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1 .\" Copyright (C) 2014 Michael Kerrisk <mtk.manpages@gmail.com>
2 .\" and Copyright (C) 2014 Peter Zijlstra <peterz@infradead.org>
3 .\" and Copyright (C) 2014 Juri Lelli <juri.lelli@gmail.com>
4 .\" Various pieces from the old sched_setscheduler(2) page
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7 .\" and Copyright (C) 2008 Michael Kerrisk <mtk.manpages@gmail.com>
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30 .\" Worth looking at: http://rt.wiki.kernel.org/index.php
31 .\"
32 .TH SCHED 7 2016-10-08 "Linux" "Linux Programmer's Manual"
33 .SH NAME
34 sched \- overview of CPU scheduling
35 .SH DESCRIPTION
36 Since Linux 2.6.23, the default scheduler is CFS,
37 the "Completely Fair Scheduler".
38 The CFS scheduler replaced the earlier "O(1)" scheduler.
39 .\"
40 .SS API summary
41 Linux provides the following system calls for controlling
42 the CPU scheduling behavior, policy, and priority of processes
43 (or, more precisely, threads).
44 .TP
45 .BR nice (2)
46 Set a new nice value for the calling thread,
47 and return the new nice value.
48 .TP
49 .BR getpriority (2)
50 Return the nice value of a thread, a process group,
51 or the set of threads owned by a specified user.
52 .TP
53 .BR setpriority (2)
54 Set the nice value of a thread, a process group,
55 or the set of threads owned by a specified user.
56 .TP
57 .BR sched_setscheduler (2)
58 Set the scheduling policy and parameters of a specified thread.
59 .TP
60 .BR sched_getscheduler (2)
61 Return the scheduling policy of a specified thread.
62 .TP
63 .BR sched_setparam (2)
64 Set the scheduling parameters of a specified thread.
65 .TP
66 .BR sched_getparam (2)
67 Fetch the scheduling parameters of a specified thread.
68 .TP
69 .BR sched_get_priority_max (2)
70 Return the maximum priority available in a specified scheduling policy.
71 .TP
72 .BR sched_get_priority_min (2)
73 Return the minimum priority available in a specified scheduling policy.
74 .TP
75 .BR sched_rr_get_interval (2)
76 Fetch the quantum used for threads that are scheduled under
77 the "round-robin" scheduling policy.
78 .TP
79 .BR sched_yield (2)
80 Cause the caller to relinquish the CPU,
81 so that some other thread be executed.
82 .TP
83 .BR sched_setaffinity (2)
84 (Linux-specific)
85 Set the CPU affinity of a specified thread.
86 .TP
87 .BR sched_getaffinity (2)
88 (Linux-specific)
89 Get the CPU affinity of a specified thread.
90 .TP
91 .BR sched_setattr (2)
92 Set the scheduling policy and parameters of a specified thread.
93 This (Linux-specific) system call provides a superset of the functionality of
94 .BR sched_setscheduler (2)
95 and
96 .BR sched_setparam (2).
97 .TP
98 .BR sched_getattr (2)
99 Fetch the scheduling policy and parameters of a specified thread.
100 This (Linux-specific) system call provides a superset of the functionality of
101 .BR sched_getscheduler (2)
102 and
103 .BR sched_getparam (2).
104 .\"
105 .SS Scheduling policies
106 The scheduler is the kernel component that decides which runnable thread
107 will be executed by the CPU next.
108 Each thread has an associated scheduling policy and a \fIstatic\fP
109 scheduling priority,
110 .IR sched_priority .
111 The scheduler makes its decisions based on knowledge of the scheduling
112 policy and static priority of all threads on the system.
113
114 For threads scheduled under one of the normal scheduling policies
115 (\fBSCHED_OTHER\fP, \fBSCHED_IDLE\fP, \fBSCHED_BATCH\fP),
116 \fIsched_priority\fP is not used in scheduling
117 decisions (it must be specified as 0).
118
119 Processes scheduled under one of the real-time policies
120 (\fBSCHED_FIFO\fP, \fBSCHED_RR\fP) have a
121 \fIsched_priority\fP value in the range 1 (low) to 99 (high).
122 (As the numbers imply, real-time threads always have higher priority
123 than normal threads.)
