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Chapter 5: CPU Scheduling
5.2 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005
Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005
Chapter 5: CPU Scheduling
 Basic Concepts
 Scheduling Criteria
 Scheduling Algorithms
 Multiple-Processor Scheduling
 Real-Time Scheduling
 Thread Scheduling
 Operating Systems Examples
 Java Thread Scheduling
 Algorithm Evaluation
5.3 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005
Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005
Basic Concepts
 Maximum CPU utilization obtained with multiprogramming
 CPU–I/O Burst Cycle – Process execution consists of a cycle of
CPU execution and I/O wait
 CPU burst distribution
5.4 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005
Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005
Alternating Sequence of CPU And I/O Bursts
5.5 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005
Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005
Histogram of CPU-burst Times
5.6 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005
Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005
CPU Scheduler
 Selects from among the processes in memory that are ready to
execute, and allocates the CPU to one of them
 CPU scheduling decisions may take place when a process:
1. Switches from running to waiting state
2. Switches from running to ready state
3. Switches from waiting to ready
4. Terminates
 Scheduling under 1 and 4 is nonpreemptive
 All other scheduling is preemptive
5.7 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005
Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005
Dispatcher
 Dispatcher module gives control of the CPU to the process
selected by the short-term scheduler; this involves:
 switching context
 switching to user mode
 jumping to the proper location in the user program to restart
that program
 Dispatch latency – time it takes for the dispatcher to stop one
process and start another running
5.8 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005
Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005
Scheduling Criteria
 CPU utilization – keep the CPU as busy as possible
 Throughput – # of processes that complete their execution
per time unit
 Turnaround time – amount of time to execute a particular
process
 Waiting time – amount of time a process has been waiting
in the ready queue
 Response time – amount of time it takes from when a
request was submitted until the first response is produced,
not output
5.9 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005
Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005
Optimization Criteria
 Max CPU utilization
 Max throughput
 Min turnaround time
 Min waiting time
 Min response time
5.10 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005
Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005
First-Come, First-Served (FCFS) Scheduling
Process Burst Time
P1 24
P2 3
P3 3
 Suppose that the processes arrive in the order: P1 , P2 , P3
The Gantt Chart for the schedule is:
 Waiting time for P1 = 0; P2 = 24; P3 = 27
 Average waiting time: (0 + 24 + 27)/3 = 17
P1 P2 P3
24 27 30
0
5.11 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005
Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005
FCFS Scheduling (Cont.)
Suppose that the processes arrive in the order
P2 , P3 , P1
 The Gantt chart for the schedule is:
 Waiting time for P1 = 6; P2 = 0; P3 = 3
 Average waiting time: (6 + 0 + 3)/3 = 3
 Much better than previous case
 Convoy effect short process behind long process
P1
P3
P2
6
3 30
0
5.12 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005
Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005
Shortest-Job-First (SJF) Scheduling
 Associate with each process the length of its next CPU burst. Use
these lengths to schedule the process with the shortest time
 Two schemes:
 nonpreemptive – once CPU given to the process it cannot be
preempted until completes its CPU burst
 preemptive – if a new process arrives with CPU burst length
less than remaining time of current executing process,
preempt. This scheme is know as the
Shortest-Remaining-Time-First (SRTF)
 SJF is optimal – gives minimum average waiting time for a given
set of processes
5.13 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005
Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005
Process Arrival Time Burst Time
P1 0.0 7
P2 2.0 4
P3 4.0 1
P4 5.0 4
 SJF (non-preemptive)
 Average waiting time = (0 + 6 + 3 + 7)/4 = 4
Example of Non-Preemptive SJF
P1 P3 P2
7
3 16
0
P4
8 12
5.14 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005
Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005
Example of Preemptive SJF
Process Arrival Time Burst Time
P1 0.0 7
P2 2.0 4
P3 4.0 1
P4 5.0 4
 SJF (preemptive)
 Average waiting time = (9 + 1 + 0 +2)/4 = 3
P1 P3
P2
4
2 11
0
P4
5 7
P2 P1
16
5.15 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005
Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005
Determining Length of Next CPU Burst
 Can only estimate the length
 Can be done by using the length of previous CPU bursts, using
exponential averaging
:
Define
4.
1
0
,
3.
burst
CPU
next
the
for
value
predicted
2.
burst
CPU
of
length
actual
1.







 1
n
th
n n
t
  .
