On 12.02.2013 08:06, Mike Galbraith wrote: >> In this case pick_next_task takes idle tasks and idle wastes cpu >> time. > That's not a waste of CPU time, that's utilization enforcement the thing > it is designed to do. Well this is a philosophical question and the opinions will IMHO vary strongly. If the throttling kicks in, the system already is in the out-of-spec state. Is the goal now just to allow e.g. the ssh login to be able to kill the task and still try to do the best if otherwise (possibly masking the problem for months), or is it to enforce the utilization? For example we have a PLC software where the end-user develops an application that will be executed in our realtime task. The application usually has a longer initialization part where the excess utilization can happen and should be tolerated and the running part where it is a bug if it happens. Here I would prefer the throttling to alert the user, but not to actually throttle if there is no non-RT task actually wanting to run. In other cases I would maybe prefer even killing the task, alerting the user to the fact. I have a related question: is the information that the throttling happened available somewhere except the log (where it gets only written once)? If not, would a patch exporting the count of throttlings via /sys be accepted? My problem is that I would like to know that the throttling happened right now and display it to the user. Regards -- Stano -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-rt-users" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html