minix/servers/sched/utility.c

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Scheduling server (by Bjorn Swift) In this second phase, scheduling is moved from PM to its own scheduler (see r6557 for phase one). In the next phase we hope to a) include useful information in the "out of quantum" message and b) create some simple scheduling policy that makes use of that information. When the system starts up, PM will iterate over its process table and ask SCHED to take over scheduling unprivileged processes. This is done by sending a SCHEDULING_START message to SCHED. This message includes the processes endpoint, the parent's endpoint and its nice level. The scheduler adds this process to its schedproc table, issues a schedctl, and returns its own endpoint to PM - as the endpoint of the effective scheduler. When a process terminates, a SCHEDULING_STOP message is sent to the scheduler. The reason for this effective endpoint is for future compatibility. Some day, we may have a scheduler that, instead of scheduling the process itself, forwards the SCHEDULING_START message on to another scheduler. PM has information on who schedules whom. As such, scheduling messages from user-land are sent through PM. An example is when processes change their priority, using nice(). In that case, a getsetpriority message is sent to PM, which then sends a SCHEDULING_SET_NICE to the process's effective scheduler. When a process is forked through PM, it inherits its parent's scheduler, but is spawned with an empty quantum. As before, a request to fork a process flows through VM before returning to PM, which then wakes up the child process. This flow has been modified slightly so that PM notifies the scheduler of the new process, before waking up the child process. If the scheduler fails to take over scheduling, the child process is torn down and the fork fails with an erroneous value. Process priority is entirely decided upon using nice levels. PM stores a copy of each process's nice level and when a child is forked, its parent's nice level is sent in the SCHEDULING_START message. How this level is mapped to a priority queue is up to the scheduler. It should be noted that the nice level is used to determine the max_priority and the parent could have been in a lower priority when it was spawned. To prevent a CPU intensive process from hawking the CPU by continuously forking children that get scheduled in the max_priority, the scheduler should determine in which queue the parent is currently scheduled, and schedule the child in that same queue. Other fixes: The USER_Q in kernel/proc.h was incorrectly defined as NR_SCHED_QUEUES/2. That results in a "off by one" error when converting priority->nice->priority for nice=0. This also had the side effect that if someone were to set the MAX_USER_Q to something else than 0, then USER_Q would be off.
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/* This file contains some utility routines for SCHED.
*
* The entry points are:
* no_sys: called for invalid system call numbers
* sched_isokendpt: check the validity of an endpoint
* sched_isemtyendpt check for validity and availability of endpoint slot
* accept_message check whether message is allowed
Scheduling server (by Bjorn Swift) In this second phase, scheduling is moved from PM to its own scheduler (see r6557 for phase one). In the next phase we hope to a) include useful information in the "out of quantum" message and b) create some simple scheduling policy that makes use of that information. When the system starts up, PM will iterate over its process table and ask SCHED to take over scheduling unprivileged processes. This is done by sending a SCHEDULING_START message to SCHED. This message includes the processes endpoint, the parent's endpoint and its nice level. The scheduler adds this process to its schedproc table, issues a schedctl, and returns its own endpoint to PM - as the endpoint of the effective scheduler. When a process terminates, a SCHEDULING_STOP message is sent to the scheduler. The reason for this effective endpoint is for future compatibility. Some day, we may have a scheduler that, instead of scheduling the process itself, forwards the SCHEDULING_START message on to another scheduler. PM has information on who schedules whom. As such, scheduling messages from user-land are sent through PM. An example is when processes change their priority, using nice(). In that case, a getsetpriority message is sent to PM, which then sends a SCHEDULING_SET_NICE to the process's effective scheduler. When a process is forked through PM, it inherits its parent's scheduler, but is spawned with an empty quantum. As before, a request to fork a process flows through VM before returning to PM, which then wakes up the child process. This flow has been modified slightly so that PM notifies the scheduler of the new process, before waking up the child process. If the scheduler fails to take over scheduling, the child process is torn down and the fork fails with an erroneous value. Process priority is entirely decided upon using nice levels. PM stores a copy of each process's nice level and when a child is forked, its parent's nice level is sent in the SCHEDULING_START message. How this level is mapped to a priority queue is up to the scheduler. It should be noted that the nice level is used to determine the max_priority and the parent could have been in a lower priority when it was spawned. To prevent a CPU intensive process from hawking the CPU by continuously forking children that get scheduled in the max_priority, the scheduler should determine in which queue the parent is currently scheduled, and schedule the child in that same queue. Other fixes: The USER_Q in kernel/proc.h was incorrectly defined as NR_SCHED_QUEUES/2. That results in a "off by one" error when converting priority->nice->priority for nice=0. This also had the side effect that if someone were to set the MAX_USER_Q to something else than 0, then USER_Q would be off.
