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Operating System: Chapter 6: CPU Scheduling

This document discusses CPU scheduling in operating systems. It covers basic concepts of CPU scheduling, criteria for evaluating scheduling algorithms like throughput and turnaround time. Common scheduling algorithms like first-come first-served, shortest job first, priority scheduling and round robin are explained. The document also discusses thread scheduling, multiprocessor scheduling, load balancing and scheduling on multicore processors.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
50 views

Operating System: Chapter 6: CPU Scheduling

This document discusses CPU scheduling in operating systems. It covers basic concepts of CPU scheduling, criteria for evaluating scheduling algorithms like throughput and turnaround time. Common scheduling algorithms like first-come first-served, shortest job first, priority scheduling and round robin are explained. The document also discusses thread scheduling, multiprocessor scheduling, load balancing and scheduling on multicore processors.

Uploaded by

Alun Weaving
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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OPERATING SYSTEM

Chapter 6: CPU Scheduling


Chapter 6: CPU Scheduling
• Basic Concepts
• Scheduling Criteria
• Scheduling Algorithms
• Thread Scheduling
• Multiple-Processor Scheduling
• Real-Time CPU Scheduling
• Operating Systems Examples
• Algorithm Evaluation
Objectives
• To introduce CPU scheduling, which is the basis for multiprogrammed
operating systems

• To describe various CPU-scheduling algorithms

• To discuss evaluation criteria for selecting a CPU-scheduling algorithm for


a particular system

• To examine the scheduling algorithms of several operating systems


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 followed by I/O burst

• CPU burst distribution is of main


concern
Histogram of CPU-burst Times
CPU Scheduler
• Short-term scheduler selects from among the processes in ready queue,
and allocates the CPU to one of them
– Queue may be ordered in various ways
• CPU scheduling decisions may take place when a process:
– Switches from running to waiting state
– Switches from running to ready state
– Switches from waiting to ready
– Terminates
• Scheduling under 1 and 4 is nonpreemptive
• All other scheduling is preemptive
– Consider access to shared data
– Consider preemption while in kernel mode
– Consider interrupts occurring during crucial OS activities
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
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 (for time-sharing environment)
Scheduling Algorithm Optimization Criteria
• Max CPU utilization
• Max throughput
• Min turnaround time
• Min waiting time
• Min response time
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:
P1 P2 P3

0 24 27 30

• Waiting time for P1 = 0; P2 = 24; P3 = 27


• Average waiting time: (0 + 24 + 27)/3 = 17
FCFS Scheduling (Cont.)
Suppose that the processes arrive in the order:
P2 , P3 , P1
• The Gantt chart for the schedule is:
P2 P3 P1

0 3 6 30

• 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
– Consider one CPU-bound and many I/O-bound processes
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

• SJF is optimal – gives minimum average waiting time for a given set of
processes
– The difficulty is knowing the length of the next CPU request
– Could ask the user
Example of SJF
Process Arrival Time Burst Time
P1 0.0 6
P2 2.0 8
P3 4.0 7
P4 5.0 3

• SJF scheduling chart


P4 P1 P3 P2

0 3 9 16 24

• Average waiting time = (3 + 16 + 9 + 0) / 4 = 7


Determining Length of Next CPU Burst
• Can only estimate the length – should be similar to the previous one
– Then pick process with shortest predicted next CPU burst
• Can be done by using the length of previous CPU bursts, using exponential
averaging
1. t n  actual length of n th CPU burst
2.  n 1  predicted value for the next CPU burst
3.  , 0    1
4. Define :  n 1   t n  1    n .

• Commonly, α set to ½
• Preemptive version called shortest-remaining-time-first
Prediction of the Length
of the Next CPU Burst
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 priority scheduling where priority is the inverse of predicted next
CPU burst time
• Problem  Starvation – low priority processes may never execute
• Solution  Aging – as time progresses increase the priority of the process
Round Robin (RR)
• Each process gets a small unit of CPU time (time quantum q), 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.
• Timer interrupts every quantum to schedule next process
• Performance
– q large  FIFO
– q small  q must be large with respect to context switch, otherwise overhead is
too high
Time Quantum and Context Switch Time
Turnaround Time Varies With
The Time Quantum

80% of CPU
bursts should be
shorter than q
Multilevel Queue
• Ready queue is partitioned into separate queues, eg:
– foreground (interactive)
– background (batch)
• Process permanently in a given queue
• 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
Multilevel Queue Scheduling
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
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
Thread Scheduling
• Distinction between user-level and kernel-level threads
• When threads supported, threads scheduled, not processes
• Many-to-one and many-to-many models, thread library schedules user-
level threads to run on LWP
– Known as process-contention scope (PCS) since scheduling competition is within
the process
– Typically done via priority set by programmer
• Kernel thread scheduled onto available CPU is system-contention scope
(SCS) – competition among all threads in system
Multiple-Processor Scheduling
• CPU scheduling more complex when multiple CPUs are available
• Homogeneous processors within a multiprocessor
• Asymmetric multiprocessing – only one processor accesses the system
data structures, alleviating the need for data sharing
• Symmetric multiprocessing (SMP) – each processor is self-scheduling, all
processes in common ready queue, or each has its own private queue of
ready processes
– Currently, most common
• Processor affinity – process has affinity for processor on which it is
currently running
– soft affinity
– hard affinity
– Variations including processor sets
NUMA and CPU Scheduling

