Does POSIX standard say EXPLICIT or IMPLICIT SCHED
Till Straumann
strauman at slac.stanford.edu
Wed Dec 4 17:09:22 UTC 2002
I guess I was naive when I first wrote the benchmark code - I figured
POSIX was a standard
and hence the defaults would be standardized.
After discovering the problem, yesterday I did a similar research and
came to the same
conclusion: it seems that the defaults set by pthread_attr_init() are
implementation dependent.
Here are more examples:
IBM AIX unix uses INHERIT_SCHED by default, IBM OS/400's default is
EXPLICIT_SCHED
;-)
-- Till
Ralf Corsepius wrote:
>Am Mit, 2002-12-04 um 16.48 schrieb Joel Sherrill:
>
>
>>>>My benchmark code fails to set PTHREAD_EXPLICIT_SCHED and hence
>>>>the benchmark task runs at the wrong priority. I had developed the
>>>>pthread stuff for RT-Linux (where EXPLICIT_SCHED is the default,
>>>>as it is on some other systems, it seems).
>>>>
>>>>
>>>I searched some last night
>>>
>>>
>>and unfortunately did not complete this paragraph. :(
>>
>>I looked to see what the POSIX or OpenGroup standards say about this
>>and didn't find anything which gave me a clue.
>>
>>
>
>>From SUSV3/pthread_attr_init():
>
>The pthread_attr_init() function shall initialize a thread attributes
>object attr with the default value for all of the individual attributes
>used by a given implementation.
>
>I read this as being "explicitly unspecific", i.e. "everything is
>implementation-defined".
>
>
>
>> Does anyone out there
>>know what The Right Thing To Do (TM) is?
>>
>>
>IMO: "You must not rely on any implicit defaults".
>
>
>Anyway, from Solaris-2.7's pthread_attr_init's man-page:
>
> The pthread_attr_init() function initializes a thread attri-
> butes object ( attr) with the default value for each attri-
> bute as follows:
>
> Attribute Default Value Meaning of Default
> contentionscope PTHREAD_SCOPE_PROCESS resource competition within process
> detachstate PTHREAD_CREATE_JOINABLE joinable by other threads
> stackaddr NULL stack allocated by system
> stacksize NULL 1 or 2 megabyte
> priority 0 priority of the thread
> policy SCHED_OTHER determined by system
> inheritsched PTHREAD_EXPLICIT_SCHED scheduling policy and parameters
> not inherited but explicitly
> defined by the attribute object
> guardsize PAGESIZE size of guard area for a thread's
> created stack
>
>Linux pthread_attr_init man-page
>
> inheritsched
> Indicate whether the scheduling policy and scheduling parameters for
> the newly created thread are determined by the values of the schedpol-
> icy and schedparam attributes (value PTHREAD_EXPLICIT_SCHED) or are
> inherited from the parent thread (value PTHREAD_INHERIT_SCHED).
>
> Default value: PTHREAD_EXPLICIT_SCHED.
>
>Ralf
>
>
>
>
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