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*/
#include "sched.h"
#include <machine/archtypes.h>
#include <sys/resource.h> /* for PRIO_MAX & PRIO_MIN */
#include "kernel/proc.h" /* for queue constants */
#include "schedproc.h"
/*===========================================================================*
* no_sys *
*===========================================================================*/
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int no_sys(int who_e, int call_nr)
Scheduling server (by Bjorn Swift) In this second phase, scheduling is moved from PM to its own scheduler (see r6557 for phase one). In the next phase we hope to a) include useful information in the "out of quantum" message and b) create some simple scheduling policy that makes use of that information. When the system starts up, PM will iterate over its process table and ask SCHED to take over scheduling unprivileged processes. This is done by sending a SCHEDULING_START message to SCHED. This message includes the processes endpoint, the parent's endpoint and its nice level. The scheduler adds this process to its schedproc table, issues a schedctl, and returns its own endpoint to PM - as the endpoint of the effective scheduler. When a process terminates, a SCHEDULING_STOP message is sent to the scheduler. The reason for this effective endpoint is for future compatibility. Some day, we may have a scheduler that, instead of scheduling the process itself, forwards the SCHEDULING_START message on to another scheduler. PM has information on who schedules whom. As such, scheduling messages from user-land are sent through PM. An example is when processes change their priority, using nice(). In that case, a getsetpriority message is sent to PM, which then sends a SCHEDULING_SET_NICE to the process's effective scheduler. When a process is forked through PM, it inherits its parent's scheduler, but is spawned with an empty quantum. As before, a request to fork a process flows through VM before returning to PM, which then wakes up the child process. This flow has been modified slightly so that PM notifies the scheduler of the new process, before waking up the child process. If the scheduler fails to take over scheduling, the child process is torn down and the fork fails with an erroneous value. Process priority is entirely decided upon using nice levels. PM stores a copy of each process's nice level and when a child is forked, its parent's nice level is sent in the SCHEDULING_START message. How this level is mapped to a priority queue is up to the scheduler. It should be noted that the nice level is used to determine the max_priority and the parent could have been in a lower priority when it was spawned. To prevent a CPU intensive process from hawking the CPU by continuously forking children that get scheduled in the max_priority, the scheduler should determine in which queue the parent is currently scheduled, and schedule the child in that same queue. Other fixes: The USER_Q in kernel/proc.h was incorrectly defined as NR_SCHED_QUEUES/2. That results in a "off by one" error when converting priority->nice->priority for nice=0. This also had the side effect that if someone were to set the MAX_USER_Q to something else than 0, then USER_Q would be off.
