Difference between revisions of "CPU Fair scheduler"
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On the first level the scheduler decides which VE to give CPU time slice to, based on per-VE <code>cpuunits</code> values. On the second level the standard Linux scheduler decides which process to run in that container, using standard Linux process priorities and such. | On the first level the scheduler decides which VE to give CPU time slice to, based on per-VE <code>cpuunits</code> values. On the second level the standard Linux scheduler decides which process to run in that container, using standard Linux process priorities and such. | ||
− | OpenVZ administrator can set up different values of <code>cpuunits</code> for different containers, and the CPU time will be given to those proportionally. | + | The OpenVZ administrator can set up different values of <code>cpuunits</code> for different containers, and the CPU time will be given to those proportionally. |
Also there is a way to limit CPU time, e.g. say that this container is limited to, say, 10% of CPU time available. | Also there is a way to limit CPU time, e.g. say that this container is limited to, say, 10% of CPU time available. |
Revision as of 00:47, 2 April 2011
The Fair scheduler distributes CPU resources among the VEs, and controls CPU resource management.
It is a two-level implementation of fair-share scheduling strategy.
On the first level the scheduler decides which VE to give CPU time slice to, based on per-VE cpuunits
values. On the second level the standard Linux scheduler decides which process to run in that container, using standard Linux process priorities and such.
The OpenVZ administrator can set up different values of cpuunits
for different containers, and the CPU time will be given to those proportionally.
Also there is a way to limit CPU time, e.g. say that this container is limited to, say, 10% of CPU time available.
...Stay tuned for more info...
Monitoring
The scheduler can be monitored by using the /proc/vz/vestat
file.