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Process Scheduling 國立中正大學 資訊工程研究所 羅習五 老師 1. Outline OS schedulers Unix scheduling Linux scheduling Linux 2.4 scheduler Linux 2.6 scheduler – O(1) scheduler.

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Presentation on theme: "Process Scheduling 國立中正大學 資訊工程研究所 羅習五 老師 1. Outline OS schedulers Unix scheduling Linux scheduling Linux 2.4 scheduler Linux 2.6 scheduler – O(1) scheduler."— Presentation transcript:

1 Process Scheduling 國立中正大學 資訊工程研究所 羅習五 老師 1

2 Outline OS schedulers Unix scheduling Linux scheduling Linux 2.4 scheduler Linux 2.6 scheduler – O(1) scheduler – CFS 2

3 Introduction preemptive & cooperative multitasking A multitasking operating system is one that can simultaneously interleave execution of more than one process. Multitasking operating systems come in two flavors: cooperative multitasking and preemptive multitasking. – Linux provides preemptive multitasking – MAC OS 9 and earlier being the most notable cooperative multitasking. 3

4 UNIX Scheduling Policy Scheduling policy determines what runs when – fast process response time (low latency) – maximal system utilization (high throughput) Processes classification: – I/O-bound processes: spends much of its time submitting and waiting on I/O requests – Processor-bound processes: spend much of their time executing code Unix variants tends to favor I/O-bound processes, thus providing good process response time 4

5 Linux scheduler – Process Priority Linux’s priority-based scheduling – Rank processes based on their worth and need for processor time. – processes with a higher priority also receive a longer timeslice. – Both the user and the system may set a process's priority to influence the scheduling behavior of the system. Dynamic priority-based scheduling – Begins with an initial base priority – Then enables the scheduler to increase or decrease the priority dynamically to fulfill scheduling objectives. – E.g., a process that is spending more time waiting on I/O will receive an elevated dynamic priority. 5

6 Linux scheduler – Priority Ranges Two separate priority ranges. – nice value, from -20 to +19 with a default of 0. Larger nice values correspond to a lower priority. (you are being nice to the other processes on the system). – real-time priority, by default range from 0 to 99. All real-time processes are at a higher priority than normal processes. Linux implements real-time priorities in accordance with POSIX standards on the matter. 6

7 scheduler – priority 7

8 Timeslice The timeslice is the numeric value that represents how long a task can run until it is pre-empted. – too short => large overhead of switching process – too long => poor interactive response Linux’s CFS scheduler does not directly assign timeslices to processes. – CFS assigns processes a proportion of the processor. – the amount of processor time that a process receives is a function of the load of the system 8

9 2.4 SCHEDULER 9

10 2.4 scheduler - SMP run queue 10 busy

11 2.4 scheduler - SMP run queue 11 IDLE search & estimate busy

12 2.4 scheduler - SMP run queue 12 busy

13 2.4 scheduler Non-preemptible kernel – Set p->need_resched if schedule() should be invoked at the ‘next opportunity‘ (kernel => user mode). Round-robin – task_struct->counter: number of clock ticks left to run in this scheduling slice, decremented by a timer. 13

14 2.4 scheduler 1.Check if schedule() was invoked from interrupt handler (due to a bug) and panic if so. 2.Use spin_lock_irq() to lock ‘runqueue_lock’ 3.Check if a task is ‘runnable’ – in TASK_RUNNING state – in TASK_INTERRUPTIBLE state and a signal is pending 4.Examine the ‘goodness’ of each process 5.Context switch 14

15 2.4 scheduler – ‘goodness’ ‘goodness’: identifying the best candidate among all processes in the runqueue list. – ‘goodness’ = 0: the entity has exhausted its quantum. – 0 < ‘goodness’ < 1000: the entity is a conventional process/thread that has not exhausted its quantum; a higher value denotes a higher level of goodness. 15

16 2.4 scheduler – ‘goodness’ (to improve multithreading performance) if (p->mm == prev->mm) return p->counter + p->priority + 1; else return p->counter + p->priority; A small bonus is given to the task p if it shares the address space with the previous task. 16

17 2.4 scheduler - SMP Examine the processor field of the processes and gives a consistent bonus (that is PROC_CHANGE_PENALTY, usually 15) to the process that was last executed on the ‘this_cpu’ CPU. 17

18 Recalculating Timeslices (kernel 2.4) Problems: – Can take a long time. Worse, it scales O(n) for n tasks on the system. – Recalculation must occur under some sort of lock protecting the task list and the individual process descriptors. This results in high lock contention. – Nondeterminism is a problem with deterministic real- time programs. 18

19 Processes classification Definition: – I/O-bound processes: spends much of its time submitting and waiting on I/O requests – Processor-bound processes: spend much of their time executing code Linux tends to favor I/O-bound processes, thus providing good process response time How to classify processes? 19

20 20

21 21 tq=0 Time quantum = 0 (CPU bound) tq ≠ 0 tq =??? Time quantum ≠ 0 I/O bound High priority tasks

22 Scheduling policy 22

23 23 tq=0 tq=? Time quantum = 0 (CPU bound) tq ≠ 0 tq =??? Time quantum ≠ 0 I/O bound

