My question is, as I said I am measuring the schedule time difference between my 2 of my SCHED_FIFO process in schedule() .But, I get only one set of readings (i.e., schedule() is being called once which implies my process is being scheduled only once and run till completion)
Also, as I said my interrupts are being processed during this time.I inspected /proc/interrupts for this.So, my question was if interrupts heve been processed several times the 2 SCHED_FIFO process which has been interrupted must have been resecheduled several times and for this upon returning from the interrupt handler the schedule() function must have been called several times to schedule the 2 process which were running.But, as I said I get only one reading??
From your reply, I come to understand that when an interrupt interrupts myuser process.....it runs straight way ....but upon return from the interrupt handler does it not call schedule() to again resume my interrupted process? Please help.
Thanks arun
From: Steven Rostedt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: Arun Srinivas <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> CC: [EMAIL PROTECTED], LKML <linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org> Subject: Re: scheduler/SCHED_FIFO behaviour Date: Mon, 04 Apr 2005 23:33:05 -0400
On Tue, 2005-04-05 at 07:46 +0530, Arun Srinivas wrote:
>
> So, what I want from the above code is whenever process1 or process2 is
> being scheduled measure the time and print the timedifference. But, when I
> run my 2 processes as SCHED_FIFO processes i get only one set of
> readings....indicating they have been scheduled only once and run till
> completion.
>
> But, as we saw above if interrupts have been processed they must have been
> scheduled several times(i.e., schedule() called several times). Is my
> measurement procedure not correct?
No! Interrupts are not scheduled. When an interrupt goes off, the interrupt service routine (ISR) is executed. It doesn't need to be scheduled. It runs right where it interrupted the CPU. That's why you need to be careful about protecting data that ISRs manipulate with spin_lock_irqsave. This not only protects against multiple CPUs, but turns off interrupts so that an interrupt wont be called and one of the ISRs modify the data you need to be atomic.
Your tasks are running and will be interrupted by an ISR, on return from the routine, a check is made to see if your tasks should be preempted. But since they are the highest running tasks and in FIFO mode, the check determines that schedule should not be called. So you will not see any schedules while your tasks are running.
Now, if you where running Ingo's RT patch with PREEMPT_HARDIRQ enabled, and your tasks were of lower priority than the ISR thread handlers, then you would see the scheduling. Maybe that is what you want?
-- Steve
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