124 Note well: POSIX.1 requires an implementation to support only a
125 minimum 32 distinct priority levels for the real-time policies,
126 and some systems supply just this minimum.
127 Portable programs should use
128 .BR sched_get_priority_min (2)
129 and
130 .BR sched_get_priority_max (2)
131 to find the range of priorities supported for a particular policy.
132
133 Conceptually, the scheduler maintains a list of runnable
134 threads for each possible \fIsched_priority\fP value.
135 In order to determine which thread runs next, the scheduler looks for
136 the nonempty list with the highest static priority and selects the
137 thread at the head of this list.
138
139 A thread's scheduling policy determines
140 where it will be inserted into the list of threads
141 with equal static priority and how it will move inside this list.
142
143 All scheduling is preemptive: if a thread with a higher static
144 priority becomes ready to run, the currently running thread
145 will be preempted and
146 returned to the wait list for its static priority level.
147 The scheduling policy determines the
148 ordering only within the list of runnable threads with equal static
149 priority.
150 .SS SCHED_FIFO: First in-first out scheduling
151 \fBSCHED_FIFO\fP can be used only with static priorities higher than
152 0, which means that when a \fBSCHED_FIFO\fP threads becomes runnable,
153 it will always immediately preempt any currently running
154 \fBSCHED_OTHER\fP, \fBSCHED_BATCH\fP, or \fBSCHED_IDLE\fP thread.
155 \fBSCHED_FIFO\fP is a simple scheduling
156 algorithm without time slicing.
157 For threads scheduled under the
158 \fBSCHED_FIFO\fP policy, the following rules apply:
159 .IP * 3
160 A \fBSCHED_FIFO\fP thread that has been preempted by another thread of
161 higher priority will stay at the head of the list for its priority and
162 will resume execution as soon as all threads of higher priority are
163 blocked again.
164 .IP *
165 When a \fBSCHED_FIFO\fP thread becomes runnable, it
166 will be inserted at the end of the list for its priority.
167 .IP *
168 A call to
169 .BR sched_setscheduler (2),
170 .BR sched_setparam (2),
171 or
172 .BR sched_setattr (2)
173 will put the
174 \fBSCHED_FIFO\fP (or \fBSCHED_RR\fP) thread identified by
175 \fIpid\fP at the start of the list if it was runnable.
176 As a consequence, it may preempt the currently running thread if
177 it has the same priority.
178 (POSIX.1 specifies that the thread should go to the end
179 of the list.)
180 .\" In 2.2.x and 2.4.x, the thread is placed at the front of the queue
181 .\" In 2.0.x, the Right Thing happened: the thread went to the back -- MTK
182 .IP *
183 A thread calling
184 .BR sched_yield (2)
185 will be put at the end of the list.
186 .PP
187 No other events will move a thread
188 scheduled under the \fBSCHED_FIFO\fP policy in the wait list of
189 runnable threads with equal static priority.
190
191 A \fBSCHED_FIFO\fP
192 thread runs until either it is blocked by an I/O request, it is
193 preempted by a higher priority thread, or it calls
194 .BR sched_yield (2).
195 .SS SCHED_RR: Round-robin scheduling
196 \fBSCHED_RR\fP is a simple enhancement of \fBSCHED_FIFO\fP.
197 Everything
198 described above for \fBSCHED_FIFO\fP also applies to \fBSCHED_RR\fP,
199 except that each thread is allowed to run only for a maximum time
200 quantum.
201 If a \fBSCHED_RR\fP thread has been running for a time
202 period equal to or longer than the time quantum, it will be put at the
203 end of the list for its priority.
204 A \fBSCHED_RR\fP thread that has
205 been preempted by a higher priority thread and subsequently resumes
206 execution as a running thread will complete the unexpired portion of
207 its round-robin time quantum.
208 The length of the time quantum can be
209 retrieved using
210 .BR sched_rr_get_interval (2).
211 .\" On Linux 2.4, the length of the RR interval is influenced
212 .\" by the process nice value -- MTK
213 .\"
214 .SS SCHED_DEADLINE: Sporadic task model deadline scheduling
215 Since version 3.14, Linux provides a deadline scheduling policy
216 .RB ( SCHED_DEADLINE ).
