Joseph wrote:
>How to list real-time priority in Linux for an application (example
>asterisk)?
>
>
>
What do you mean with listing real-time priority? You can list process
priorities with commands like top or "ps -eo pri,nice,%cpu,pid,args
--sort pri" (for example).
If you're interrested in asterisk's real-time responsiveness, the
following might be of interrest.
Real-time priority actually doesn't exist in Linux (you'll need to use a
real RTOS for that). Still, Linux makes a destinction between processes
that need sort of real-time response times and processes that don't.
Controlling this in a direct way is a difficult, if possible at all.
Prioritizing processes is done on the fly (in real time) by the
scheduling process in the Linux core.
However, there is a way to manipulate the prioritizing of processes with
a command called 'nice'. Normally you use this command (with a positive
adjustment value) to make a process to behave 'nice' to other processes.
That is, it gives the process a lower priority that it would normally
get, thus making it a relative low priority process. By using nice with
a negative adjustment (you'll need to be root for that), you're able to
give a certain process a higher priority than it would normally get,
thus giving the process more of a 'real-time' priority.
In my experience it proved to be more usefull to give all the processes,
that stood in the way of asterisk performance, a positive nice
adjustment, rather than giving asterisk a negative nice adjustment. I
haven't tested this thoroughly, so I'm not sure about the reasons for
this. It could have something to with asterisk getting in the way of
Linux's core processes when incresing it's priority. Still, it's
nothing
more than a guess.