Ok, I see it's part of the kernel since 2.6

On Feb 20, 12:18 pm, Sabuj Pattanayek <[email protected]> wrote:
> Try using the deadline scheduler
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> On Mon, Feb 20, 2012 at 12:14 PM, Tilghman Lesher <[email protected]> 
> wrote:
> > On Mon, Feb 20, 2012 at 11:59 AM, tocsa <[email protected]> wrote:
> >> The server in our laboratory has some problems. A PhD student is
> >> running computation which has very heavy I/O load, but no CPU load.
> >> The lack of CPU load means that there's nothing which would hold back
> >> the process to hog the hard drive. Many of you are server
> >> administrators so you know the concept of "server load". If it is
> >> above 3, then the server is under very heavy load, above 6-7 it can
> >> happen that you cannot log-in remotely.
> >> So far my techniques is that I keep an open root console on my desktop
> >> machine at the university, that console is always alive. Last week I
> >> saw load above 22. Today I had to take a screenshot, so when I'll be a
> >> grandpa I can show it to my grandchildren: load above 76.
>
> >> The machine is a server hardware, quad core with 16GB RAM, I don't
> >> exactly know the HDD subsystem, browsing the /proc I think it's some
> >> kind of SAS disks. It is running Ubuntu Server LTS.
>
> >> Question: how can I limit the I/O access of a process?
>
> >> I've seen numerous articles on disk quotas, network bandwidth tuning,
> >> some on CPU load tuning, but no I/O load tuning.
>
> > There's nothing I can see that would do that.  However, since what
> > you're really aiming to do is to avoid resource starvation, why not
> > re-nice his process?  Give it a slightly lower priority, and
> > everything else will preempt his process when those other processes
> > need CPU and I/O time.  Ask him nicely, and he may even start his next
> > process with a nice'd priority.
>
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