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{
/* A system call number not implemented by PM has been requested. */
printf("SCHED: in no_sys, call nr %d from %d\n", call_nr, who_e);
return(ENOSYS);
}
/*===========================================================================*
* sched_isokendpt *
*===========================================================================*/
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int sched_isokendpt(int endpoint, int *proc)
Scheduling server (by Bjorn Swift) In this second phase, scheduling is moved from PM to its own scheduler (see r6557 for phase one). In the next phase we hope to a) include useful information in the "out of quantum" message and b) create some simple scheduling policy that makes use of that information. When the system starts up, PM will iterate over its process table and ask SCHED to take over scheduling unprivileged processes. This is done by sending a SCHEDULING_START message to SCHED. This message includes the processes endpoint, the parent's endpoint and its nice level. The scheduler adds this process to its schedproc table, issues a schedctl, and returns its own endpoint to PM - as the endpoint of the effective scheduler. When a process terminates, a SCHEDULING_STOP message is sent to the scheduler. The reason for this effective endpoint is for future compatibility. Some day, we may have a scheduler that, instead of scheduling the process itself, forwards the SCHEDULING_START message on to another scheduler. PM has information on who schedules whom. As such, scheduling messages from user-land are sent through PM. An example is when processes change their priority, using nice(). In that case, a getsetpriority message is sent to PM, which then sends a SCHEDULING_SET_NICE to the process's effective scheduler. When a process is forked through PM, it inherits its parent's scheduler, but is spawned with an empty quantum. As before, a request to fork a process flows through VM before returning to PM, which then wakes up the child process. This flow has been modified slightly so that PM notifies the scheduler of the new process, before waking up the child process. If the scheduler fails to take over scheduling, the child process is torn down and the fork fails with an erroneous value. Process priority is entirely decided upon using nice levels. PM stores a copy of each process's nice level and when a child is forked, its parent's nice level is sent in the SCHEDULING_START message. How this level is mapped to a priority queue is up to the scheduler. It should be noted that the nice level is used to determine the max_priority and the parent could have been in a lower priority when it was spawned. To prevent a CPU intensive process from hawking the CPU by continuously forking children that get scheduled in the max_priority, the scheduler should determine in which queue the parent is currently scheduled, and schedule the child in that same queue. Other fixes: The USER_Q in kernel/proc.h was incorrectly defined as NR_SCHED_QUEUES/2. That results in a "off by one" error when converting priority->nice->priority for nice=0. This also had the side effect that if someone were to set the MAX_USER_Q to something else than 0, then USER_Q would be off.
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{
*proc = _ENDPOINT_P(endpoint);
if (*proc < 0)
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return (EBADEPT); /* Don't schedule tasks */
Scheduling server (by Bjorn Swift) In this second phase, scheduling is moved from PM to its own scheduler (see r6557 for phase one). In the next phase we hope to a) include useful information in the "out of quantum" message and b) create some simple scheduling policy that makes use of that information. When the system starts up, PM will iterate over its process table and ask SCHED to take over scheduling unprivileged processes. This is done by sending a SCHEDULING_START message to SCHED. This message includes the processes endpoint, the parent's endpoint and its nice level. The scheduler adds this process to its schedproc table, issues a schedctl, and returns its own endpoint to PM - as the endpoint of the effective scheduler. When a process terminates, a SCHEDULING_STOP message is sent to the scheduler. The reason for this effective endpoint is for future compatibility. Some day, we may have a scheduler that, instead of scheduling the process itself, forwards the SCHEDULING_START message on to another scheduler. PM has information on who schedules whom. As such, scheduling messages from user-land are sent through PM. An example is when processes change their priority, using nice(). In that case, a getsetpriority message is sent to PM, which then sends a SCHEDULING_SET_NICE to the process's effective scheduler. When a process is forked through PM, it inherits its parent's scheduler, but is spawned with an empty quantum. As before, a request to fork a process flows through VM before returning to PM, which then wakes up the child process. This flow has been modified slightly so that PM notifies the scheduler of the new process, before waking up the child process. If the scheduler fails to take over scheduling, the child process is torn down and the fork fails with an erroneous value. Process priority is entirely decided upon using nice levels. PM stores a copy of each process's nice level and when a child is forked, its parent's nice level is sent in the SCHEDULING_START message. How this level is mapped to a priority queue is up to the scheduler. It should be noted that the nice level is used to determine the max_priority and the parent could have been in a lower priority when it was spawned. To prevent a CPU intensive process from hawking the CPU by continuously forking children that get scheduled in the max_priority, the scheduler should determine in which queue the parent is currently scheduled, and schedule the child in that same queue. Other fixes: The USER_Q in kernel/proc.h was incorrectly defined as NR_SCHED_QUEUES/2. That results in a "off by one" error when converting priority->nice->priority for nice=0. This also had the side effect that if someone were to set the MAX_USER_Q to something else than 0, then USER_Q would be off.