Note that memory-placement algorithms can


also consider affinity
Multiple-Processor Scheduling –
Load Balancing
• If SMP, need to keep all CPUs loaded for efficiency

• Load balancing attempts to keep workload evenly


distributed

• Push migration – periodic task checks load on each


processor, and if found pushes task from overloaded CPU to
other CPUs

• Pull migration – idle processors pulls waiting task from busy


Multicore Processors
• Recent trend to place multiple processor cores on same physical chip

• Faster and consumes less power

• Multiple threads per core also growing


– Takes advantage of memory stall to make progress on another thread while
memory retrieve happens
Multithreaded Multicore System
Real-Time CPU Scheduling
• Can present obvious challenges
• Soft real-time systems – no guarantee as to
when critical real-time process will be
scheduled
• Hard real-time systems – task must be
serviced by its deadline
• Two types of latencies affect performance
1. Interrupt latency – time from arrival of
interrupt to start of routine that services
interrupt
2. Dispatch latency – time for schedule to take
current process off CPU and switch to another
Real-Time CPU Scheduling (Cont.)
• Conflict phase of dispatch
latency:
1. Preemption of any process
running in kernel mode
2. Release by low-priority process
of resources needed by high-
priority processes
Priority-based Scheduling
• For real-time scheduling, scheduler must support preemptive, priority-
based scheduling
– But only guarantees soft real-time
• For hard real-time must also provide ability to meet deadlines
• Processes have new characteristics: periodic ones require CPU at constant
intervals
– Has processing time t, deadline d, period p
– 0≤t≤d≤p
– Rate of periodic task is 1/p
Virtualization and Scheduling
• Virtualization software schedules multiple guests onto CPU(s)

• Each guest doing its own scheduling


– Not knowing it doesn’t own the CPUs
– Can result in poor response time
– Can effect time-of-day clocks in guests

• Can undo good scheduling algorithm efforts of guests


Rate Montonic Scheduling
• A priority is assigned based on the inverse of its period
• Shorter periods = higher priority;
• Longer periods = lower priority
• P1 is assigned a higher priority than P2.
Missed Deadlines with
Rate Monotonic Scheduling
Earliest Deadline First Scheduling (EDF)
• Priorities are assigned according to deadlines:

“the earlier the deadline, the higher the priority; the later the
deadline, the lower the priority”
Proportional Share Scheduling
• T shares are allocated among all processes in the system
• An application receives N shares where N < T
• This ensures each application will receive N / T of the total processor time
POSIX Real-Time Scheduling
• The POSIX.1b standard
• API provides functions for managing real-time threads
• Defines two scheduling classes for real-time threads:
1. SCHED_FIFO - threads are scheduled using a FCFS strategy with a FIFO
queue. There is no time-slicing for threads of equal priority
2. SCHED_RR - similar to SCHED_FIFO except time-slicing occurs for threads of
equal priority
POSIX Real-Time Scheduling (Cont.)
• Defines two functions for getting and setting scheduling policy:
1. pthread attr getsched policy(pthread attr t *attr, int *policy)
2. pthread attr setsched policy(pthread attr t *attr, int policy)
Operating System Examples
• Linux scheduling

