| This document explains the thinking about the revamped and streamlined |
| nice-levels implementation in the new Linux scheduler. |
| |
| Nice levels were always pretty weak under Linux and people continuously |
| pestered us to make nice +19 tasks use up much less CPU time. |
| |
| Unfortunately that was not that easy to implement under the old |
| scheduler, (otherwise we'd have done it long ago) because nice level |
| support was historically coupled to timeslice length, and timeslice |
| units were driven by the HZ tick, so the smallest timeslice was 1/HZ. |
| |
| In the O(1) scheduler (in 2003) we changed negative nice levels to be |
| much stronger than they were before in 2.4 (and people were happy about |
| that change), and we also intentionally calibrated the linear timeslice |
| rule so that nice +19 level would be _exactly_ 1 jiffy. To better |
| understand it, the timeslice graph went like this (cheesy ASCII art |
| alert!): |
| |
| |
| A |
| \ | [timeslice length] |
| \ | |
| \ | |
| \ | |
| \ | |
| \|___100msecs |
| |^ . _ |
| | ^ . _ |
| | ^ . _ |
| -*----------------------------------*-----> [nice level] |
| -20 | +19 |
| | |
| | |
| |
| So that if someone wanted to really renice tasks, +19 would give a much |
| bigger hit than the normal linear rule would do. (The solution of |
| changing the ABI to extend priorities was discarded early on.) |
| |
| This approach worked to some degree for some time, but later on with |
| HZ=1000 it caused 1 jiffy to be 1 msec, which meant 0.1% CPU usage which |
| we felt to be a bit excessive. Excessive _not_ because it's too small of |
| a CPU utilization, but because it causes too frequent (once per |
| millisec) rescheduling. (and would thus trash the cache, etc. Remember, |
| this was long ago when hardware was weaker and caches were smaller, and |
| people were running number crunching apps at nice +19.) |
| |
| So for HZ=1000 we changed nice +19 to 5msecs, because that felt like the |
| right minimal granularity - and this translates to 5% CPU utilization. |
| But the fundamental HZ-sensitive property for nice+19 still remained, |
| and we never got a single complaint about nice +19 being too _weak_ in |
| terms of CPU utilization, we only got complaints about it (still) being |
| too _strong_ :-) |
| |
| To sum it up: we always wanted to make nice levels more consistent, but |
| within the constraints of HZ and jiffies and their nasty design level |
| coupling to timeslices and granularity it was not really viable. |
| |
| The second (less frequent but still periodically occurring) complaint |
| about Linux's nice level support was its assymetry around the origo |
| (which you can see demonstrated in the picture above), or more |
| accurately: the fact that nice level behavior depended on the _absolute_ |
| nice level as well, while the nice API itself is fundamentally |
| "relative": |
| |
| int nice(int inc); |
| |
| asmlinkage long sys_nice(int increment) |
| |
| (the first one is the glibc API, the second one is the syscall API.) |
| Note that the 'inc' is relative to the current nice level. Tools like |
| bash's "nice" command mirror this relative API. |
| |
| With the old scheduler, if you for example started a niced task with +1 |
| and another task with +2, the CPU split between the two tasks would |
| depend on the nice level of the parent shell - if it was at nice -10 the |
| CPU split was different than if it was at +5 or +10. |
| |
| A third complaint against Linux's nice level support was that negative |
| nice levels were not 'punchy enough', so lots of people had to resort to |
| run audio (and other multimedia) apps under RT priorities such as |
| SCHED_FIFO. But this caused other problems: SCHED_FIFO is not starvation |
| proof, and a buggy SCHED_FIFO app can also lock up the system for good. |
| |
| The new scheduler in v2.6.23 addresses all three types of complaints: |
| |
| To address the first complaint (of nice levels being not "punchy" |
| enough), the scheduler was decoupled from 'time slice' and HZ concepts |
| (and granularity was made a separate concept from nice levels) and thus |
| it was possible to implement better and more consistent nice +19 |
| support: with the new scheduler nice +19 tasks get a HZ-independent |
| 1.5%, instead of the variable 3%-5%-9% range they got in the old |
| scheduler. |
| |
| To address the second complaint (of nice levels not being consistent), |
| the new scheduler makes nice(1) have the same CPU utilization effect on |
| tasks, regardless of their absolute nice levels. So on the new |
| scheduler, running a nice +10 and a nice 11 task has the same CPU |
| utilization "split" between them as running a nice -5 and a nice -4 |
| task. (one will get 55% of the CPU, the other 45%.) That is why nice |
| levels were changed to be "multiplicative" (or exponential) - that way |
| it does not matter which nice level you start out from, the 'relative |
| result' will always be the same. |
| |
| The third complaint (of negative nice levels not being "punchy" enough |
| and forcing audio apps to run under the more dangerous SCHED_FIFO |
| scheduling policy) is addressed by the new scheduler almost |
| automatically: stronger negative nice levels are an automatic |
| side-effect of the recalibrated dynamic range of nice levels. |