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=== Kernel 2.6.9 (19 October 2004)===
=== Kernel 2.6.9 (19 October 2004)===
[[Red Hat Enterprise Linux]] 4 used this I/O scheduler as the default even though it used a kernel based on a 2.6.9.<ref>{{Cite news |title= Choosing an I/O Scheduler for Red Hat® Enterprise Linux® 4 and the 2.6 Kernel |author= D. John Shakshober |date= June 2005 |work= Red Hat magazine |url= http://www.redhat.com/magazine/008jun05/features/schedulers/ |accessdate= 20 November 2011 }}</ref>
[[Red Hat Enterprise Linux]] 4 used this I/O scheduler as the default even though it used a kernel based on a 2.6.9.<ref>{{Cite news |title= Choosing an I/O Scheduler for Red Hat® Enterprise Linux® 4 and the 2.6 Kernel |author= D. John Shakshober |date= June 2005 |work= Red Hat magazine |url= http://www.redhat.com/magazine/008jun05/features/schedulers/ |accessdate= 20 November 2011 }}</ref>


=== Kernel 2.6.10 (24 December 2004)===
=== Kernel 2.6.10 (24 December 2004)===

Revision as of 10:34, 14 December 2017

Completely Fair Queuing (CFQ) is an I/O scheduler for the Linux kernel which was written in 2003 by Jens Axboe.

Description

CFQ places synchronous requests submitted by processes into a number of per-process queues and then allocates timeslices for each of the queues to access the disk. The length of the time slice and the number of requests a queue is allowed to submit depends on the I/O priority of the given process. Asynchronous requests for all processes are batched together in fewer queues, one per priority. While CFQ does not do explicit anticipatory I/O scheduling, it achieves the same effect of having good aggregate throughput for the system as a whole, by allowing a process queue to idle at the end of synchronous I/O thereby "anticipating" further close I/O from that process. It can be considered a natural extension of granting I/O time slices to a process[1].

History

Prior to the integration

In February 2003 Andrea Arcangeli put forward his idea for a Stochastic Fair Queueing I/O scheduler to Jens Axboe who then implemented it. Jens Axboe made improvements to his first implementation, calling the new version the Completely Fair Queueing scheduler, and produced a patch to apply it to the 2.5.60 development series kernel.

Kernel 2.6.6 (10 May 2004)

The CFQ I/O scheduler was first integrated into the mainline kernel as an optional I/O scheduler. It is possible to change the scheduler at boot time with the 'elevator' parameter to kernel.

Kernel 2.6.9 (19 October 2004)

Red Hat Enterprise Linux 4 used this I/O scheduler as the default even though it used a kernel based on a 2.6.9.[2]

Kernel 2.6.10 (24 December 2004)

The second release of the CFQ scheduler dubbed CFQv2 is included in the 2.6.10, improvements include better responsiveness and the elimination of some starvation issues which were present in the earlier version. The scheduler now is also switchable at run time by modifying the /sys/block/<block_device>/queue/scheduler variable in the sysfs filesystem.

Kernel 2.6.13 (27 June 2005)

CFQ scheduler moved to a new time sliced design dubbed CFQv3. Among other things, it implements ioprio_get(2) and ioprio_set(2) which allows user to set per-process I/O priorities, usually using ionice(1) command (although using nice(1) also modifies I/O priorities somewhat)

Kernel 2.6.18 (20 September 2006)

CFQ became the default scheduler, replacing the anticipatory scheduler.[3]

See also

References

  1. ^ Bessie Palos (October 2014). "Explicit Anticipatory I/O Scheduling - Case Study". Retrieved 13 August 2015.
  2. ^ D. John Shakshober (June 2005). "Choosing an I/O Scheduler for Red Hat® Enterprise Linux® 4 and the 2.6 Kernel". Red Hat magazine. Archived from the original on 27 August 2007. Retrieved 20 November 2011. {{cite news}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  3. ^ Jens Axboe (June 2006). "Linux Kernel 2.6.18 - Make CFQ the default IO scheduler". Retrieved 20 March 2016.

Sources