• Windows scheduling

• Solaris scheduling
Linux Scheduling Through Version 2.5
• Prior to kernel version 2.5, ran variation of standard UNIX scheduling
algorithm
• Version 2.5 moved to constant order O(1) scheduling time
– Preemptive, priority based
– Two priority ranges: time-sharing and real-time
– Real-time range from 0 to 99 and nice value from 100 to 140
– Map into global priority with numerically lower values indicating higher priority
– Higher priority gets larger q
– Task run-able as long as time left in time slice (active)
– If no time left (expired), not run-able until all other tasks use their slices
– All run-able tasks tracked in per-CPU runqueue data structure
• Two priority arrays (active, expired)
• Tasks indexed by priority
• When no more active, arrays are exchanged
– Worked well, but poor response times for interactive processes
Linux Scheduling in Version 2.6.23 +
• Completely Fair Scheduler (CFS)
• Scheduling classes
– Each has specific priority
– Scheduler picks highest priority task in highest scheduling class
– Rather than quantum based on fixed time allotments, based on proportion of CPU
time
– 2 scheduling classes included, others can be added
1. default
2. real-time
Linux Scheduling in Version 2.6.23 + (Cont.)
• Quantum calculated based on nice value from -20 to +19
– Lower value is higher priority
– Calculates target latency – interval of time during which task should run at least
once
– Target latency can increase if say number of active tasks increases
• CFS scheduler maintains per task virtual run time in variable vruntime
– Associated with decay factor based on priority of task – lower priority is higher
decay rate
– Normal default priority yields virtual run time = actual run time
• To decide next task to run, scheduler picks task with lowest virtual run time
CFS Performance
Linux Scheduling (Cont.)
• Real-time scheduling according to POSIX.1b
– Real-time tasks have static priorities
• Real-time plus normal map into global priority scheme
• Nice value of -20 maps to global priority 100
• Nice value of +19 maps to priority 139
Windows Scheduling
• Windows uses priority-based preemptive scheduling
• Highest-priority thread runs next
• Dispatcher is scheduler
• Thread runs until (1) blocks, (2) uses time slice, (3) preempted by higher-priority
thread
• Real-time threads can preempt non-real-time
• 32-level priority scheme
• Variable class is 1-15, real-time class is 16-31
• Priority 0 is memory-management thread
• Queue for each priority
• If no run-able thread, runs idle thread
Windows Priority Classes
• Win32 API identifies several priority classes to which a process can belong
– REALTIME_PRIORITY_CLASS, HIGH_PRIORITY_CLASS,
ABOVE_NORMAL_PRIORITY_CLASS,NORMAL_PRIORITY_CLASS,
BELOW_NORMAL_PRIORITY_CLASS, IDLE_PRIORITY_CLASS
– All are variable except REALTIME
• A thread within a given priority class has a relative priority
– TIME_CRITICAL, HIGHEST, ABOVE_NORMAL, NORMAL, BELOW_NORMAL,
LOWEST, IDLE
Windows Priority Classes (Cont.)
• Priority class and relative priority combine to give numeric priority
• Base priority is NORMAL within the class
• If quantum expires, priority lowered, but never below base
• If wait occurs, priority boosted depending on what was waited for
• Foreground window given 3x priority boost
• Windows 7 added user-mode scheduling (UMS)
– Applications create and manage threads independent of kernel
– For large number of threads, much more efficient
– UMS schedulers come from programming language libraries like C++
Concurrent Runtime (ConcRT) framework
Windows Priorities
Solaris
• Priority-based scheduling
• Six classes available
– Time sharing (default) (TS)
– Interactive (IA)
– Real time (RT)
– System (SYS)
– Fair Share (FSS)
– Fixed priority (FP)
• Given thread can be in one class at a time
• Each class has its own scheduling algorithm
• Time sharing is multi-level feedback queue
– Loadable table configurable by sysadmin
Solaris Dispatch Table
Solaris Scheduling
Solaris Scheduling (Cont.)
• Scheduler converts class-specific priorities into a per-thread global priority
– Thread with highest priority runs next
– Runs until (1) blocks, (2) uses time slice, (3) preempted by higher-priority thread
– Multiple threads at same priority selected via RR
Algorithm Evaluation
• How to select CPU-scheduling algorithm for an OS?
• Determine criteria, then evaluate algorithms
• Deterministic modeling
– Type of analytic evaluation
– Takes a particular predetermined workload and defines the performance of each
algorithm for that workload

• Consider 5 processes arriving at time 0:


Deterministic Evaluation
• For each algorithm, calculate minimum average waiting time
• Simple and fast, but requires exact numbers for input, applies only to those
inputs
– FCS is 28ms:

– Non-preemptive SFJ is 13ms:

– RR is 23ms:
Queueing Models
• Describes the arrival of processes, and CPU and I/O bursts probabilistically
– Commonly exponential, and described by mean
– Computes average throughput, utilization, waiting time, etc

• Computer system described as network of servers, each with queue of


waiting processes
– Knowing arrival rates and service rates
– Computes utilization, average queue length, average wait time, etc
Little’s Formula
• n = average queue length
• W = average waiting time in queue
• λ = average arrival rate into queue
• Little’s law – in steady state, processes leaving queue must equal
processes arriving, thus
n=λxW
– Valid for any scheduling algorithm and arrival distribution

• For example, if on average 7 processes arrive per second, and normally 14


processes in queue, then average wait time per process = 2 seconds
Simulations
• Queueing models limited
• Simulations more accurate
– Programmed model of computer system
– Clock is a variable
– Gather statistics indicating algorithm performance
– Data to drive simulation gathered via
• Random number generator according to probabilities
• Distributions defined mathematically or empirically
• Trace tapes record sequences of real events in real systems
Evaluation of CPU Schedulers
by Simulation
Implementation
• Even simulations have limited accuracy
• Just implement new scheduler and test in real systems
– High cost, high risk
– Environments vary
• Most flexible schedulers can be modified per-site or per-system
• Or APIs to modify priorities
• But again environments vary
End of Chapter 6

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