1
1 n
n
n
t 


 



5.16 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005
Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005
Priority Scheduling
 A priority number (integer) is associated with each process
 The CPU is allocated to the process with the highest priority
(smallest integer  highest priority)
 Preemptive
 nonpreemptive
 SJF is a priority scheduling
 Problem  Starvation – low priority processes may never execute
 Solution  Aging – as time progresses increase the priority of the
process
5.17 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005
Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005
Round Robin (RR)
 Each process gets a small unit of CPU time (time quantum),
usually 10-100 milliseconds. After this time has elapsed, the
process is preempted and added to the end of the ready queue.
 If there are n processes in the ready queue and the time
quantum is q, then each process gets 1/n of the CPU time in
chunks of at most q time units at once. No process waits more
than (n-1)q time units.
 Performance
 q large  FIFO
 q small  q must be large with respect to context switch,
otherwise overhead is too high
5.18 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005
Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005
Example of RR with Time Quantum = 20
Process Burst Time
P1 53
P2 17
P3 68
P4 24
 The Gantt chart is:
 Typically, higher average turnaround than SJF, but better response
P1 P2 P3 P4 P1 P3 P4 P1 P3 P3
0 20 37 57 77 97 117 121 134 154 162
5.19 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005
Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005
Time Quantum and Context Switch Time
5.20 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005
Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005
Turnaround Time Varies With The Time Quantum
5.21 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005
Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005
Multilevel Queue
 Ready queue is partitioned into separate queues:
foreground (interactive)
background (batch)
 Each queue has its own scheduling algorithm
 foreground – RR
 background – FCFS
 Scheduling must be done between the queues
 Fixed priority scheduling; (i.e., serve all from foreground then
from background). Possibility of starvation.
 Time slice – each queue gets a certain amount of CPU time
which it can schedule amongst its processes; i.e., 80% to
foreground in RR
 20% to background in FCFS
5.22 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005
Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005
Multilevel Queue Scheduling
5.23 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005
Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005
Multilevel Feedback Queue
 A process can move between the various queues; aging can be
implemented this way
 Multilevel-feedback-queue scheduler defined by the following
parameters:
 number of queues
 scheduling algorithms for each queue
 method used to determine when to upgrade a process
 method used to determine when to demote a process
 method used to determine which queue a process will enter
when that process needs service
5.24 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005
Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005
Example of Multilevel Feedback Queue
 Three queues:
 Q0 – RR with time quantum 8 milliseconds
 Q1 – RR time quantum 16 milliseconds
 Q2 – FCFS
 Scheduling
 A new job enters queue Q0 which is served FCFS. When it
gains CPU, job receives 8 milliseconds. If it does not finish in 8
milliseconds, job is moved to queue Q1.
 At Q1 job is again served FCFS and receives 16 additional
milliseconds. If it still does not complete, it is preempted and
moved to queue Q2.
5.25 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005
Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005
Multilevel Feedback Queues
5.26 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005
Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005
Multiple-Processor Scheduling
 CPU scheduling more complex when multiple CPUs are
available
 Homogeneous processors within a multiprocessor
 Load sharing
 Asymmetric multiprocessing – only one processor
accesses the system data structures, alleviating the need
for data sharing
5.27 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005
Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005
Real-Time Scheduling
 Hard real-time systems – required to complete a
critical task within a guaranteed amount of time
 Soft real-time computing – requires that critical
processes receive priority over less fortunate ones
5.28 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005
Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005
Thread Scheduling
 Local Scheduling – How the threads library decides which
thread to put onto an available LWP
 Global Scheduling – How the kernel decides which kernel
thread to run next
5.29 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005
Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005
Pthread Scheduling API
#include <pthread.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#define NUM THREADS 5
int main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
int i;
pthread t tid[NUM THREADS];
pthread attr t attr;
/* get the default attributes */
pthread attr init(&attr);
/* set the scheduling algorithm to PROCESS or SYSTEM */
pthread attr setscope(&attr, PTHREAD SCOPE SYSTEM);
/* set the scheduling policy - FIFO, RT, or OTHER */
pthread attr setschedpolicy(&attr, SCHED OTHER);
/* create the threads */
for (i = 0; i < NUM THREADS; i++)
pthread create(&tid[i],&attr,runner,NULL);
5.30 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005
Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005
Pthread Scheduling API
/* now join on each thread */
for (i = 0; i < NUM THREADS; i++)
pthread join(tid[i], NULL);
}
/* Each thread will begin control in this function */
void *runner(void *param)
{
printf("I am a threadn");
pthread exit(0);
}
5.31 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005
Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005
Operating System Examples
 Solaris scheduling
 Windows XP scheduling