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if(*proc >= NR_PROCS)
return (EINVAL);
if(endpoint != schedproc[*proc].endpoint)
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return (EDEADEPT);
Scheduling server (by Bjorn Swift) In this second phase, scheduling is moved from PM to its own scheduler (see r6557 for phase one). In the next phase we hope to a) include useful information in the "out of quantum" message and b) create some simple scheduling policy that makes use of that information. When the system starts up, PM will iterate over its process table and ask SCHED to take over scheduling unprivileged processes. This is done by sending a SCHEDULING_START message to SCHED. This message includes the processes endpoint, the parent's endpoint and its nice level. The scheduler adds this process to its schedproc table, issues a schedctl, and returns its own endpoint to PM - as the endpoint of the effective scheduler. When a process terminates, a SCHEDULING_STOP message is sent to the scheduler. The reason for this effective endpoint is for future compatibility. Some day, we may have a scheduler that, instead of scheduling the process itself, forwards the SCHEDULING_START message on to another scheduler. PM has information on who schedules whom. As such, scheduling messages from user-land are sent through PM. An example is when processes change their priority, using nice(). In that case, a getsetpriority message is sent to PM, which then sends a SCHEDULING_SET_NICE to the process's effective scheduler. When a process is forked through PM, it inherits its parent's scheduler, but is spawned with an empty quantum. As before, a request to fork a process flows through VM before returning to PM, which then wakes up the child process. This flow has been modified slightly so that PM notifies the scheduler of the new process, before waking up the child process. If the scheduler fails to take over scheduling, the child process is torn down and the fork fails with an erroneous value. Process priority is entirely decided upon using nice levels. PM stores a copy of each process's nice level and when a child is forked, its parent's nice level is sent in the SCHEDULING_START message. How this level is mapped to a priority queue is up to the scheduler. It should be noted that the nice level is used to determine the max_priority and the parent could have been in a lower priority when it was spawned. To prevent a CPU intensive process from hawking the CPU by continuously forking children that get scheduled in the max_priority, the scheduler should determine in which queue the parent is currently scheduled, and schedule the child in that same queue. Other fixes: The USER_Q in kernel/proc.h was incorrectly defined as NR_SCHED_QUEUES/2. That results in a "off by one" error when converting priority->nice->priority for nice=0. This also had the side effect that if someone were to set the MAX_USER_Q to something else than 0, then USER_Q would be off.
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if(!(schedproc[*proc].flags & IN_USE))
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return (EDEADEPT);
Scheduling server (by Bjorn Swift) In this second phase, scheduling is moved from PM to its own scheduler (see r6557 for phase one). In the next phase we hope to a) include useful information in the "out of quantum" message and b) create some simple scheduling policy that makes use of that information. When the system starts up, PM will iterate over its process table and ask SCHED to take over scheduling unprivileged processes. This is done by sending a SCHEDULING_START message to SCHED. This message includes the processes endpoint, the parent's endpoint and its nice level. The scheduler adds this process to its schedproc table, issues a schedctl, and returns its own endpoint to PM - as the endpoint of the effective scheduler. When a process terminates, a SCHEDULING_STOP message is sent to the scheduler. The reason for this effective endpoint is for future compatibility. Some day, we may have a scheduler that, instead of scheduling the process itself, forwards the SCHEDULING_START message on to another scheduler. PM has information on who schedules whom. As such, scheduling messages from user-land are sent through PM. An example is when processes change their priority, using nice(). In that case, a getsetpriority message is sent to PM, which then sends a SCHEDULING_SET_NICE to the process's effective scheduler. When a process is forked through PM, it inherits its parent's scheduler, but is spawned with an empty quantum. As before, a request to fork a process flows through VM before returning to PM, which then wakes up the child process. This flow has been modified slightly so that PM notifies the scheduler of the new process, before waking up the child process. If the scheduler fails to take over scheduling, the child process is torn down and the fork fails with an erroneous value. Process priority is entirely decided upon using nice levels. PM stores a copy of each process's nice level and when a child is forked, its parent's nice level is sent in the SCHEDULING_START message. How this level is mapped to a priority queue is up to the scheduler. It should be noted that the nice level is used to determine the max_priority and the parent could have been in a lower priority when it was spawned. To prevent a CPU intensive process from hawking the CPU by continuously forking children that get scheduled in the max_priority, the scheduler should determine in which queue the parent is currently scheduled, and schedule the child in that same queue. Other fixes: The USER_Q in kernel/proc.h was incorrectly defined as NR_SCHED_QUEUES/2. That results in a "off by one" error when converting priority->nice->priority for nice=0. This also had the side effect that if someone were to set the MAX_USER_Q to something else than 0, then USER_Q would be off.