217 This policy is currently implemented using
218 GEDF (Global Earliest Deadline First)
219 in conjunction with CBS (Constant Bandwidth Server).
220 To set and fetch this policy and associated attributes,
221 one must use the Linux-specific
222 .BR sched_setattr (2)
223 and
224 .BR sched_getattr (2)
225 system calls.
226
227 A sporadic task is one that has a sequence of jobs, where each
228 job is activated at most once per period.
229 Each job also has a
230 .IR "relative deadline" ,
231 before which it should finish execution, and a
232 .IR "computation time" ,
233 which is the CPU time necessary for executing the job.
234 The moment when a task wakes up
235 because a new job has to be executed is called the
236 .IR "arrival time"
237 (also referred to as the request time or release time).
238 The
239 .IR "start time"
240 is the time at which a task starts its execution.
241 The
242 .I "absolute deadline"
243 is thus obtained by adding the relative deadline to the arrival time.
244
245 The following diagram clarifies these terms:
246
247 .in +4n
248 .nf
249 arrival/wakeup absolute deadline
250 | start time |
251 | | |
252 v v v
253 -----x--------xooooooooooooooooo--------x--------x---
254 |<- comp. time ->|
255 |<------- relative deadline ------>|
256 |<-------------- period ------------------->|
257 .fi
258 .in
259
260 When setting a
261 .B SCHED_DEADLINE
262 policy for a thread using
263 .BR sched_setattr (2),
264 one can specify three parameters:
265 .IR Runtime ,
266 .IR Deadline ,
267 and
268 .IR Period .
269 These parameters do not necessarily correspond to the aforementioned terms:
270 usual practice is to set Runtime to something bigger than the average
271 computation time (or worst-case execution time for hard real-time tasks),
272 Deadline to the relative deadline, and Period to the period of the task.
273 Thus, for
274 .BR SCHED_DEADLINE
275 scheduling, we have:
276
277 .in +4n
278 .nf
279 arrival/wakeup absolute deadline
280 | start time |
281 | | |
282 v v v
283 -----x--------xooooooooooooooooo--------x--------x---
284 |<-- Runtime ------->|
285 |<----------- Deadline ----------->|
286 |<-------------- Period ------------------->|
287 .fi
288 .in
289
290 The three deadline-scheduling parameters correspond to the
291 .IR sched_runtime ,
292 .IR sched_deadline ,
293 and
294 .IR sched_period
295 fields of the
296 .I sched_attr
297 structure; see
298 .BR sched_setattr (2).
299 These fields express values in nanoseconds.
300 .\" FIXME It looks as though specifying sched_period as 0 means
301 .\" "make sched_period the same as sched_deadline".
302 .\" This needs to be documented.
303 If
304 .IR sched_period
305 is specified as 0, then it is made the same as
306 .IR sched_deadline .
307
308 The kernel requires that:
309
310 sched_runtime <= sched_deadline <= sched_period
311
312 .\" See __checkparam_dl in kernel/sched/core.c
313 In addition, under the current implementation,
314 all of the parameter values must be at least 1024
315 (i.e., just over one microsecond,
316 which is the resolution of the implementation), and less than 2^63.
317 If any of these checks fails,
318 .BR sched_setattr (2)
319 fails with the error
320 .BR EINVAL .
321
322 The CBS guarantees non-interference between tasks, by throttling
323 threads that attempt to over-run their specified Runtime.
324
325 To ensure deadline scheduling guarantees,
326 the kernel must prevent situations where the set of
327 .B SCHED_DEADLINE
328 threads is not feasible (schedulable) within the given constraints.
329 The kernel thus performs an admittance test when setting or changing
330 .B SCHED_DEADLINE
331 policy and attributes.
332 This admission test calculates whether the change is feasible;
333 if it is not,
334 .BR sched_setattr (2)
335 fails with the error
336 .BR EBUSY .
