| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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as with clock_getres, the time64 syscall for this is not necessary or
useful, this time since scheduling timeslices are not on the order 68
years. if there's a 32-bit syscall, use it and expand the result into
timespec; otherwise there is only one syscall and it does the right
thing to store to timespec directly.
on 64-bit archs, there is no change to the code after preprocessing.
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linux's sched_* syscalls actually implement the TPS (thread
scheduling) functionality, not the PS (process scheduling)
functionality which the sched_* functions are supposed to have.
omitting support for the PS option (and having the sched_* interfaces
fail with ENOSYS rather than omitting them, since some broken software
assumes they exist) seems to be the only conforming way to do this on
linux.
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these actually work, but for now they prohibit actually setting
priority levels and report min/max priority as 0.
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