real time system scheduling. basics of scheduling usually fewer processor than tasks adherence to...
TRANSCRIPT
REAL TIME SYSTEM
Scheduling
Basics of Scheduling
Usually Fewer Processor than tasks Adherence to timing constraints like
deadline In a Multiprocessor (or MultiCore)
environment, A scheduling decision is a decision to execute a task, and it has the following three parts: assignment: which processor should
execute the task; ordering: in what order each processor
should execute its tasks; and timing: the time at which each task
executes.
Type of schedulers – Offline
Fully static schedulerDoesn't require mutex or semaphoreDifficult to realize
Difficult to predict execution timeTasks typically have data dependent
execution times Static order scheduler
Tasks assignment and ordering at design time
Defer until run time decision of when in physical time to execute a task
Depend on whether locks could be acquired or precedence constraints are satisfied
Type of scheduler- Online
Static assignment schedulerAssignment at design time rest at run
time Fully dynamic scheduler
When a processor become available scheduler decides which tasks should be assigned to it
Preemptive scheduler Tasks can be removed while still
executing and another task can be assigned the processorTasks may be blocked if it try to acquire a lock and the lock is not available
Non-preemptive scheduler
Times associated with a task Periodic tasks Sporadic tasks- repeat but timing is
irregular Priority or precedence constraints Tasks may have preconditions
Comparing Schedulers
Feasible schedule (fi<di) Optimal with respect to feasibility Processor utilization Maximum lateness
Lmax=max(fi-di) where i belongs to T Help us to analyze infeasible schedules For soft real time system positive Lmax is
not a problem Total completion time or Makespan
M=max(fi) – min(ri) for all i belonging to T
Implementation of a Scheduler For preemptive scheduling the scheduler is
invoked when any of several things occur: A timer interrupt occurs, for example at a jiffy
interval. An I/O interrupt occurs. An operating system service is invoked. A task attempts to acquire a mutex. A task tests a semaphore.
For interrupts, the scheduling procedure is called by the interrupt service routine
In the other cases, the scheduling procedure is called by the operating system procedure that provides the service
RM – Rate monotonic
Static priority protocol optimal with respect to feasibility among
fixed priority uniprocessor schedulers for the above task model.
This scheduling strategy gives higher priority to a task with a smaller period
Cannot always achieve 100% utilization. In particular, RM schedulers are
constrained to have fixed priority.
RM schedule for two tasks
RM Schedule
Consider two tasks to be executed periodically on a single processor, where task 1 has period p1 = 4 and task 2 has period p2 = 6.Let the execution time of task 1 be e1 = 1. Find
the maximum value for the execution time e2 of task 2 such that the RM schedule is feasible.
Again let the execution time of task 1 be e1 = 1. Let non-RMS be a fixed-priority schedule that is not an RM schedule. Find the maximum value for the execution time e2 of task 2 such that non-RMS is feasible.
EDF
simply executes the tasks in the same order as their deadlines, with the one with the earliest deadline going first
dynamic priority scheduling algorithm. If a task is repeatedly executed, it may be assigned
a different priority on each execution EDF is more expensive to implement than RM,
in practice its performance is generally superior First, RM is optimal with respect to feasibility only
among fixed priority schedulers, whereas EDF is optimal w.r.t. feasibility among dynamic priority schedulers
EDF also minimizes the maximum lateness EDF results in fewer preemptions
Priority inversion
It is a scheduling anomaly where a high-priority task is blocked while unrelated lower-priority tasks are executing
Mars Pathfinder: The Problem• Two tasks were critical for controlling
communication on the lander’s communication bus, the scheduler task (bc_sched) and the distribution task (bc_dist).
• Each of these tasks checked each cycle to be sure that the other had run successfully.
time = 0.125 s
bc_sched
bc_dist
bus active
Mars Pathfinder: The problem• bc_dist was blocked by a much lower priority
meteorological science task (ASI/MET)
• ASI/MET was preempted by several medium priority processes such as accelerometers and radar altimeters.
• bc_sched started and discovered that bc_dist had not completed. Under these circumstances, bc_sched reacted by reinitializing the lander’s hardware and software and terminating all ground command activities.
Problem resolution
• Logging designed into vxWorks enabled NASA and Wind River to reproduce the failure on Earth. This reproduction made the priority inversion obvious.
• NASA patched the lander’s software to enable priority inheritance.
Priority Inheritance protocol
when a task blocks attempting to acquire a lock, then the task that holds the lock inherits the priority of the blocked task
Priority ceiling Protocol
every lock or semaphore is assigned a priority ceiling equal to the priority of the highest-priority task that can lock it.
A task t can acquire a lock a only if the task’s priority is strictly higher than the priority ceilings of all locks currently held by other tasks
Multiprocessor scheduling
Scheduling tasks on multiple processor is even harder then scheduling tasks on a single scheduler
Hu level scheduling algorithmAssigns priority to each task t based on the levelit emphasizes the path through the precedence
graph with the greatest total execution timeOnce priorities are assigned to tasks, a list
scheduler sorts the tasks by priorities and assigns them to processors in the order of the sorted list as processors become available
Multiprocessor scheduling
A schedule for task 1-6 on two processorsMakespan is 4
Scheduling anomalies
Unexpected or counterintuitive behaviors emerge due to small changes in the operating condition of a system Improvements in performance at a local
level can result in degradations in performance at a global level,
Scheduling anomalies
Nine tasks scheduled on three processors
Execution time of tasks reduced by one time unit
Scheduling anomalies
Adding one more processor
Removing precedence between tasks 4,7, and 8
Scheduling anomalies
Anomaly due to mutual exclusion locksTasks 2 and 4 contend for a mutex.If the execution time of task 1 is reduced,
then the order of execution of tasks 2 and 4 reverses, which results in an increased execution time.