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explain pre emptive and non preemptive scheduling?

diff bet preemptive & nonpreemptive in os

29th Jan 2017, 2:07 PM
S.Archana
S.Archana - avatar
1 Réponse
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@S.Archana According to my old operating system concepts textbook (silberschatz, galvin, gagne) from a while ago, pg. 154, "under non-preemptive scheduling, once the CPU has been allocated to a process, the process keeps the CPU until it releases the CPU either by termination or by switching to the waiting state." So I guess with that being said preemptive scheduling would likely be the opposite. Meaning that the CPU can be released from a process even if the process isn't complete. For ex, the Round Robin (RR) scheduling algorithm is preemptive. If a process' CPU exceeds the allotted time burst allowed then that process is "preempted" and is put back on the ready queue while a different process is granted the CPU for a certain allotted time. And the same process continues for new process who was granted CPU time. Hope that makes a little sense S. Archana
29th Jan 2017, 3:13 PM
deejae
deejae - avatar