I have a project that dynamically loads in unknown assemblies implementing a specified interface. I don't know the contents or purposes of the assembly, other than it implementing my interface.
I need to somehow restrict the amount of processing power available to these assemblies. Processor priority is not what I'm looking for. I can't use a stopwatch and assign a certain amount of time for the assembly to run as the server might be arbitrarily busy.
Optimally I'd like to specify some completely load independent measure of CPU usage. I can run the assemblies in their own process if necessary.
Is there any way to somehow measure the total over-time CPU usage of a given thread (or process, though thread would be the optimal)?
Might I use the process performance counters, or are they, as I suspect, too unreliable? While I don't need to-the-cycle accuracy, I would need rather high accuracy to limit the computing power allocated to each assembly execution.
To extrapolate a bit on my situation. The reason I'm not looking for prioritization of the processes is that I'm not afraid of exhausting my resources, I just need to ensure I can measure "how many" resources a given assembly uses - thus my point about the server being arbitrarily busy.
Imagine the example scenario where you have two assemblies X and Y. Each of them implement a given algorithm and I want to do a primitive test of which assembly gets the job done quickest. I run each assembly and let it run until it's used "Z" resources, at which point I evaluate which assembly did the best job. In this case, I don't mind if one assembly runs at 100% CPU for three seconds, while the other one runs for 2% CPU over 5 minutes - it's the total resource usage that's important.
I'm thinking I might be able to use the CPU time perfcounter to do a crude limitation. Runt each assembly in a new thread and let it run until it's used a given amount of CPU time, at which point I'll kill the process and evaluate the results. I'm just afraid it won't be accurate enough.
GetProcessTimesorQueryProcessCycleTime(the latter only on Vista or later). – rwong Dec 21 '10 at 6:42