On 14/01/2008, Alexander Schrijver <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Jan 14, 2008 1:30 PM, Andreas Kahari <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > On 14/01/2008, Alexander Schrijver <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > > On Jan 14, 2008 11:52 AM, Andreas Kahari <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > > > Hi,
> > > >
> > > > Is there a way of limiting the amount of CPU given to a particular
> > > > process or process group? For example, I would want the build of the
> > > > qt4 port to use a maximum of 25% of the available CPU, leaving the CPU
> > > > 75% idle if nothing else is happening on the machine.
> > > >
> > > > I know about 'nice', but it doesn't fulfil the criteria that the
> > > > machine is left otherwise idle if nothing else runs on it.
> > > >
> > > > I don't have a real reason for why I would want to do this, I'm mainly
> > > > curious as to if it's possible.
> > [cut]
> > >
> > > I have never done this myself, but I believe this is possible by
> > > creating a login class in /etc/login.conf and set the cputime option.
> > > See login.conf(5) for a better description.
> >
> > Hi Alexander,
> >
> > I believe that the cputime resource limit will limit the maximum
> > amount of CPU time that the user may use in a session, which is not
> > really what I asked for. I'd like the process or process group to run
> > for as long as it needs to run, but that it only ever uses a fraction
> > of the CPU power.
> >
> > It's like limiting the network bandwidth for a particular type of
> > traffic, only this is about time on the CPU.
> >
> >
> > Regards,
> > Andreas
> >
> > --
> > Andreas Kahari
> > Somewhere in the general Cambridge area, UK
> >
>
> Yes, you are right. It is also possible to set a priority for a
> process in a login class.
>
> From login.conf(5)
>      priority          number                  Initial priority (nice) level.
>
> This is not exactly what you want, but it is pretty close. I am
> curious why do you want to set an exact limit and not let the
> scheduler do this for you?
>

As I said, I don't have a good reason for wanting to do this. It just
seemed like something someone might want to do. But let me dream up
three examples: Sometimes firefox (or whatever program) goes a bit
haywire and brings the machine to a crawl. It would be nice to limit
firefox's CPU to a maximum of, say, 50% so that I'm guaranteed to have
50% of the machine to work with.

Another example: Let's say I'm rebuilding the kernel, base system, and
all my packages after a major update from CVS after a long time away.
I'm not worried about how long this takes so I'm quite happy to run
the build at 5% of the CPU while I get on with my work.

Third example, similar to the last one: I'm running a distributed.net
or SETI-at-home client in the background, but I don't ever want it to
run at 100% of the CPU, maybe because that would make the machine too
noisy during the night (due to the fans).

Maybe no-one has these kind of requirements?

Andreas

-- 
Andreas Kahari
Somewhere in the general Cambridge area, UK

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