prevent linux thread from being interrupted by scheduler

johnnycrash picture johnnycrash · Apr 7, 2010 · Viewed 16.9k times · Source

How do you tell the thread scheduler in linux to not interrupt your thread for any reason? I am programming in user mode. Does simply locking a mutex acomplish this? I want to prevent other threads in my process from being scheduled when a certain function is executing. They would block and I would be wasting cpu cycles with context switches. I want any thread executing the function to be able to finish executing without interruption even if the threads' timeslice is exceeded.

Answer

nos picture nos · Apr 7, 2010

How do you tell the thread scheduler in linux to not interrupt your thread for any reason?

Can't really be done, you need a real time system for that. The closes thing you'll get with linux is to set the scheduling policy to a realtime scheduler, e.g. SCHED_FIFO, and also set the PTHREAD_EXPLICIT_SCHED attribute. See e.g. here , even now though, e.g. irq handlers and other other stuff will interrupt your thread and run.

However, if you only care about the threads in your own process not being able to do anything, then yes, having them block on a mutex your running thread holds is sufficient.

The hard part is to coordinate all the other threads to grab that mutex whenever your thread needs to do its thing.