nice really nice?

Robert Collins rbcollins@cygwin.com
Mon Nov 25 20:51:00 GMT 2002


On Tue, 2002-11-26 at 14:00, Randall R Schulz wrote:
> Thomas,
> 
> One thing to keep in mind is that while Unix (and work-alikes) has a -20 
> (best scheduling priority) ... +20 (worst priority) range, Windows has only 
> the six distinct levels. I don't know how Cygwin maps the Unix nice values 
> to the Windows priorities, offhand. Probably it's a linear mapping.
> 
> I haven't had a chance to read the information about scheduling in Windows, 
> but I will. Thanks for referring me to it.

Windows has (offhand) ~ 30 scheduling levels. It has priority classes,
which 'group' processes, and then relative priorities within each
class.IIRC you can check sched,cc via CVS to see the actual mapping I
used, it's not linear as such, but nearly so.

Thomas,
 those tests show nothing other than the time it takes to push the iso
through to a bitbucket. Unless there is serious other load on the CPU,
the time *should* be constant.
Rob
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