Re: Gang Scheduling in linux

From: Sam Mason (mason@f2s.com)
Date: Wed Jul 17 2002 - 16:24:07 EST


On Thu, Jul 18, 2002 at 10:32:04PM +0200, Ingo Molnar wrote:
>On Wed, 17 Jul 2002, Sam Mason wrote:
>> The important thing to remember is that this isn't a normal scheduling
>> method, it's used for VERY specialised software which is assumed to have
>> (almost) complete control of the machine. [...]
>so how does this differ from a normal Linux system that is used
>exclusively? The specialized tasks will get evenly distributed between
>CPUs (as long as the number of tasks is not higher than the number of
>CPUs), and nothing should interrupt them.

At the moment I can't think of anything, but I'm sure that someone
with a bit of real life experience will show up and prove me wrong.

>> [...] Gang scheduled processes would have the highest priority possible
>> and would get executed before any other processes. This works because
>> the software knows what it's doing and assumes that the user only ran
>> one bit of gang scheduled software, if all of these are valid
>> assumptions everything should work nicely.
>>
>> Thinking about it, if a process just sets itself to be the highest
>> priority and constrains it's self to appropriate processors then it
>> wouldn't surprise me if this was just what you want to do gang
>> scheduled.
>
>yeah. You can schedule processes 'manually' by using affinities - this is
>for corner-cases which know it 100% well what they are doing. But the
>default scheduler should get the '8 tasks running on an 8-way system' case
>right as well - each CPU will run a single number-cruncher, and there wont
>be any bouncing.

I think that would work, I would also assume that the program has
enough knowledge to start only the required number of tasks and
therefore let the scheduler figure out where to put them.
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