24 24 tq=0 tq=? Time quantum = 0 (CPU bound) tq ≠ 0 tq =??? Time quantum ≠ 0 I/O bound

25 25 tq ≠ 0 tq =??? Time quantum ≠ 0 I/O bound tq=0 tq=? tq ≠ 0

26 2.4 scheduler - performance The algorithm does not scale well – It is inefficient to re-compute all dynamic priorities at once. The predefined quantum is too large for high system loads (for example: a server) I/O-bound process boosting strategy is not optimal – a good strategy to ensure a short response time for interactive programs, but… – some batch programs with almost no user interaction are I/O-bound. 26

27 2.6 SCHEDULER 27

28 2.6 scheduler run queue task migration (put + pull) 28

29 2.6 scheduler – User Preemption User preemption can occur – When returning to user-space from a system call – When returning to user-space from an interrupt handler 29

30 2.6 scheduler – Kernel Preemption The Linux kernel is a fully preemptive kernel. – It is possible to preempt a task at any point, so long as the kernel is in a state in which it is safe to reschedule. – “safe to reschedule”: kernel does not hold a lock The Linux design: – adding of a preemption counter, preempt_count, to each process's thread_info – This count increments once for each lock that is acquired and decrements once for each lock that is released Kernel preemption can also occur explicitly, when a task in the kernel blocks or explicitly calls schedule(). – no additional logic is required to ensure that the kernel is in a state that is safe to preempt! 30

31 Kernel Preemption Kernel preemption can occur – When an interrupt handler exits, before returning to kernel-space – When kernel code becomes preemptible again – If a task in the kernel explicitly calls schedule() – If a task in the kernel blocks (which results in a call to schedule()) 31

32 O(1) & CFS scheduler 2.5 ~ 2.6.22: O(1) scheduler – Time complexity: O(1) – Using “run queue” (an active Q and an expired Q) to realize the ready queue 2.6.23~present: Completely Fair Scheduler (CFS) – Time complexity: O(log n) – the ready queue is implemented as a red-black tree 32

33 2.6 SCHEDULER – O(1) 33

34 O(1) scheduler Implement fully O(1) scheduling. – Every algorithm in the new scheduler completes in constant-time, regardless of the number of running processes. (Since the 2.5 kernel). Implement perfect SMP scalability. – Each processor has its own locking and individual runqueue. Implement improved SMP affinity. – Attempt to group tasks to a specific CPU and continue to run them there. – Only migrate tasks from one CPU to another to resolve imbalances in runqueue sizes. Provide good interactive performance. – Even during considerable system load, the system should react and schedule interactive tasks immediately. Provide fairness. – No process should find itself starved of timeslice for any reasonable amount of time. Likewise, no process should receive an unfairly high amount of timeslice. Optimize for the common case of only one or two runnable processes, yet scale well to multiple processors, each with many processes. 34

35 The Priority Arrays Each runqueue contains two priority arrays (defined in kernel/sched.c as struct prio_array) – Active array: all tasks with timeslice left. – Expired array: all tasks that have exhausted their timeslice. Priority arrays provide O(1) scheduling. – Each priority array contains one queue of runnable processors per priority level. – The priority arrays also contain a priority bitmap used to efficiently discover the highest-priority runnable task in the system. 35

36 The Linux O(1) scheduler algorithm 36

37 The Priority Arrays Each runqueuecontains two priority arrays (defined in kernel/sched.cas struct prio_array) – Active array: all tasks with timesliceleft. – Expired array: all tasks that have exhausted their timeslice. Priority arrays provide O(1) scheduling. – Each priority array contains one queue of runnable processors per priority level. – The priority arrays also contain a priority bitmap used to efficiently discover the highest-priority runnable task in the system. 37

38 runqueue expiredactive Priority queue (0-139)  Each runqueue contains two priority arrays – active and expired.  Each of these priority arrays contains a list of tasks indexed according to priority 38

39 runqueue expiredactive tsk1 tsk2tsk3 Time quantum ≈ 1/priority  Linux assigns higher-priority tasks longer time-slice 39

40 tsk1 runqueue expiredactive tsk2tsk3  Linux chooses the task with the highest priority from the active array for execution. 40

41 runqueue expiredactive tsk2tsk3 Round-robin tsk1 41

42 runqueue expiredactive tsk3tsk2 Round-robin tsk1 42

43 runqueue expiredactive tsk3tsk2 tsk1 43

44 runqueue expiredactive tsk3tsk2 tsk3 dynPrio = staticPrio + bonus bonus = -5 ~ +5 bonus ≈ 1/sleep_time tsk1 I/O bound  Most tasks have dynamic priorities that are based on their “nice” value (static priority) plus or minus 5  Interactivity of a task ≈ 1/sleep_time 44

45 runqueue tsk2 tsk3 tsk1 activeexpired  When all tasks have exhausted their time slices, the two priority arrays are exchanged! 45