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return (OK);
}
/*===========================================================================*
* sched_isemtyendpt *
*===========================================================================*/
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int sched_isemtyendpt(int endpoint, int *proc)
Scheduling server (by Bjorn Swift) In this second phase, scheduling is moved from PM to its own scheduler (see r6557 for phase one). In the next phase we hope to a) include useful information in the "out of quantum" message and b) create some simple scheduling policy that makes use of that information. When the system starts up, PM will iterate over its process table and ask SCHED to take over scheduling unprivileged processes. This is done by sending a SCHEDULING_START message to SCHED. This message includes the processes endpoint, the parent's endpoint and its nice level. The scheduler adds this process to its schedproc table, issues a schedctl, and returns its own endpoint to PM - as the endpoint of the effective scheduler. When a process terminates, a SCHEDULING_STOP message is sent to the scheduler. The reason for this effective endpoint is for future compatibility. Some day, we may have a scheduler that, instead of scheduling the process itself, forwards the SCHEDULING_START message on to another scheduler. PM has information on who schedules whom. As such, scheduling messages from user-land are sent through PM. An example is when processes change their priority, using nice(). In that case, a getsetpriority message is sent to PM, which then sends a SCHEDULING_SET_NICE to the process's effective scheduler. When a process is forked through PM, it inherits its parent's scheduler, but is spawned with an empty quantum. As before, a request to fork a process flows through VM before returning to PM, which then wakes up the child process. This flow has been modified slightly so that PM notifies the scheduler of the new process, before waking up the child process. If the scheduler fails to take over scheduling, the child process is torn down and the fork fails with an erroneous value. Process priority is entirely decided upon using nice levels. PM stores a copy of each process's nice level and when a child is forked, its parent's nice level is sent in the SCHEDULING_START message. How this level is mapped to a priority queue is up to the scheduler. It should be noted that the nice level is used to determine the max_priority and the parent could have been in a lower priority when it was spawned. To prevent a CPU intensive process from hawking the CPU by continuously forking children that get scheduled in the max_priority, the scheduler should determine in which queue the parent is currently scheduled, and schedule the child in that same queue. Other fixes: The USER_Q in kernel/proc.h was incorrectly defined as NR_SCHED_QUEUES/2. That results in a "off by one" error when converting priority->nice->priority for nice=0. This also had the side effect that if someone were to set the MAX_USER_Q to something else than 0, then USER_Q would be off.
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{
*proc = _ENDPOINT_P(endpoint);
if (*proc < 0)
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return (EBADEPT); /* Don't schedule tasks */
Scheduling server (by Bjorn Swift) In this second phase, scheduling is moved from PM to its own scheduler (see r6557 for phase one). In the next phase we hope to a) include useful information in the "out of quantum" message and b) create some simple scheduling policy that makes use of that information. When the system starts up, PM will iterate over its process table and ask SCHED to take over scheduling unprivileged processes. This is done by sending a SCHEDULING_START message to SCHED. This message includes the processes endpoint, the parent's endpoint and its nice level. The scheduler adds this process to its schedproc table, issues a schedctl, and returns its own endpoint to PM - as the endpoint of the effective scheduler. When a process terminates, a SCHEDULING_STOP message is sent to the scheduler. The reason for this effective endpoint is for future compatibility. Some day, we may have a scheduler that, instead of scheduling the process itself, forwards the SCHEDULING_START message on to another scheduler. PM has information on who schedules whom. As such, scheduling messages from user-land are sent through PM. An example is when processes change their priority, using nice(). In that case, a getsetpriority message is sent to PM, which then sends a SCHEDULING_SET_NICE to the process's effective scheduler. When a process is forked through PM, it inherits its parent's scheduler, but is spawned with an empty quantum. As before, a request to fork a process flows through VM before returning to PM, which then wakes up the child process. This flow has been modified slightly so that PM notifies the scheduler of the new process, before waking up the child process. If the scheduler fails to take over scheduling, the child process is torn down and the fork fails with an erroneous value. Process priority is entirely decided upon using nice levels. PM stores a copy of each process's nice level and when a child is forked, its parent's nice level is sent in the SCHEDULING_START message. How this level is mapped to a priority queue is up to the scheduler. It should be noted that the nice level is used to determine the max_priority and the parent could have been in a lower priority when it was spawned. To prevent a CPU intensive process from hawking the CPU by continuously forking children that get scheduled in the max_priority, the scheduler should determine in which queue the parent is currently scheduled, and schedule the child in that same queue. Other fixes: The USER_Q in kernel/proc.h was incorrectly defined as NR_SCHED_QUEUES/2. That results in a "off by one" error when converting priority->nice->priority for nice=0. This also had the side effect that if someone were to set the MAX_USER_Q to something else than 0, then USER_Q would be off.
