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Originally, Unix had 1 sec. time slices. Too long. Most timesharing systems today use time slices of 10,000 - 100,000 instructions.
Implementation of priorities: run highest priority processes first, use round-robin among processes of equal priority. Re-insertprocess in run queue behind all processes of greater or equal priority.
Even round-robin can produce bad results occasionally. Go through example of ten processes each requiring 100 timeslices.
What is the best we can do?
Shortest time to completion first with preemption. This minimizes the average response time.
As an example, show two processes, one doing 1 ms computation followed by 10 ms I/O, one doing all computation. Suppose we use 100ms time slice: I/O process only runs at 1/10th speed, effective I/O time is 100 ms. Suppose we use 1 ms time slice: then compute-bound process gets interrupted9 times unnecessarily for each valid interrupt. STCF works quite nicely.
Unfortunately, STCF requires knowledge of the future. Instead, we can use past performance to predict future performance.
Attacks both efficiency and response time problems.
Fair-share scheduling as implemented in Unix:
Summary:
There are some curious interactions between scheduling and synchronization. A classic problem caused by this interaction wasfirst observed in 1979 but Butler Lampson and David Redell at Xerox.
Suppose that you have three processes:
P1: | Highest priority |
P2: | Medium priority |
P3: | Lowest priority |
And suppose that you have the following critical section, S:
S: mutex.P()
. . .
. . .
mutex.V()
The three processes execute as follows:
So, what's going wrong here? To really understand this situation, you should try to work out the example for yourself, beforecontinuing to read.
As a result, P2 running (at medium priority) is blocking P1 (at highest priority) from running. This example is not an academicone. Many designers of real-time systems, where priority can be crucial, have stumbled over issue. You can read the original paper by Lampson and Redell to see their suggestion for handling the situation.
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