Schedulers in contemporary operating systems implicitly give higher priority to I/O bound process over CPU bound processes. Do you think that while scheduling the processes, CPU bound processes should be given higher priority as compared to I/O bound processes so that the throughput could be increased.
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If serving IO is given lower priority it is likely that some input is missed while the processor is executing non-IO processes which is almost certainly bad. That's why higher priority for IO processes is a necessary evil. If this is a problem you need an operating system that schedules otherwise. |
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