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if(*proc >= NR_PROCS)
return (EINVAL);
if(schedproc[*proc].flags & IN_USE)
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return (EDEADEPT);
Scheduling server (by Bjorn Swift) In this second phase, scheduling is moved from PM to its own scheduler (see r6557 for phase one). In the next phase we hope to a) include useful information in the "out of quantum" message and b) create some simple scheduling policy that makes use of that information. When the system starts up, PM will iterate over its process table and ask SCHED to take over scheduling unprivileged processes. This is done by sending a SCHEDULING_START message to SCHED. This message includes the processes endpoint, the parent's endpoint and its nice level. The scheduler adds this process to its schedproc table, issues a schedctl, and returns its own endpoint to PM - as the endpoint of the effective scheduler. When a process terminates, a SCHEDULING_STOP message is sent to the scheduler. The reason for this effective endpoint is for future compatibility. Some day, we may have a scheduler that, instead of scheduling the process itself, forwards the SCHEDULING_START message on to another scheduler. PM has information on who schedules whom. As such, scheduling messages from user-land are sent through PM. An example is when processes change their priority, using nice(). In that case, a getsetpriority message is sent to PM, which then sends a SCHEDULING_SET_NICE to the process's effective scheduler. When a process is forked through PM, it inherits its parent's scheduler, but is spawned with an empty quantum. As before, a request to fork a process flows through VM before returning to PM, which then wakes up the child process. This flow has been modified slightly so that PM notifies the scheduler of the new process, before waking up the child process. If the scheduler fails to take over scheduling, the child process is torn down and the fork fails with an erroneous value. Process priority is entirely decided upon using nice levels. PM stores a copy of each process's nice level and when a child is forked, its parent's nice level is sent in the SCHEDULING_START message. How this level is mapped to a priority queue is up to the scheduler. It should be noted that the nice level is used to determine the max_priority and the parent could have been in a lower priority when it was spawned. To prevent a CPU intensive process from hawking the CPU by continuously forking children that get scheduled in the max_priority, the scheduler should determine in which queue the parent is currently scheduled, and schedule the child in that same queue. Other fixes: The USER_Q in kernel/proc.h was incorrectly defined as NR_SCHED_QUEUES/2. That results in a "off by one" error when converting priority->nice->priority for nice=0. This also had the side effect that if someone were to set the MAX_USER_Q to something else than 0, then USER_Q would be off.
