sched: Expose some macros related to priority

Some macros in kernel/sched/sched.h about priority are
private to kernel/sched. But they are useful to other
parts of the core kernel.

This patch moves these macros from kernel/sched/sched.h to
include/linux/sched/prio.h so that they are available to
other subsystems.

Signed-off-by: Dongsheng Yang <yangds.fnst@cn.fujitsu.com>
Cc: raistlin@linux.it
Cc: juri.lelli@gmail.com
Cc: clark.williams@gmail.com
Cc: rostedt@goodmis.org
Signed-off-by: Peter Zijlstra <peterz@infradead.org>
Link: http://lkml.kernel.org/r/2b022810905b52d13238466807f4b2a691577180.1390859827.git.yangds.fnst@cn.fujitsu.com
Signed-off-by: Ingo Molnar <mingo@kernel.org>
This commit is contained in:
Dongsheng Yang 2014-01-27 17:15:38 -05:00 committed by Ingo Molnar
parent 5c228079ce
commit 6b6350f155
2 changed files with 18 additions and 18 deletions

View File

@ -20,4 +20,22 @@
#define MAX_PRIO (MAX_RT_PRIO + 40)
#define DEFAULT_PRIO (MAX_RT_PRIO + 20)
/*
* Convert user-nice values [ -20 ... 0 ... 19 ]
* to static priority [ MAX_RT_PRIO..MAX_PRIO-1 ],
* and back.
*/
#define NICE_TO_PRIO(nice) (MAX_RT_PRIO + (nice) + 20)
#define PRIO_TO_NICE(prio) ((prio) - MAX_RT_PRIO - 20)
#define TASK_NICE(p) PRIO_TO_NICE((p)->static_prio)
/*
* 'User priority' is the nice value converted to something we
* can work with better when scaling various scheduler parameters,
* it's a [ 0 ... 39 ] range.
*/
#define USER_PRIO(p) ((p)-MAX_RT_PRIO)
#define TASK_USER_PRIO(p) USER_PRIO((p)->static_prio)
#define MAX_USER_PRIO (USER_PRIO(MAX_PRIO))
#endif /* _SCHED_PRIO_H */

View File

@ -23,24 +23,6 @@ extern atomic_long_t calc_load_tasks;
extern long calc_load_fold_active(struct rq *this_rq);
extern void update_cpu_load_active(struct rq *this_rq);
/*
* Convert user-nice values [ -20 ... 0 ... 19 ]
* to static priority [ MAX_RT_PRIO..MAX_PRIO-1 ],
* and back.
*/
#define NICE_TO_PRIO(nice) (MAX_RT_PRIO + (nice) + 20)
#define PRIO_TO_NICE(prio) ((prio) - MAX_RT_PRIO - 20)
#define TASK_NICE(p) PRIO_TO_NICE((p)->static_prio)
/*
* 'User priority' is the nice value converted to something we
* can work with better when scaling various scheduler parameters,
* it's a [ 0 ... 39 ] range.
*/
#define USER_PRIO(p) ((p)-MAX_RT_PRIO)
#define TASK_USER_PRIO(p) USER_PRIO((p)->static_prio)
#define MAX_USER_PRIO (USER_PRIO(MAX_PRIO))
/*
* Helpers for converting nanosecond timing to jiffy resolution
*/