337
338 For example, it is required (but not necessarily sufficient) for
339 the total utilization to be less than or equal to the total number of
340 CPUs available, where, since each thread can maximally run for
341 Runtime per Period, that thread's utilization is its
342 Runtime divided by its Period.
343
344 In order to fulfill the guarantees that are made when
345 a thread is admitted to the
346 .BR SCHED_DEADLINE
347 policy,
348 .BR SCHED_DEADLINE
349 threads are the highest priority (user controllable) threads in the
350 system; if any
351 .BR SCHED_DEADLINE
352 thread is runnable,
353 it will preempt any thread scheduled under one of the other policies.
354
355 A call to
356 .BR fork (2)
357 by a thread scheduled under the
358 .B SCHED_DEADLINE
359 policy will fail with the error
360 .BR EAGAIN ,
361 unless the thread has its reset-on-fork flag set (see below).
362
363 A
364 .B SCHED_DEADLINE
365 thread that calls
366 .BR sched_yield (2)
367 will yield the current job and wait for a new period to begin.
368 .\"
369 .\" FIXME Calling sched_getparam() on a SCHED_DEADLINE thread
370 .\" fails with EINVAL, but sched_getscheduler() succeeds.
371 .\" Is that intended? (Why?)
372 .\"
373 .SS SCHED_OTHER: Default Linux time-sharing scheduling
374 \fBSCHED_OTHER\fP can be used at only static priority 0
375 (i.e., threads under real-time policies always have priority over
376 .B SCHED_OTHER
377 processes).
378 \fBSCHED_OTHER\fP is the standard Linux time-sharing scheduler that is
379 intended for all threads that do not require the special
380 real-time mechanisms.
381
382 The thread to run is chosen from the static
383 priority 0 list based on a \fIdynamic\fP priority that is determined only
384 inside this list.
385 The dynamic priority is based on the nice value (see below)
386 and is increased for each time quantum the thread is ready to run,
387 but denied to run by the scheduler.
388 This ensures fair progress among all \fBSCHED_OTHER\fP threads.
389 .\"
390 .SS The nice value
391 The nice value is an attribute
392 that can be used to influence the CPU scheduler to
393 favor or disfavor a process in scheduling decisions.
394 It affects the scheduling of
395 .BR SCHED_OTHER
396 and
397 .BR SCHED_BATCH
398 (see below) processes.
399 The nice value can be modified using
400 .BR nice (2),
401 .BR setpriority (2),
402 or
403 .BR sched_setattr (2).
404
405 According to POSIX.1, the nice value is a per-process attribute;
406 that is, the threads in a process should share a nice value.
407 However, on Linux, the nice value is a per-thread attribute:
408 different threads in the same process may have different nice values.
409
410 The range of the nice value
411 varies across UNIX systems.
412 On modern Linux, the range is \-20 (high priority) to +19 (low priority).
413 On some other systems, the range is \-20..20.
414 Very early Linux kernels (Before Linux 2.0) had the range \-infinity..15.
415 .\" Linux before 1.3.36 had \-infinity..15.
416 .\" Since kernel 1.3.43, Linux has the range \-20..19.
417
418 The degree to which the nice value affects the relative scheduling of
419 .BR SCHED_OTHER
420 processes likewise varies across UNIX systems and
421 across Linux kernel versions.
422
423 With the advent of the CFS scheduler in kernel 2.6.23,
424 Linux adopted an algorithm that causes
425 relative differences in nice values to have a much stronger effect.
426 In the current implementation, each unit of difference in the
427 nice values of two processes results in a factor of 1.25
428 in the degree to which the scheduler favors the higher priority process.
429 This causes very low nice values (+19) to truly provide little CPU
430 to a process whenever there is any other
431 higher priority load on the system,
432 and makes high nice values (\-20) deliver most of the CPU to applications
433 that require it (e.g., some audio applications).
434
435 On Linux, the
436 .BR RLIMIT_NICE
437 resource limit can be used to define a limit to which
438 an unprivileged process's nice value can be raised; see
439 .BR setrlimit (2)
440 for details.
441 .\"
442 .SS SCHED_BATCH: Scheduling batch processes
443 (Since Linux 2.6.16.)
444 \fBSCHED_BATCH\fP can be used only at static priority 0.
445 This policy is similar to \fBSCHED_OTHER\fP in that it schedules
446 the thread according to its dynamic priority
447 (based on the nice value).
448 The difference is that this policy
449 will cause the scheduler to always assume
450 that the thread is CPU-intensive.