46 The O(1) scheduling algorithm 111 sched_find_first_bit() tsk2 tsk3 tsk1 46

47 The O(1) scheduling algorithm Insert O(1) Remove O(1) find first set bit O(1) 111 47

48 find first set bit O(1) static inline unsigned long __ffs (unsigned long word) { int num = 0; #if BITS_PER_LONG == 64 if ((word & 0xffffffff) == 0) { num += 32; word >>= 32; } #endif if ((word & 0xffff) == 0) { num += 16; word >>= 16; } if ((word & 0xff) == 0) { num += 8; word >>= 8; } if ((word & 0xf) == 0) { num += 4; word >>= 4; } if ((word & 0x3) == 0) { num += 2; word >>= 2; } if ((word & 0x1) == 0) num += 1; return num; } 48

49 2.6 SCHEDULER - CFS 49

50 2.6 scheduler – CFS The inventor of the CFS set himself a goal of devising a scheduler capable of the fair devision of available CPU power among all tasks. If one had an ideal multitasking computer capable of concurrent execution on N processes then every process would get exactly 1/N-th of its available CPU power. 50

51 2.6 scheduler – CFS Classical schedulers compute time slices for each process in the system and allow them to run until their time slice/quantum is used up. – After that, all process need to be recalculated. CFS considers only the wait time of a process – The task with the most need for CPU time is scheduled. 51

52 2.6 SCHEDULER - CFS 52

53 2.6 scheduler – CFS The inventor of the CFS set himself a goal of devising a scheduler capable of the fair devision of available CPU power among all tasks. If one had an ideal multitasking computer capable of concurrent execution on N processes then every process would get exactly 1/N-th of its available CPU power. 53

54 2.6 scheduler – CFS Classical schedulers compute time slices for each process in the system and allow them to run until their time slice/quantum is used up. – After that, all process need to be recalculated. CFS considers only the wait time of a process – The task with the most need for CPU time is scheduled. 54

55 2.6 scheduler – CFS 55

56 vruntime The vruntime variable stores the virtual runtime of a process, which is the actual runtime normalized by the number of runnable processes. The virtual runtime’s units are nanoseconds and therefore vruntime is decoupled from the timer tick. The virtual runtime is used to help us approximate the “ideal multitasking processor” that CFS is modeling. 56

57 updating vruntime update_curr() calculates the execution time of the current process and stores that value in delta_exec. It then passes that runtime to __update_curr(), which weights the time by the number of runnable processes. 57

58 Process Selection When CFS is deciding what process to run next, it picks the process with the smallest vruntime. CFS uses a red-black tree to manage the list of runnable processes and efficiently find the process with the smallest vruntime. 58

59 Adding Processes to the Tree This would occur when a process becomes runnable (wakes up) or is first created via fork(). se->vruntime += cfs_rq->min_vruntime; update_curr(cfs_rq); account_entity_enqueue(cfs_rq, se); update_stats_enqueue(cfs_rq, se); __enqueue_entity(cfs_rq, se); 59

60 2.6 scheduler – issues Different priority levels for tasks (i.e., nice values) must be taken into account Tasks must not be switched too often because a context switch has a certain overhead. 60

61 2.6 scheduler – issues 61 time slice is a CPU timeslice that the task deserves, period is the epoch length task_load – the weighted task loading cfs rq load – the weight of the fair queue.

62 Scheduling policies for I/O-bound tasks Every tasks (i.e. i/o-bound tasks) that is waken up gets the virtual runtime equal to the smallest virtual runtime among the tasks in the queue. – OR smallest_virtual - epsilon Run the i/o tasks first 62

63 2.6 scheduler – fields in the task_struct 63

64 2.6 scheduler – fields in the task_struct prio and normal_prio indicate the dynamic priorities, static_prio the static priority of a process. – The static priority is the priority assigned to the process when it was started. – The normal_prio & prio denote a priority that is computed based on the static priority and the scheduling policy of the process. 64

65 2.6 scheduler – fields in the task_struct cpus_allowed is a bit field used on multiprocessor systems to restrict the CPUs on which a process may run. – setaffinity() – getaffinity() 65

66 2.6 scheduler – priority 66

67 2.6 scheduler – priority kernel/sched.c static const int prio_to_weight[40] = { /* -20 */ 88761, 71755, 56483, 46273, 36291, /* -15 */ 29154, 23254, 18705, 14949, 11916, /* -10 */ 9548, 7620, 6100, 4904, 3906, /* -5 */ 3121, 2501, 1991, 1586, 1277, /* 0 */ 1024, 820, 655, 526, 423, /* 5 */ 335, 272, 215, 172, 137, /* 10 */ 110, 87, 70, 56, 45, /* 15 */ 36, 29, 23, 18, 15, }; 67

68 2.6 scheduler – priority 68

69 Summary The concept of OS schedulers Maximize throughput. – This is what system administrators care about. – How to maximize throughput (CPU & I/O). What is the major drawback of Linux 2.4 scheduler To understand the pros and cons of Linux 2.6 schedulers – O(1) – CFS 69

70 期末報告 題目 task scheduling main memory management virtual memory & virtual memory space virtual file system & btrfs interrupt service routine & device drivers virtual machine (software approaches or hardware approaches) 70


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