Re: [PATCH] Minor scheduler fix to get rid of skipping in xmms
From: Con Kolivas
Date: Sun Sep 07 2003 - 19:16:05 EST
On Mon, 8 Sep 2003 03:30, John Yau wrote:
> > Its actually more important when you have smaller timeslices, because
> > the interactive task is more likely to use all of its timeslice in a
> > burst of activity, then getting stuck behind all the cpu hogs.
>
> Well, I didn't claim it'd be optimal, I just said that it's not worth the
> extra effort. The interactive task will still finish in
> O((interactive_time / timeslice) * #hogs + interative_time) ms. As long as
> the cpu time interactive tasks require are very short, they still should
> finish within a reasonable amount of time.
>
> > Yes. Also, say 5 hogs running, an interactive task needs to do something
> > taking 2ms. At a 2ms timeslice, it will take 2ms. At a 1ms timeslice it
> > will take 6ms.
>
> That's assuming that the interactive task gets scheduled first. In the
> worst case scenario where it gets scheduled last, at 2 ms, it takes 12 ms
> and at 1 ms it also takes 12 ms. Not much difference there.
Ultra short timeslices would dissolve a lot of the interactivity issues but
come with a serious problem - most cpu caches these days, which are
incredibly valuable to cpu performance, take time to be filled and emptied,
and 1ms timeslices are just too short to use their benefits. The time
required to derive useful benefit depends on the cpu type but can be up to
20ms. In my patches, the most interactive tasks round robin every 10ms which
can cause some detriment to performance, but fortunately interactive tasks
tend not to be as cpu bound as other tasks. What also happens is that if an
interactive task decides to use a burst of cpu it will always be dropped by
at least one priority so the tasks that only ever use small amounts of cpu
(read audio apps) will always go first.
Also O1int as of vO20 round robins them with less frequency as their
interactivity drops, which corresponds quite nicely with how cpu bound they
are, and this maintaints throughput of cpu bound tasks.
Con
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