451 Consequently, the scheduler will apply a small scheduling
452 penalty with respect to wakeup behavior,
453 so that this thread is mildly disfavored in scheduling decisions.
454
455 .\" The following paragraph is drawn largely from the text that
456 .\" accompanied Ingo Molnar's patch for the implementation of
457 .\" SCHED_BATCH.
458 .\" commit b0a9499c3dd50d333e2aedb7e894873c58da3785
459 This policy is useful for workloads that are noninteractive,
460 but do not want to lower their nice value,
461 and for workloads that want a deterministic scheduling policy without
462 interactivity causing extra preemptions (between the workload's tasks).
463 .\"
464 .SS SCHED_IDLE: Scheduling very low priority jobs
465 (Since Linux 2.6.23.)
466 \fBSCHED_IDLE\fP can be used only at static priority 0;
467 the process nice value has no influence for this policy.
468
469 This policy is intended for running jobs at extremely low
470 priority (lower even than a +19 nice value with the
471 .B SCHED_OTHER
472 or
473 .B SCHED_BATCH
474 policies).
475 .\"
476 .SS Resetting scheduling policy for child processes
477 Each thread has a reset-on-fork scheduling flag.
478 When this flag is set, children created by
479 .BR fork (2)
480 do not inherit privileged scheduling policies.
481 The reset-on-fork flag can be set by either:
482 .IP * 3
483 ORing the
484 .B SCHED_RESET_ON_FORK
485 flag into the
486 .I policy
487 argument when calling
488 .BR sched_setscheduler (2)
489 (since Linux 2.6.32);
490 or
491 .IP *
492 specifying the
493 .B SCHED_FLAG_RESET_ON_FORK
494 flag in
495 .IR attr.sched_flags
496 when calling
497 .BR sched_setattr (2).
498 .PP
499 Note that the constants used with these two APIs have different names.
500 The state of the reset-on-fork flag can analogously be retrieved using
501 .BR sched_getscheduler (2)
502 and
503 .BR sched_getattr (2).
504
505 The reset-on-fork feature is intended for media-playback applications,
506 and can be used to prevent applications evading the
507 .BR RLIMIT_RTTIME
508 resource limit (see
509 .BR getrlimit (2))
510 by creating multiple child processes.
511
512 More precisely, if the reset-on-fork flag is set,
513 the following rules apply for subsequently created children:
514 .IP * 3
515 If the calling thread has a scheduling policy of
516 .B SCHED_FIFO
517 or
518 .BR SCHED_RR ,
519 the policy is reset to
520 .BR SCHED_OTHER
521 in child processes.
522 .IP *
523 If the calling process has a negative nice value,
524 the nice value is reset to zero in child processes.
525 .PP
526 After the reset-on-fork flag has been enabled,
527 it can be reset only if the thread has the
528 .BR CAP_SYS_NICE
529 capability.
530 This flag is disabled in child processes created by
531 .BR fork (2).
532 .\"
533 .SS Privileges and resource limits
534 In Linux kernels before 2.6.12, only privileged
535 .RB ( CAP_SYS_NICE )
536 threads can set a nonzero static priority (i.e., set a real-time
537 scheduling policy).
538 The only change that an unprivileged thread can make is to set the
539 .B SCHED_OTHER
540 policy, and this can be done only if the effective user ID of the caller
541 matches the real or effective user ID of the target thread
542 (i.e., the thread specified by
543 .IR pid )
544 whose policy is being changed.
545
546 A thread must be privileged
547 .RB ( CAP_SYS_NICE )
548 in order to set or modify a
549 .BR SCHED_DEADLINE
550 policy.
551
552 Since Linux 2.6.12, the
553 .B RLIMIT_RTPRIO
554 resource limit defines a ceiling on an unprivileged thread's
555 static priority for the
556 .B SCHED_RR
557 and
558 .B SCHED_FIFO
559 policies.
560 The rules for changing scheduling policy and priority are as follows:
561 .IP * 3
562 If an unprivileged thread has a nonzero
563 .B RLIMIT_RTPRIO
564 soft limit, then it can change its scheduling policy and priority,
565 subject to the restriction that the priority cannot be set to a
566 value higher than the maximum of its current priority and its
567 .B RLIMIT_RTPRIO
568 soft limit.
