dwww Home | Manual pages | Find package

sched_setattr(2)              System Calls Manual             sched_setattr(2)

NAME
       sched_setattr,  sched_getattr  -  set and get scheduling policy and at-
       tributes

LIBRARY
       Standard C library (libc, -lc)

SYNOPSIS
       #include <sched.h>            /* Definition of SCHED_* constants */
       #include <sys/syscall.h>      /* Definition of SYS_* constants */
       #include <unistd.h>

       int syscall(SYS_sched_setattr, pid_t pid, struct sched_attr *attr,
                   unsigned int flags);
       int syscall(SYS_sched_getattr, pid_t pid, struct sched_attr *attr,
                   unsigned int size, unsigned int flags);

       Note: glibc provides no wrappers for these system calls,  necessitating
       the use of syscall(2).

DESCRIPTION
   sched_setattr()
       The  sched_setattr() system call sets the scheduling policy and associ-
       ated attributes for the thread whose ID is specified in  pid.   If  pid
       equals zero, the scheduling policy and attributes of the calling thread
       will be set.

       Currently, Linux supports the following "normal" (i.e.,  non-real-time)
       scheduling policies as values that may be specified in policy:

       SCHED_OTHER   the standard round-robin time-sharing policy;

       SCHED_BATCH   for "batch" style execution of processes; and

       SCHED_IDLE    for running very low priority background jobs.

       Various "real-time" policies are also supported, for special time-crit-
       ical applications that need precise  control  over  the  way  in  which
       runnable  threads  are selected for execution.  For the rules governing
       when a process may use these policies,  see  sched(7).   The  real-time
       policies that may be specified in policy are:

       SCHED_FIFO    a first-in, first-out policy; and

       SCHED_RR      a round-robin policy.

       Linux also provides the following policy:

       SCHED_DEADLINE
                     a deadline scheduling policy; see sched(7) for details.

       The  attr  argument  is  a  pointer to a structure that defines the new
       scheduling policy and attributes for the specified thread.  This struc-
       ture has the following form:

           struct sched_attr {
               u32 size;              /* Size of this structure */
               u32 sched_policy;      /* Policy (SCHED_*) */
               u64 sched_flags;       /* Flags */
               s32 sched_nice;        /* Nice value (SCHED_OTHER,
                                         SCHED_BATCH) */
               u32 sched_priority;    /* Static priority (SCHED_FIFO,
                                         SCHED_RR) */
               /* Remaining fields are for SCHED_DEADLINE */
               u64 sched_runtime;
               u64 sched_deadline;
               u64 sched_period;
           };

       The fields of the sched_attr structure are as follows:

       size   This  field should be set to the size of the structure in bytes,
              as in sizeof(struct sched_attr).  If the provided  structure  is
              smaller than the kernel structure, any additional fields are as-
              sumed to be '0'.  If the provided structure is larger  than  the
              kernel structure, the kernel verifies that all additional fields
              are 0; if they are not, sched_setattr()  fails  with  the  error
              E2BIG  and updates size to contain the size of the kernel struc-
              ture.

              The above behavior when the size of  the  user-space  sched_attr
              structure does not match the size of the kernel structure allows
              for future extensibility of the interface.   Malformed  applica-
              tions that pass oversize structures won't break in the future if
              the size of the kernel sched_attr structure  is  increased.   In
              the  future,  it could also allow applications that know about a
              larger user-space sched_attr structure to determine whether they
              are  running on an older kernel that does not support the larger
              structure.

       sched_policy
              This field specifies  the  scheduling  policy,  as  one  of  the
              SCHED_* values listed above.

       sched_flags
              This field contains zero or more of the following flags that are
              ORed together to control scheduling behavior:

              SCHED_FLAG_RESET_ON_FORK
                     Children created by fork(2)  do  not  inherit  privileged
                     scheduling policies.  See sched(7) for details.

              SCHED_FLAG_RECLAIM (since Linux 4.13)
                     This flag allows a SCHED_DEADLINE thread to reclaim band-
                     width unused by other real-time threads.

              SCHED_FLAG_DL_OVERRUN (since Linux 4.16)
                     This flag allows an application  to  get  informed  about
                     run-time  overruns in SCHED_DEADLINE threads.  Such over-
                     runs may be caused by (for example) coarse execution time
                     accounting  or incorrect parameter assignment.  Notifica-
                     tion takes the form of a SIGXCPU signal which  is  gener-
                     ated on each overrun.

