syncthing/lib/osutil/lowprio_linux.go

101 lines
3.1 KiB
Go

// Copyright (C) 2018 The Syncthing Authors.
//
// This Source Code Form is subject to the terms of the Mozilla Public
// License, v. 2.0. If a copy of the MPL was not distributed with this file,
// You can obtain one at https://mozilla.org/MPL/2.0/.
// +build !android
package osutil
import (
"os"
"syscall"
"github.com/pkg/errors"
)
const ioprioClassShift = 13
type ioprioClass int
const (
ioprioClassRT ioprioClass = iota + 1
ioprioClassBE
ioprioClassIdle
)
const (
ioprioWhoProcess = iota + 1
ioprioWhoPGRP
ioprioWhoUser
)
func ioprioSet(class ioprioClass, value int) error {
res, _, err := syscall.Syscall(syscall.SYS_IOPRIO_SET,
uintptr(ioprioWhoProcess), 0,
uintptr(class)<<ioprioClassShift|uintptr(value))
if res == 0 {
return nil
}
return err
}
// SetLowPriority lowers the process CPU scheduling priority, and possibly
// I/O priority depending on the platform and OS.
func SetLowPriority() error {
// Process zero is "self", niceness value 9 is something between 0
// (default) and 19 (worst priority). But then, this is Linux, so of
// course we get this to take care of as well:
//
// "C library/kernel differences
//
// Within the kernel, nice values are actually represented using the
// range 40..1 (since negative numbers are error codes) and these are
// the values employed by the setpriority() and getpriority() system
// calls. The glibc wrapper functions for these system calls handle the
// translations between the user-land and kernel representations of the
// nice value according to the formula unice = 20 - knice. (Thus, the
// kernel's 40..1 range corresponds to the range -20..19 as seen by user
// space.)"
const (
pidSelf = 0
wantNiceLevel = 20 - 9
)
// Remember Linux kernel nice levels are upside down.
if cur, err := syscall.Getpriority(syscall.PRIO_PROCESS, 0); err == nil && cur <= wantNiceLevel {
// We're done here.
return nil
}
// Move ourselves to a new process group so that we can use the process
// group variants of Setpriority etc to affect all of our threads in one
// go. If this fails, bail, so that we don't affect things we shouldn't.
// If we are already the leader of our own process group, do nothing.
//
// Oh and this is because Linux doesn't follow the POSIX threading model
// where setting the niceness of the process would actually set the
// niceness of the process, instead it just affects the current thread
// so we need this workaround...
if pgid, err := syscall.Getpgid(pidSelf); err != nil {
// This error really shouldn't happen
return errors.Wrap(err, "get process group")
} else if pgid != os.Getpid() {
// We are not process group leader. Elevate!
if err := syscall.Setpgid(pidSelf, 0); err != nil {
return errors.Wrap(err, "set process group")
}
}
if err := syscall.Setpriority(syscall.PRIO_PGRP, pidSelf, wantNiceLevel); err != nil {
return errors.Wrap(err, "set niceness")
}
// Best effort, somewhere to the end of the scale (0 through 7 being the
// range).
err := ioprioSet(ioprioClassBE, 5)
return errors.Wrap(err, "set I/O priority") // wraps nil as nil
}