Scheduling
Scheduling
Operating System Concepts Essentials – 2nd Edition Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Basic Concepts
Operating System Concepts Essentials – 2nd Edition 6.2 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Histogram of CPU-burst Times
Operating System Concepts Essentials – 2nd Edition 6.3 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
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:
1. Switches from running to waiting state
2. Switches from running to ready state
3. Switches from waiting to ready
4. 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
Operating System Concepts Essentials – 2nd Edition 6.4 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Dispatcher
Operating System Concepts Essentials – 2nd Edition 6.5 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Scheduling Criteria
Operating System Concepts Essentials – 2nd Edition 6.6 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Scheduling Algorithm Optimization Criteria
Operating System Concepts Essentials – 2nd Edition 6.7 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
First- Come, First-Served (FCFS) Scheduling
P1 P2 P3
0 24 27 30
Operating System Concepts Essentials – 2nd Edition 6.8 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
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
Operating System Concepts Essentials – 2nd Edition 6.9 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
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
Operating System Concepts Essentials – 2nd Edition 6.10 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Example of SJF
P4 P1 P3 P2
0 3 9 16 24
Operating System Concepts Essentials – 2nd Edition 6.11 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Priority Scheduling
Operating System Concepts Essentials – 2nd Edition 6.12 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Example of Priority Scheduling
P1 P2 P1 P3 P4
0 1 6 16 18 19
Operating System Concepts Essentials – 2nd Edition 6.13 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
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
Operating System Concepts Essentials – 2nd Edition 6.14 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Example of RR with Time Quantum = 4
Process Burst Time
P1 24
P2 3
P3 3
The Gantt chart is:
P1 P2 P3 P1 P1 P1 P1 P1
0 4 7 10 14 18 22 26 30
Operating System Concepts Essentials – 2nd Edition 6.15 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Time Quantum and Context Switch Time
Operating System Concepts Essentials – 2nd Edition 6.16 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
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
Operating System Concepts Essentials – 2nd Edition 6.17 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Multilevel Queue Scheduling
Operating System Concepts Essentials – 2nd Edition 6.18 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013