 Linux scheduling
5.32 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005
Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005
Solaris 2 Scheduling
5.33 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005
Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005
Solaris Dispatch Table
5.34 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005
Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005
Windows XP Priorities
5.35 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005
Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005
Linux Scheduling
 Two algorithms: time-sharing and real-time
 Time-sharing
 Prioritized credit-based – process with most credits is
scheduled next
 Credit subtracted when timer interrupt occurs
 When credit = 0, another process chosen
 When all processes have credit = 0, recrediting occurs
 Based on factors including priority and history
 Real-time
 Soft real-time
 Posix.1b compliant – two classes
 FCFS and RR
 Highest priority process always runs first
5.36 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005
Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005
The Relationship Between Priorities and Time-slice length
5.37 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005
Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005
List of Tasks Indexed According to Prorities
5.38 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005
Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005
Algorithm Evaluation
 Deterministic modeling – takes a particular
predetermined workload and defines the performance of
each algorithm for that workload
 Queueing models
 Implementation
5.39 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005
Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005
5.15
5.40 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005
Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005
Java Thread Scheduling
 JVM Uses a Preemptive, Priority-Based Scheduling Algorithm
 FIFO Queue is Used if There Are Multiple Threads With the Same
Priority
5.41 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005
Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005
Java Thread Scheduling (cont)
JVM Schedules a Thread to Run When:
1. The Currently Running Thread Exits the Runnable State
2. A Higher Priority Thread Enters the Runnable State
* Note – the JVM Does Not Specify Whether Threads are Time-Sliced
or Not
5.42 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005
Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005
Time-Slicing
Since the JVM Doesn’t Ensure Time-Slicing, the yield() Method
May Be Used:
while (true) {
// perform CPU-intensive task
. . .
Thread.yield();
}
This Yields Control to Another Thread of Equal Priority
5.43 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005
Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005
Thread Priorities
Priority Comment
Thread.MIN_PRIORITY Minimum Thread Priority
Thread.MAX_PRIORITY Maximum Thread Priority
Thread.NORM_PRIORITY Default Thread Priority
Priorities May Be Set Using setPriority() method:
setPriority(Thread.NORM_PRIORITY + 2);
End of Chapter 5

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oprations of internet.ppt

  • 1. Chapter 5: CPU Scheduling
  • 2. 5.2 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005 Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005 Chapter 5: CPU Scheduling  Basic Concepts  Scheduling Criteria  Scheduling Algorithms  Multiple-Processor Scheduling  Real-Time Scheduling  Thread Scheduling  Operating Systems Examples  Java Thread Scheduling  Algorithm Evaluation
  • 3. 5.3 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005 Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005 Basic Concepts  Maximum CPU utilization obtained with multiprogramming  CPU–I/O Burst Cycle – Process execution consists of a cycle of CPU execution and I/O wait  CPU burst distribution
  • 4. 5.4 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005 Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005 Alternating Sequence of CPU And I/O Bursts
  • 5. 5.5 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005 Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005 Histogram of CPU-burst Times
  • 6. 5.6 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005 Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005 CPU Scheduler  Selects from among the processes in memory that are ready to execute, and allocates the CPU to one of them  CPU scheduling decisions may take place when a process: 1. Switches from running to waiting state 2. Switches from running to ready state 3. Switches from waiting to ready 4. Terminates  Scheduling under 1 and 4 is nonpreemptive  All other scheduling is preemptive
  • 7. 5.7 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005 Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005 Dispatcher  Dispatcher module gives control of the CPU to the process selected by the short-term scheduler; this involves:  switching context  switching to user mode  jumping to the proper location in the user program to restart that program  Dispatch latency – time it takes for the dispatcher to stop one process and start another running
  • 8. 5.8 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005 Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005 Scheduling Criteria  CPU utilization – keep the CPU as busy as possible  Throughput – # of processes that complete their execution per time unit  Turnaround time – amount of time to execute a particular process  Waiting time – amount of time a process has been waiting in the ready queue  Response time – amount of time it takes from when a request was submitted until the first response is produced, not output
  • 9. 5.9 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005 Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005 Optimization Criteria  Max CPU utilization  Max throughput  Min turnaround time  Min waiting time  Min response time