                     This  SIGXCPU  signal is process-directed (see signal(7))
                     rather than thread-directed.  This is probably a bug.  On
                     the one hand, sched_setattr() is being used to set a per-
                     thread attribute.  On the other hand, if the  process-di-
                     rected signal is delivered to a thread inside the process
                     other than the one that had a run-time overrun,  the  ap-
                     plication has no way of knowing which thread overran.

       sched_nice
              This  field  specifies  the nice value to be set when specifying
              sched_policy as SCHED_OTHER or SCHED_BATCH.  The nice value is a
              number  in  the range -20 (high priority) to +19 (low priority);
              see sched(7).

       sched_priority
              This field specifies the static priority to be set when specify-
              ing  sched_policy  as SCHED_FIFO or SCHED_RR.  The allowed range
              of  priorities  for  these  policies  can  be  determined  using
              sched_get_priority_min(2)  and  sched_get_priority_max(2).   For
              other policies, this field must be specified as 0.

       sched_runtime
              This field specifies the "Runtime" parameter for deadline sched-
              uling.   The value is expressed in nanoseconds.  This field, and
              the next two fields, are used only for  SCHED_DEADLINE  schedul-
              ing; for further details, see sched(7).

       sched_deadline
              This  field  specifies  the  "Deadline"  parameter  for deadline
              scheduling.  The value is expressed in nanoseconds.

       sched_period
              This field specifies the "Period" parameter for deadline  sched-
              uling.  The value is expressed in nanoseconds.

       The  flags  argument  is provided to allow for future extensions to the
       interface; in the current implementation it must be specified as 0.

   sched_getattr()
       The sched_getattr() system call fetches the scheduling policy  and  the
       associated  attributes for the thread whose ID is specified in pid.  If
       pid equals zero, the scheduling policy and attributes  of  the  calling
       thread will be retrieved.

       The size argument should be set to the size of the sched_attr structure
       as known to user space.  The value must be at least  as  large  as  the
       size of the initially published sched_attr structure, or the call fails
       with the error EINVAL.

       The retrieved scheduling attributes are placed in  the  fields  of  the
       sched_attr  structure pointed to by attr.  The kernel sets attr.size to
       the size of its sched_attr structure.

       If  the  caller-provided  attr  buffer  is  larger  than  the  kernel's
       sched_attr  structure, the additional bytes in the user-space structure
       are not touched.  If the caller-provided structure is smaller than  the
       kernel  sched_attr  structure,  the kernel will silently not return any
       values which would be stored  outside  the  provided  space.   As  with
       sched_setattr(),  these semantics allow for future extensibility of the
       interface.

       The flags argument is provided to allow for future  extensions  to  the
       interface; in the current implementation it must be specified as 0.

RETURN VALUE
       On success, sched_setattr() and sched_getattr() return 0.  On error, -1
       is returned, and errno is set to indicate the error.

ERRORS
       sched_getattr() and sched_setattr() can both  fail  for  the  following
       reasons:

       EINVAL attr is NULL; or pid is negative; or flags is not zero.

       ESRCH  The thread whose ID is pid could not be found.

       In addition, sched_getattr() can fail for the following reasons:

       E2BIG  The buffer specified by size and attr is too small.

       EINVAL size is invalid; that is, it is smaller than the initial version
              of the sched_attr structure (48 bytes) or larger than the system
              page size.

       In addition, sched_setattr() can fail for the following reasons:

       E2BIG  The  buffer specified by size and attr is larger than the kernel
              structure, and one or more of the excess bytes is nonzero.

       EBUSY  SCHED_DEADLINE admission control failure, see sched(7).

       EINVAL attr.sched_policy  is  not  one  of  the  recognized   policies;
              attr.sched_flags  contains  a  flag  other  than  SCHED_FLAG_RE-
              SET_ON_FORK;   or    attr.sched_priority    is    invalid;    or
              attr.sched_policy  is SCHED_DEADLINE and the deadline scheduling
              parameters in attr are invalid.

       EPERM  The caller does not have appropriate privileges.

       EPERM  The CPU affinity mask of the thread specified by  pid  does  not
              include all CPUs in the system (see sched_setaffinity(2)).

VERSIONS
       These system calls first appeared in Linux 3.14.

STANDARDS
       These system calls are nonstandard Linux extensions.

NOTES
       glibc does not provide wrappers for these system calls; call them using
       syscall(2).

       sched_setattr()  provides  a   superset   of   the   functionality   of
       sched_setscheduler(2),  sched_setparam(2), nice(2), and (other than the
       ability to set the priority of all processes belonging to  a  specified
       user  or  all  processes  in a specified group) setpriority(2).  Analo-
       gously, sched_getattr() provides a superset  of  the  functionality  of
       sched_getscheduler(2),  sched_getparam(2),  and  (partially)  getprior-
       ity(2).

BUGS
       In Linux versions up to 3.15, sched_setattr()  failed  with  the  error
       EFAULT instead of E2BIG for the case described in ERRORS.

       Up to Linux 5.3, sched_getattr() failed with the error EFBIG if the in-
       kernel sched_attr structure was larger than the  size  passed  by  user
       space.

SEE ALSO
       chrt(1), nice(2), sched_get_priority_max(2), sched_get_priority_min(2),
       sched_getaffinity(2), sched_getparam(2), sched_getscheduler(2),
       sched_rr_get_interval(2), sched_setaffinity(2), sched_setparam(2),
       sched_setscheduler(2), sched_yield(2), setpriority(2),
       pthread_getschedparam(3), pthread_setschedparam(3),
       pthread_setschedprio(3), capabilities(7), cpuset(7), sched(7)

Linux man-pages 6.03              2023-02-05                  sched_setattr(2)

Generated by dwww version 1.15 on Fri Jun 21 07:56:27 CEST 2024.