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Linux Kernel Programming

You're reading from   Linux Kernel Programming A comprehensive and practical guide to kernel internals, writing modules, and kernel synchronization

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Product type Paperback
Published in Feb 2024
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803232225
Length 826 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
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Author (1):
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Kaiwan N. Billimoria Kaiwan N. Billimoria
Author Profile Icon Kaiwan N. Billimoria
Kaiwan N. Billimoria
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Toc

Table of Contents (16) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Linux Kernel Programming – A Quick Introduction 2. Building the 6.x Linux Kernel from Source – Part 1 FREE CHAPTER 3. Building the 6.x Linux Kernel from Source – Part 2 4. Writing Your First Kernel Module – Part 1 5. Writing Your First Kernel Module – Part 2 6. Kernel Internals Essentials – Processes and Threads 7. Memory Management Internals – Essentials 8. Kernel Memory Allocation for Module Authors – Part 1 9. Kernel Memory Allocation for Module Authors – Part 2 10. The CPU Scheduler – Part 1 11. The CPU Scheduler – Part 2 12. Kernel Synchronization – Part 1 13. Kernel Synchronization – Part 2 14. Other Books You May Enjoy
15. Index

Summary

In this, our second chapter on CPU (or task) scheduling on the Linux OS, you have learned several key things. Among them, you learned how to programmatically query and set any (user or kernel) thread’s CPU affinity mask; this naturally led to how you can programmatically query and set any thread’s scheduling policy and priority.

The whole notion of being “completely fair” (via the CFS implementation) was brought into question, and some light (quite a bit!) was shed on the elegant solution called cgroups (v2), which is now deeply embedded into the Linux kernel. We covered how systemd helps auto-integrate cgroups into modern distros, servers and even embedded systems, automatically and dynamically creating and maintaining various cgroups (via its slice and scope artifacts). You even learned how to leverage the cgroups v2 CPU controller to allocate CPU bandwidth (or utilization) as desired to processes in a sub-group, both via systemd unit files...

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