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return (OK);
}
/*===========================================================================*
* accept_message *
Scheduling server (by Bjorn Swift) In this second phase, scheduling is moved from PM to its own scheduler (see r6557 for phase one). In the next phase we hope to a) include useful information in the "out of quantum" message and b) create some simple scheduling policy that makes use of that information. When the system starts up, PM will iterate over its process table and ask SCHED to take over scheduling unprivileged processes. This is done by sending a SCHEDULING_START message to SCHED. This message includes the processes endpoint, the parent's endpoint and its nice level. The scheduler adds this process to its schedproc table, issues a schedctl, and returns its own endpoint to PM - as the endpoint of the effective scheduler. When a process terminates, a SCHEDULING_STOP message is sent to the scheduler. The reason for this effective endpoint is for future compatibility. Some day, we may have a scheduler that, instead of scheduling the process itself, forwards the SCHEDULING_START message on to another scheduler. PM has information on who schedules whom. As such, scheduling messages from user-land are sent through PM. An example is when processes change their priority, using nice(). In that case, a getsetpriority message is sent to PM, which then sends a SCHEDULING_SET_NICE to the process's effective scheduler. When a process is forked through PM, it inherits its parent's scheduler, but is spawned with an empty quantum. As before, a request to fork a process flows through VM before returning to PM, which then wakes up the child process. This flow has been modified slightly so that PM notifies the scheduler of the new process, before waking up the child process. If the scheduler fails to take over scheduling, the child process is torn down and the fork fails with an erroneous value. Process priority is entirely decided upon using nice levels. PM stores a copy of each process's nice level and when a child is forked, its parent's nice level is sent in the SCHEDULING_START message. How this level is mapped to a priority queue is up to the scheduler. It should be noted that the nice level is used to determine the max_priority and the parent could have been in a lower priority when it was spawned. To prevent a CPU intensive process from hawking the CPU by continuously forking children that get scheduled in the max_priority, the scheduler should determine in which queue the parent is currently scheduled, and schedule the child in that same queue. Other fixes: The USER_Q in kernel/proc.h was incorrectly defined as NR_SCHED_QUEUES/2. That results in a "off by one" error when converting priority->nice->priority for nice=0. This also had the side effect that if someone were to set the MAX_USER_Q to something else than 0, then USER_Q would be off.
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*===========================================================================*/
2012-03-25 20:25:53 +02:00
int accept_message(message *m_ptr)
Scheduling server (by Bjorn Swift) In this second phase, scheduling is moved from PM to its own scheduler (see r6557 for phase one). In the next phase we hope to a) include useful information in the "out of quantum" message and b) create some simple scheduling policy that makes use of that information. When the system starts up, PM will iterate over its process table and ask SCHED to take over scheduling unprivileged processes. This is done by sending a SCHEDULING_START message to SCHED. This message includes the processes endpoint, the parent's endpoint and its nice level. The scheduler adds this process to its schedproc table, issues a schedctl, and returns its own endpoint to PM - as the endpoint of the effective scheduler. When a process terminates, a SCHEDULING_STOP message is sent to the scheduler. The reason for this effective endpoint is for future compatibility. Some day, we may have a scheduler that, instead of scheduling the process itself, forwards the SCHEDULING_START message on to another scheduler. PM has information on who schedules whom. As such, scheduling messages from user-land are sent through PM. An example is when processes change their priority, using nice(). In that case, a getsetpriority message is sent to PM, which then sends a SCHEDULING_SET_NICE to the process's effective scheduler. When a process is forked through PM, it inherits its parent's scheduler, but is spawned with an empty quantum. As before, a request to fork a process flows through VM before returning to PM, which then wakes up the child process. This flow has been modified slightly so that PM notifies the scheduler of the new process, before waking up the child process. If the scheduler fails to take over scheduling, the child process is torn down and the fork fails with an erroneous value. Process priority is entirely decided upon using nice levels. PM stores a copy of each process's nice level and when a child is forked, its parent's nice level is sent in the SCHEDULING_START message. How this level is mapped to a priority queue is up to the scheduler. It should be noted that the nice level is used to determine the max_priority and the parent could have been in a lower priority when it was spawned. To prevent a CPU intensive process from hawking the CPU by continuously forking children that get scheduled in the max_priority, the scheduler should determine in which queue the parent is currently scheduled, and schedule the child in that same queue. Other fixes: The USER_Q in kernel/proc.h was incorrectly defined as NR_SCHED_QUEUES/2. That results in a "off by one" error when converting priority->nice->priority for nice=0. This also had the side effect that if someone were to set the MAX_USER_Q to something else than 0, then USER_Q would be off.