569 .IP *
570 If the
571 .B RLIMIT_RTPRIO
572 soft limit is 0, then the only permitted changes are to lower the priority,
573 or to switch to a non-real-time policy.
574 .IP *
575 Subject to the same rules,
576 another unprivileged thread can also make these changes,
577 as long as the effective user ID of the thread making the change
578 matches the real or effective user ID of the target thread.
579 .IP *
580 Special rules apply for the
581 .BR SCHED_IDLE
582 policy.
583 In Linux kernels before 2.6.39,
584 an unprivileged thread operating under this policy cannot
585 change its policy, regardless of the value of its
586 .BR RLIMIT_RTPRIO
587 resource limit.
588 In Linux kernels since 2.6.39,
589 .\" commit c02aa73b1d18e43cfd79c2f193b225e84ca497c8
590 an unprivileged thread can switch to either the
591 .BR SCHED_BATCH
592 or the
593 .BR SCHED_OTHER
594 policy so long as its nice value falls within the range permitted by its
595 .BR RLIMIT_NICE
596 resource limit (see
597 .BR getrlimit (2)).
598 .PP
599 Privileged
600 .RB ( CAP_SYS_NICE )
601 threads ignore the
602 .B RLIMIT_RTPRIO
603 limit; as with older kernels,
604 they can make arbitrary changes to scheduling policy and priority.
605 See
606 .BR getrlimit (2)
607 for further information on
608 .BR RLIMIT_RTPRIO .
609 .SS Limiting the CPU usage of real-time and deadline processes
610 A nonblocking infinite loop in a thread scheduled under the
611 .BR SCHED_FIFO ,
612 .BR SCHED_RR ,
613 or
614 .BR SCHED_DEADLINE
615 policy can potentially block all other threads from accessing
616 the CPU forever.
617 Prior to Linux 2.6.25, the only way of preventing a runaway real-time
618 process from freezing the system was to run (at the console)
619 a shell scheduled under a higher static priority than the tested application.
620 This allows an emergency kill of tested
621 real-time applications that do not block or terminate as expected.
622
623 Since Linux 2.6.25, there are other techniques for dealing with runaway
624 real-time and deadline processes.
625 One of these is to use the
626 .BR RLIMIT_RTTIME
627 resource limit to set a ceiling on the CPU time that
628 a real-time process may consume.
629 See
630 .BR getrlimit (2)
631 for details.
632
633 Since version 2.6.25, Linux also provides two
634 .I /proc
635 files that can be used to reserve a certain amount of CPU time
636 to be used by non-real-time processes.
637 Reserving CPU time in this fashion allows some CPU time to be
638 allocated to (say) a root shell that can be used to kill a runaway process.
639 Both of these files specify time values in microseconds:
640 .TP
641 .IR /proc/sys/kernel/sched_rt_period_us
642 This file specifies a scheduling period that is equivalent to
643 100% CPU bandwidth.
644 The value in this file can range from 1 to
645 .BR INT_MAX ,
646 giving an operating range of 1 microsecond to around 35 minutes.
647 The default value in this file is 1,000,000 (1 second).
648 .TP
649 .IR /proc/sys/kernel/sched_rt_runtime_us
650 The value in this file specifies how much of the "period" time
651 can be used by all real-time and deadline scheduled processes
652 on the system.
653 The value in this file can range from \-1 to
654 .BR INT_MAX \-1.
655 Specifying \-1 makes the runtime the same as the period;
656 that is, no CPU time is set aside for non-real-time processes
657 (which was the Linux behavior before kernel 2.6.25).
658 The default value in this file is 950,000 (0.95 seconds),
659 meaning that 5% of the CPU time is reserved for processes that
660 don't run under a real-time or deadline scheduling policy.
661 .PP
662 .SS Response time
663 A blocked high priority thread waiting for I/O has a certain
664 response time before it is scheduled again.
665 The device driver writer
666 can greatly reduce this response time by using a "slow interrupt"
667 interrupt handler.
668 .\" as described in
669 .\" .BR request_irq (9).
670 .SS Miscellaneous
671 Child processes inherit the scheduling policy and parameters across a
672 .BR fork (2).