  • 10. 5.10 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005 Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005 First-Come, First-Served (FCFS) Scheduling Process Burst Time P1 24 P2 3 P3 3  Suppose that the processes arrive in the order: P1 , P2 , P3 The Gantt Chart for the schedule is:  Waiting time for P1 = 0; P2 = 24; P3 = 27  Average waiting time: (0 + 24 + 27)/3 = 17 P1 P2 P3 24 27 30 0
  • 11. 5.11 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005 Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005 FCFS Scheduling (Cont.) Suppose that the processes arrive in the order P2 , P3 , P1  The Gantt chart for the schedule is:  Waiting time for P1 = 6; P2 = 0; P3 = 3  Average waiting time: (6 + 0 + 3)/3 = 3  Much better than previous case  Convoy effect short process behind long process P1 P3 P2 6 3 30 0
  • 12. 5.12 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005 Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005 Shortest-Job-First (SJF) Scheduling  Associate with each process the length of its next CPU burst. Use these lengths to schedule the process with the shortest time  Two schemes:  nonpreemptive – once CPU given to the process it cannot be preempted until completes its CPU burst  preemptive – if a new process arrives with CPU burst length less than remaining time of current executing process, preempt. This scheme is know as the Shortest-Remaining-Time-First (SRTF)  SJF is optimal – gives minimum average waiting time for a given set of processes
  • 13. 5.13 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005 Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005 Process Arrival Time Burst Time P1 0.0 7 P2 2.0 4 P3 4.0 1 P4 5.0 4  SJF (non-preemptive)  Average waiting time = (0 + 6 + 3 + 7)/4 = 4 Example of Non-Preemptive SJF P1 P3 P2 7 3 16 0 P4 8 12
  • 14. 5.14 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005 Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005 Example of Preemptive SJF Process Arrival Time Burst Time P1 0.0 7 P2 2.0 4 P3 4.0 1 P4 5.0 4  SJF (preemptive)  Average waiting time = (9 + 1 + 0 +2)/4 = 3 P1 P3 P2 4 2 11 0 P4 5 7 P2 P1 16
  • 15. 5.15 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005 Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005 Determining Length of Next CPU Burst  Can only estimate the length  Can be done by using the length of previous CPU bursts, using exponential averaging : Define 4. 1 0 , 3. burst CPU next the for value predicted 2. burst CPU of length actual 1.         1 n th n n t   . 1 1 n n n t        
  • 16. 5.16 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005 Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005 Priority Scheduling  A priority number (integer) is associated with each process  The CPU is allocated to the process with the highest priority (smallest integer  highest priority)  Preemptive  nonpreemptive  SJF is a priority scheduling  Problem  Starvation – low priority processes may never execute  Solution  Aging – as time progresses increase the priority of the process
  • 17. 5.17 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005 Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005 Round Robin (RR)  Each process gets a small unit of CPU time (time quantum), usually 10-100 milliseconds. After this time has elapsed, the process is preempted and added to the end of the ready queue.  If there are n processes in the ready queue and the time quantum is q, then each process gets 1/n of the CPU time in chunks of at most q time units at once. No process waits more than (n-1)q time units.  Performance  q large  FIFO  q small  q must be large with respect to context switch, otherwise overhead is too high
  • 18. 5.18 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005 Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005 Example of RR with Time Quantum = 20 Process Burst Time P1 53 P2 17 P3 68 P4 24  The Gantt chart is:  Typically, higher average turnaround than SJF, but better response P1 P2 P3 P4 P1 P3 P4 P1 P3 P3 0 20 37 57 77 97 117 121 134 154 162
  • 19. 5.19 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005 Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005 Time Quantum and Context Switch Time
  • 20. 5.20 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005 Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005 Turnaround Time Varies With The Time Quantum
  • 21. 5.21 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005 Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005 Multilevel Queue  Ready queue is partitioned into separate queues: foreground (interactive) background (batch)  Each queue has its own scheduling algorithm  foreground – RR  background – FCFS  Scheduling must be done between the queues  Fixed priority scheduling; (i.e., serve all from foreground then from background). Possibility of starvation.  Time slice – each queue gets a certain amount of CPU time which it can schedule amongst its processes; i.e., 80% to foreground in RR  20% to background in FCFS
  • 22. 5.22 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005 Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005 Multilevel Queue Scheduling
  • 23. 5.23 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005 Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005 Multilevel Feedback Queue  A process can move between the various queues; aging can be implemented this way  Multilevel-feedback-queue scheduler defined by the following parameters:  number of queues  scheduling algorithms for each queue  method used to determine when to upgrade a process  method used to determine when to demote a process  method used to determine which queue a process will enter when that process needs service
  • 24. 5.24 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005 Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005 Example of Multilevel Feedback Queue  Three queues:  Q0 – RR with time quantum 8 milliseconds  Q1 – RR time quantum 16 milliseconds  Q2 – FCFS  Scheduling  A new job enters queue Q0 which is served FCFS. When it gains CPU, job receives 8 milliseconds. If it does not finish in 8 milliseconds, job is moved to queue Q1.  At Q1 job is again served FCFS and receives 16 additional milliseconds. If it still does not complete, it is preempted and moved to queue Q2.