2010-05-18 15:39:04 +02:00
{
/* accept all messages from PM and RS */
switch (m_ptr->m_source) {
case PM_PROC_NR:
case RS_PROC_NR:
return 1;
Scheduling server (by Bjorn Swift) In this second phase, scheduling is moved from PM to its own scheduler (see r6557 for phase one). In the next phase we hope to a) include useful information in the "out of quantum" message and b) create some simple scheduling policy that makes use of that information. When the system starts up, PM will iterate over its process table and ask SCHED to take over scheduling unprivileged processes. This is done by sending a SCHEDULING_START message to SCHED. This message includes the processes endpoint, the parent's endpoint and its nice level. The scheduler adds this process to its schedproc table, issues a schedctl, and returns its own endpoint to PM - as the endpoint of the effective scheduler. When a process terminates, a SCHEDULING_STOP message is sent to the scheduler. The reason for this effective endpoint is for future compatibility. Some day, we may have a scheduler that, instead of scheduling the process itself, forwards the SCHEDULING_START message on to another scheduler. PM has information on who schedules whom. As such, scheduling messages from user-land are sent through PM. An example is when processes change their priority, using nice(). In that case, a getsetpriority message is sent to PM, which then sends a SCHEDULING_SET_NICE to the process's effective scheduler. When a process is forked through PM, it inherits its parent's scheduler, but is spawned with an empty quantum. As before, a request to fork a process flows through VM before returning to PM, which then wakes up the child process. This flow has been modified slightly so that PM notifies the scheduler of the new process, before waking up the child process. If the scheduler fails to take over scheduling, the child process is torn down and the fork fails with an erroneous value. Process priority is entirely decided upon using nice levels. PM stores a copy of each process's nice level and when a child is forked, its parent's nice level is sent in the SCHEDULING_START message. How this level is mapped to a priority queue is up to the scheduler. It should be noted that the nice level is used to determine the max_priority and the parent could have been in a lower priority when it was spawned. To prevent a CPU intensive process from hawking the CPU by continuously forking children that get scheduled in the max_priority, the scheduler should determine in which queue the parent is currently scheduled, and schedule the child in that same queue. Other fixes: The USER_Q in kernel/proc.h was incorrectly defined as NR_SCHED_QUEUES/2. That results in a "off by one" error when converting priority->nice->priority for nice=0. This also had the side effect that if someone were to set the MAX_USER_Q to something else than 0, then USER_Q would be off.
2010-05-18 15:39:04 +02:00
}
/* no other messages are allowable */
Scheduling server (by Bjorn Swift) In this second phase, scheduling is moved from PM to its own scheduler (see r6557 for phase one). In the next phase we hope to a) include useful information in the "out of quantum" message and b) create some simple scheduling policy that makes use of that information. When the system starts up, PM will iterate over its process table and ask SCHED to take over scheduling unprivileged processes. This is done by sending a SCHEDULING_START message to SCHED. This message includes the processes endpoint, the parent's endpoint and its nice level. The scheduler adds this process to its schedproc table, issues a schedctl, and returns its own endpoint to PM - as the endpoint of the effective scheduler. When a process terminates, a SCHEDULING_STOP message is sent to the scheduler. The reason for this effective endpoint is for future compatibility. Some day, we may have a scheduler that, instead of scheduling the process itself, forwards the SCHEDULING_START message on to another scheduler. PM has information on who schedules whom. As such, scheduling messages from user-land are sent through PM. An example is when processes change their priority, using nice(). In that case, a getsetpriority message is sent to PM, which then sends a SCHEDULING_SET_NICE to the process's effective scheduler. When a process is forked through PM, it inherits its parent's scheduler, but is spawned with an empty quantum. As before, a request to fork a process flows through VM before returning to PM, which then wakes up the child process. This flow has been modified slightly so that PM notifies the scheduler of the new process, before waking up the child process. If the scheduler fails to take over scheduling, the child process is torn down and the fork fails with an erroneous value. Process priority is entirely decided upon using nice levels. PM stores a copy of each process's nice level and when a child is forked, its parent's nice level is sent in the SCHEDULING_START message. How this level is mapped to a priority queue is up to the scheduler. It should be noted that the nice level is used to determine the max_priority and the parent could have been in a lower priority when it was spawned. To prevent a CPU intensive process from hawking the CPU by continuously forking children that get scheduled in the max_priority, the scheduler should determine in which queue the parent is currently scheduled, and schedule the child in that same queue. Other fixes: The USER_Q in kernel/proc.h was incorrectly defined as NR_SCHED_QUEUES/2. That results in a "off by one" error when converting priority->nice->priority for nice=0. This also had the side effect that if someone were to set the MAX_USER_Q to something else than 0, then USER_Q would be off.
2010-05-18 15:39:04 +02:00
return 0;
}