673 The scheduling policy and parameters are preserved across
674 .BR execve (2).
675
676 Memory locking is usually needed for real-time processes to avoid
677 paging delays; this can be done with
678 .BR mlock (2)
679 or
680 .BR mlockall (2).
681 .\"
682 .SS The autogroup feature
683 .\" commit 5091faa449ee0b7d73bc296a93bca9540fc51d0a
684 Since Linux 2.6.38,
685 the kernel provides a feature known as autogrouping to improve interactive
686 desktop performance in the face of multiprocess, CPU-intensive
687 workloads such as building the Linux kernel with large numbers of
688 parallel build processes (i.e., the
689 .BR make (1)
690 .BR \-j
691 flag).
692
693 This feature operates in conjunction with the
694 CFS scheduler and requires a kernel that is configured with
695 .BR CONFIG_SCHED_AUTOGROUP .
696 On a running system, this feature is enabled or disabled via the file
697 .IR /proc/sys/kernel/sched_autogroup_enabled ;
698 a value of 0 disables the feature, while a value of 1 enables it.
699 The default value in this file is 1, unless the kernel was booted with the
700 .IR noautogroup
701 parameter.
702
703 A new autogroup is created created when a new session is created via
704 .BR setsid (2);
705 this happens, for example, when a new terminal window is started.
706 A new process created by
707 .BR fork (2)
708 inherits its parent's autogroup membership.
709 Thus, all of the processes in a session are members of the same autogroup.
710 An autogroup is automatically destroyed when the last process
711 in the group terminates.
712
713 When autogrouping is enabled, all of the members of an autogroup
714 are placed in the same kernel scheduler "task group".
715 The CFS scheduler employs an algorithm that equalizes the
716 distribution of CPU cycles across task groups.
717 The benefits of this for interactive desktop performance
718 can be described via the following example.
719
720 Suppose that there are two autogroups competing for the same CPU.
721 The first group contains ten CPU-bound processes from
722 a kernel build started with
723 .IR "make\ \-j10" .
724 The other contains a single CPU-bound process: a video player.
725 The effect of autogrouping is that the two groups will
726 each receive half of the CPU cycles.
727 That is, the video player will receive 50% of the CPU cycles,
728 rather just 9% of the cycles,
729 which would likely lead to degraded video playback.
730 Or to put things another way:
731 an autogroup that contains a large number of CPU-bound processes
732 does not end up overwhelming the CPU at the expense of the other
733 jobs on the system.
734
735 A process's autogroup (task group) membership can be viewed via the file
736 .IR /proc/[pid]/autogroup :
737
738 .nf
739 .in +4n
740 $ \fBcat /proc/1/autogroup\fP
741 /autogroup-1 nice 0
742 .in
743 .fi
744
745 This file can also be used to modify the CPU bandwidth allocated
746 to an autogroup.
747 This is done by writing a number in the "nice" range to the file
748 to set the autogroup's nice value.
749 The allowed range is from +19 (low priority) to \-20 (high priority),
750 and the setting has the same effect as modifying the nice level via
751 .BR getpriority (2).
752 (For a discussion of the nice value, see
753 .BR getpriority (2).)
754 .\" FIXME .
755 .\" Because of a bug introduced in Linux 4.7
756 .\" (commit 2159197d66770ec01f75c93fb11dc66df81fd45b made changes
757 .\" that exposed the fact that autogroup didn't call scale_load()),
758 .\" it happened that *all* values in this range caused a task group
759 .\" to be further disfavored by the scheduler, with \-20 resulting
760 .\" in the scheduler mildy disfavoring the task group and +19 greatly
761 .\" disfavoring it.
762 .\"
763 .\" A patch was posted on 23 Nov 2016
764 .\" ("sched/autogroup: Fix 64bit kernel nice adjustment";
765 .\" check later to see in which kernel version it lands.
766 .\"
767 .\" FIXME How do the nice value of a process and the nice value of
768 .\" an autogroup interact? Which has priority?
769 .\"
770 .\" It *appears* that the autogroup nice value is used for CPU distribution
771 .\" between task groups, and that the process nice value has no effect there.
772 .\" (I.e., suppose two autogroups each contain a CPU-bound process,
773 .\" with one process having nice==0 and the other having nice==19.