  • 25. 5.25 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005 Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005 Multilevel Feedback Queues
  • 26. 5.26 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005 Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005 Multiple-Processor Scheduling  CPU scheduling more complex when multiple CPUs are available  Homogeneous processors within a multiprocessor  Load sharing  Asymmetric multiprocessing – only one processor accesses the system data structures, alleviating the need for data sharing
  • 27. 5.27 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005 Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005 Real-Time Scheduling  Hard real-time systems – required to complete a critical task within a guaranteed amount of time  Soft real-time computing – requires that critical processes receive priority over less fortunate ones
  • 28. 5.28 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005 Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005 Thread Scheduling  Local Scheduling – How the threads library decides which thread to put onto an available LWP  Global Scheduling – How the kernel decides which kernel thread to run next
  • 29. 5.29 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005 Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005 Pthread Scheduling API #include <pthread.h> #include <stdio.h> #define NUM THREADS 5 int main(int argc, char *argv[]) { int i; pthread t tid[NUM THREADS]; pthread attr t attr; /* get the default attributes */ pthread attr init(&attr); /* set the scheduling algorithm to PROCESS or SYSTEM */ pthread attr setscope(&attr, PTHREAD SCOPE SYSTEM); /* set the scheduling policy - FIFO, RT, or OTHER */ pthread attr setschedpolicy(&attr, SCHED OTHER); /* create the threads */ for (i = 0; i < NUM THREADS; i++) pthread create(&tid[i],&attr,runner,NULL);
  • 30. 5.30 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005 Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005 Pthread Scheduling API /* now join on each thread */ for (i = 0; i < NUM THREADS; i++) pthread join(tid[i], NULL); } /* Each thread will begin control in this function */ void *runner(void *param) { printf("I am a threadn"); pthread exit(0); }
  • 31. 5.31 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005 Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005 Operating System Examples  Solaris scheduling  Windows XP scheduling  Linux scheduling
  • 32. 5.32 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005 Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005 Solaris 2 Scheduling
  • 33. 5.33 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005 Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005 Solaris Dispatch Table
  • 34. 5.34 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005 Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005 Windows XP Priorities
  • 35. 5.35 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005 Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005 Linux Scheduling  Two algorithms: time-sharing and real-time  Time-sharing  Prioritized credit-based – process with most credits is scheduled next  Credit subtracted when timer interrupt occurs  When credit = 0, another process chosen  When all processes have credit = 0, recrediting occurs  Based on factors including priority and history  Real-time  Soft real-time  Posix.1b compliant – two classes  FCFS and RR  Highest priority process always runs first
  • 36. 5.36 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005 Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005 The Relationship Between Priorities and Time-slice length
  • 37. 5.37 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005 Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005 List of Tasks Indexed According to Prorities
  • 38. 5.38 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005 Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005 Algorithm Evaluation  Deterministic modeling – takes a particular predetermined workload and defines the performance of each algorithm for that workload  Queueing models  Implementation
  • 39. 5.39 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005 Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005 5.15
  • 40. 5.40 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005 Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005 Java Thread Scheduling  JVM Uses a Preemptive, Priority-Based Scheduling Algorithm  FIFO Queue is Used if There Are Multiple Threads With the Same Priority
  • 41. 5.41 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005 Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005 Java Thread Scheduling (cont) JVM Schedules a Thread to Run When: 1. The Currently Running Thread Exits the Runnable State 2. A Higher Priority Thread Enters the Runnable State * Note – the JVM Does Not Specify Whether Threads are Time-Sliced or Not
  • 42. 5.42 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005 Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005 Time-Slicing Since the JVM Doesn’t Ensure Time-Slicing, the yield() Method May Be Used: while (true) { // perform CPU-intensive task . . . Thread.yield(); } This Yields Control to Another Thread of Equal Priority
  • 43. 5.43 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2005 Operating System Concepts – 7th Edition, Feb 2, 2005 Thread Priorities Priority Comment Thread.MIN_PRIORITY Minimum Thread Priority Thread.MAX_PRIORITY Maximum Thread Priority Thread.NORM_PRIORITY Default Thread Priority Priorities May Be Set Using setPriority() method: setPriority(Thread.NORM_PRIORITY + 2);