on which
R sched_setscheduler ()
and
R sched_getscheduler ()
are available define
_POSIX_PRIORITY_SCHEDULING
in
<unistd.h>.
POSIX.1 does not detail the permissions that an unprivileged
process requires in order to call
R sched_setschedule (),
and details vary across systems.
For example, the Solaris 7 manual page says that
the real of effective user ID of the calling process
match the real user ID or the save set-user-ID of the target process.
Standard Linux is a general-purpose operating system
and can handle background processes,
interactive applications, and soft real-time applications
(applications that need to usually meet timing deadlines).
This man page is directed at these kinds of applications.