Publication | Closed Access
Implementing a Thermal-Aware Scheduler in Linux Kernel on a Multi-Core Processor
14
Citations
10
References
2010
Year
EngineeringEnergy EfficiencyCurrent Linux SchedulerComputer ArchitecturePower OptimizationEmbedded SystemsHardware SystemsCompute KernelComputing SystemsThermal-aware SchedulerSystems EngineeringParallel ComputingPower ManagementPower-aware ComputingComputer EngineeringLinux KernelPower DissipationScheduling (Computing)Computer ScienceDuo ProcessorMulti-core ProcessorEnergy ManagementReal-time Multiprocessor SystemScheduling (Operating Systems)Many-core ArchitectureParallel ProgrammingReal-time SystemsPower-efficient ComputingScheduling (Project Management)
As power dissipation causes thermal issues in cooling costs, lifetime and reliability, thermal management has become an important issue in today's OS and processor design. Early OS-level thermal management schemes were proposed and evaluated mainly with simulators or analytical models. In this paper, we implement a thermal-aware round-robin scheduling algorithm in the Linux kernel, and compare its performance with the ‘Heat-and-Run’ algorithm and the default Linux baseline scheduler on an Intel Core 2 Duo processor using representative benchmarks from SPEC2000, MiBench and NetBench. Our results indicate that the current Linux scheduler can easily be enhanced with thermal-awareness to show improved performance in terms of both the on-chip temperature condition and application throughput.
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