Re: [PATCH] Return value from schedule()

From: Ingo Molnar
Date: Thu Sep 04 2008 - 12:14:56 EST



* Matthew Wilcox <matthew@xxxxxx> wrote:

> In some circumstances, you want to wait for an event to happen. let's
> assume that it's a hardware event, so you can't just add a notifier of
> some kind, you have to poll. Here's an example:
>
> On Wed, Sep 03, 2008 at 03:57:13PM -0700, Stephen Hemminger wrote:
> > return -ETIMEDOUT;
> > - udelay(10);
> > + if (signal_pending(current))
> > + return -EINTR;
> > + schedule();
>
> If there's no other task ready to run, schedule() could return in much
> less than 10 microseconds (actually, it could return in much less than
> 10 microseconds even if another task does run, but let's ignore that case).
>
> If schedule() returned whether or not it had scheduled another task, we
> could do something like:
>
> if (!schedule())
> udelay(10);

hm, i'm not really sure - this really just seems to be a higher prio
variant of yield() combined with some weird code. Do we really want to
promote such arguably broken behavior? If there's any chance of any
polling to take a material amount of CPU time it should be event driven
to begin with.

Ingo
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