On Monday 09 April 2007 22:39, Mike Galbraith wrote:
> On Mon, 2007-04-09 at 07:38 +0200, Mike Galbraith wrote:
>
> > I don't think you can have very much effect on latency using nice with
> > SD once the CPU is fully utilized. See below.
> >
> > /*
> > * This contains a bitmap for each dynamic priority level with empty slots
> > * for the valid priorities each different nice level can have. It allows
> > * us to stagger the slots where differing priorities run in a way that
> > * keeps latency differences between different nice levels at a minimum.
> > * ie, where 0 means a slot for that priority, priority running from left to
> > * right:
> > * nice -20 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
> > * nice -10 1001000100100010001001000100010010001000
> > * nice 0 0101010101010101010101010101010101010101
> > * nice 5 1101011010110101101011010110101101011011
> > * nice 10 0110111011011101110110111011101101110111
> > * nice 15 0111110111111011111101111101111110111111
> > * nice 19 1111111111111111111011111111111111111111
> > */
> >
> > Nice allocates bandwidth, but as long as the CPU is busy, tasks always
> > proceed downward in priority until they hit the expired array. That's
> > the design.
>
> There's another aspect of this that may require some thought - kernel
> threads. As load increases, so does rotation length. Would you really
> want CPU hogs routinely preempting house-keepers under load?
SD has a schedule batch nice level. This is good for tasks that want lots
of cpu when they can get it. If you overload your cpu I expect the box
to slow down - including kernel threads. If really required they can be
started with a higher priority...
Ed
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