774 .\" It appears that they each get 50% of the CPU.)
775 .\" It appears that the process nice value has effect only with respect to
776 .\" scheduling relative to other processes in the *same* autogroup.
777 .\" Is this correct?
778
779 The use of the
780 .BR cgroups (7)
781 CPU controller overrides the effect of autogrouping.
782
783 The autogroup feature does not group processes
784 that are scheduled under a real-time and deadline policies.
785 Those processes are scheduled according to the rules described earlier.
786 .SH NOTES
787 The
788 .BR cgroups (7)
789 CPU controller can be used to limit the CPU consumption of
790 groups of processes.
791 .PP
792 Originally, Standard Linux was intended as a general-purpose operating
793 system being able to handle background processes, interactive
794 applications, and less demanding real-time applications (applications that
795 need to usually meet timing deadlines).
796 Although the Linux kernel 2.6
797 allowed for kernel preemption and the newly introduced O(1) scheduler
798 ensures that the time needed to schedule is fixed and deterministic
799 irrespective of the number of active tasks, true real-time computing
800 was not possible up to kernel version 2.6.17.
801 .SS Real-time features in the mainline Linux kernel
802 .\" FIXME . Probably this text will need some minor tweaking
803 .\" ask Carsten Emde about this.
804 Since kernel version 2.6.18, Linux is gradually
805 becoming equipped with real-time capabilities,
806 most of which are derived from the former
807 .I realtime-preempt
808 patch set.
809 Until the patches have been completely merged into the
810 mainline kernel,
811 they must be installed to achieve the best real-time performance.
812 These patches are named:
813 .in +4n
814 .nf
815
816 patch-\fIkernelversion\fP-rt\fIpatchversion\fP
817 .fi
818 .in
819 .PP
820 and can be downloaded from
821 .UR http://www.kernel.org\:/pub\:/linux\:/kernel\:/projects\:/rt/
822 .UE .
823
824 Without the patches and prior to their full inclusion into the mainline
825 kernel, the kernel configuration offers only the three preemption classes
826 .BR CONFIG_PREEMPT_NONE ,
827 .BR CONFIG_PREEMPT_VOLUNTARY ,
828 and
829 .B CONFIG_PREEMPT_DESKTOP
830 which respectively provide no, some, and considerable
831 reduction of the worst-case scheduling latency.
832
833 With the patches applied or after their full inclusion into the mainline
834 kernel, the additional configuration item
835 .B CONFIG_PREEMPT_RT
836 becomes available.
837 If this is selected, Linux is transformed into a regular
838 real-time operating system.
839 The FIFO and RR scheduling policies are then used to run a thread
840 with true real-time priority and a minimum worst-case scheduling latency.
841 .SH SEE ALSO
842 .ad l
843 .nh
844 .BR chrt (1),
845 .BR taskset (1),
846 .BR getpriority (2),
847 .BR mlock (2),
848 .BR mlockall (2),
849 .BR munlock (2),
850 .BR munlockall (2),
851 .BR nice (2),
852 .BR sched_get_priority_max (2),
853 .BR sched_get_priority_min (2),
854 .BR sched_getaffinity (2),
855 .BR sched_getparam (2),
856 .BR sched_getscheduler (2),
857 .BR sched_rr_get_interval (2),
858 .BR sched_setaffinity (2),
859 .BR sched_setparam (2),
860 .BR sched_setscheduler (2),
861 .BR sched_yield (2),
862 .BR setpriority (2),
863 .BR pthread_getaffinity_np (3),
864 .BR pthread_setaffinity_np (3),
865 .BR sched_getcpu (3),
866 .BR capabilities (7),
867 .BR cpuset (7)
868 .ad
869 .PP
870 .I Programming for the real world \- POSIX.4
871 by Bill O. Gallmeister, O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., ISBN 1-56592-074-0.
872 .PP
873 The Linux kernel source files
874 .IR Documentation/scheduler/sched-deadline.txt ,
875 .IR Documentation/scheduler/sched-rt-group.txt ,
876 .IR Documentation/scheduler/sched-design-CFS.txt ,
877 and
878 .IR Documentation/scheduler/sched-nice-design.txt