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In operating system the scheduler is invoked after the system call api or after a hardware interrupt processing.

I am unable to get and found how and who calls the scheduler???

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  • Could be duplicate previous SO question link Jul 8, 2013 at 9:08
  • No its different there it is case of context switching but i am asking about how the scheduler is invoked is there some kernel thread is monitoring the queue or some periodic interrupt to check the running queue
    – Pawan
    Jul 8, 2013 at 9:25

3 Answers 3

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The scheduler is invoked:

  1. With explicit blocking: mutex, semaphore, waitqueue, etc.
  2. If TIF_NEED_RESCHED flag is set, on the nearest possible occasion:
    • If the kernel is preemptible:
      • in syscall or exception context, at the next outmost preempt_enable()
      • in IRQ context, return from interrupt-handler to preemptible context
    • If the kernel is not preemptible:
      • cond_resched() call
      • explicit schedule() call
      • return from syscall or exception to user-space
      • return from interrupt-handler to user-space
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  • Can you suggest me where am I able to find the source code in kernel tree
    – Pawan
    Jul 9, 2013 at 4:14
  • @Pawan, The schedule() can be found in kernel/sched/core.c. See note before __schedule() to see when __schedule() get called. Here also scheduler_tick() function, which important. It calls task_tick() on current scheduler, which in turn sets TIF_NEED_RESCHED flag. Jul 9, 2013 at 8:52
  • I was going through the code in /arch/avr32/kernel/entry-avr32b.S in syscall_exit_work: and several exit code they are calling schedule() function. Is this can be the right place from where after system call api and after the interrupt processing the scheduler is being called.
    – Pawan
    Jul 9, 2013 at 11:41
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The scheduler will be invoked if the current thread/process is going to sleep/wait for some event/resource to be released.

In one of the cases of worker threads which executes the bottom half in the form of workqueues, it will run in a while loop and check if the workqueue list is empty. If found empty it will mark itself as TASK_INTERRUPTABLE, calls schedule() and then goes to sleep.

If the workqueque list is not empty the worker thread marks itself RUNNING and executes the deferred bottom halfs.

So in general schedule() is called by a task which wants to sleep and thus hands over the cpu to other processes/tasks.

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I think in case of round robin algorithm followed for scheduling some process some timer is being programmed based on time slice value which is going to invoke scheduler after that time slice gets over using interrupt functionality. and that preempt the current executing thread save its context and process ready queue figure out which thread to run next restore its context from thread stack and set PC value based on new thread's previous preempt value now new thread starts running. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Programmable_interval_timer

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