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sched.h
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/* SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 */
#ifndef _LINUX_SCHED_H
#define _LINUX_SCHED_H
/*
* Define 'struct task_struct' and provide the main scheduler
* APIs (schedule(), wakeup variants, etc.)
*/
#include <uapi/linux/sched.h>
#include <asm/current.h>
#include <linux/pid.h>
#include <linux/sem.h>
#include <linux/shm.h>
#include <linux/mutex.h>
#include <linux/plist.h>
#include <linux/hrtimer.h>
#include <linux/irqflags.h>
#include <linux/seccomp.h>
#include <linux/nodemask.h>
#include <linux/rcupdate.h>
#include <linux/refcount.h>
#include <linux/resource.h>
#include <linux/latencytop.h>
#include <linux/sched/prio.h>
#include <linux/sched/types.h>
#include <linux/signal_types.h>
#include <linux/syscall_user_dispatch.h>
#include <linux/mm_types_task.h>
#include <linux/task_io_accounting.h>
#include <linux/posix-timers.h>
#include <linux/rseq.h>
#include <linux/seqlock.h>
#include <linux/kcsan.h>
#include <asm/kmap_size.h>
/* task_struct member predeclarations (sorted alphabetically): */
struct audit_context;
struct backing_dev_info;
struct bio_list;
struct blk_plug;
struct bpf_local_storage;
struct bpf_run_ctx;
struct capture_control;
struct cfs_rq;
struct fs_struct;
struct futex_pi_state;
struct io_context;
struct io_uring_task;
struct mempolicy;
struct nameidata;
struct nsproxy;
struct perf_event_context;
struct pid_namespace;
struct pipe_inode_info;
struct rcu_node;
struct reclaim_state;
struct robust_list_head;
struct root_domain;
struct rq;
struct sched_attr;
struct sched_param;
struct seq_file;
struct sighand_struct;
struct signal_struct;
struct task_delay_info;
struct task_group;
/*
* Task state bitmask. NOTE! These bits are also
* encoded in fs/proc/array.c: get_task_state().
*
* We have two separate sets of flags: task->state
* is about runnability, while task->exit_state are
* about the task exiting. Confusing, but this way
* modifying one set can't modify the other one by
* mistake.
*/
/* Used in tsk->state: */
#define TASK_RUNNING 0x0000
#define TASK_INTERRUPTIBLE 0x0001
#define TASK_UNINTERRUPTIBLE 0x0002
#define __TASK_STOPPED 0x0004
#define __TASK_TRACED 0x0008
/* Used in tsk->exit_state: */
#define EXIT_DEAD 0x0010
#define EXIT_ZOMBIE 0x0020
#define EXIT_TRACE (EXIT_ZOMBIE | EXIT_DEAD)
/* Used in tsk->state again: */
#define TASK_PARKED 0x0040
#define TASK_DEAD 0x0080
#define TASK_WAKEKILL 0x0100
#define TASK_WAKING 0x0200
#define TASK_NOLOAD 0x0400
#define TASK_NEW 0x0800
/* RT specific auxilliary flag to mark RT lock waiters */
#define TASK_RTLOCK_WAIT 0x1000
#define TASK_STATE_MAX 0x2000
/* Convenience macros for the sake of set_current_state: */
#define TASK_KILLABLE (TASK_WAKEKILL | TASK_UNINTERRUPTIBLE)
#define TASK_STOPPED (TASK_WAKEKILL | __TASK_STOPPED)
#define TASK_TRACED (TASK_WAKEKILL | __TASK_TRACED)
#define TASK_IDLE (TASK_UNINTERRUPTIBLE | TASK_NOLOAD)
/* Convenience macros for the sake of wake_up(): */
#define TASK_NORMAL (TASK_INTERRUPTIBLE | TASK_UNINTERRUPTIBLE)
/* get_task_state(): */
#define TASK_REPORT (TASK_RUNNING | TASK_INTERRUPTIBLE | \
TASK_UNINTERRUPTIBLE | __TASK_STOPPED | \
__TASK_TRACED | EXIT_DEAD | EXIT_ZOMBIE | \
TASK_PARKED)
#define task_is_running(task) (READ_ONCE((task)->__state) == TASK_RUNNING)
#define task_is_traced(task) ((READ_ONCE(task->__state) & __TASK_TRACED) != 0)
#define task_is_stopped(task) ((READ_ONCE(task->__state) & __TASK_STOPPED) != 0)
#define task_is_stopped_or_traced(task) ((READ_ONCE(task->__state) & (__TASK_STOPPED | __TASK_TRACED)) != 0)
/*
* Special states are those that do not use the normal wait-loop pattern. See
* the comment with set_special_state().
*/
#define is_special_task_state(state) \
((state) & (__TASK_STOPPED | __TASK_TRACED | TASK_PARKED | TASK_DEAD))
#ifdef CONFIG_DEBUG_ATOMIC_SLEEP
# define debug_normal_state_change(state_value) \
do { \
WARN_ON_ONCE(is_special_task_state(state_value)); \
current->task_state_change = _THIS_IP_; \
} while (0)
# define debug_special_state_change(state_value) \
do { \
WARN_ON_ONCE(!is_special_task_state(state_value)); \
current->task_state_change = _THIS_IP_; \
} while (0)
# define debug_rtlock_wait_set_state() \
do { \
current->saved_state_change = current->task_state_change;\
current->task_state_change = _THIS_IP_; \
} while (0)
# define debug_rtlock_wait_restore_state() \
do { \
current->task_state_change = current->saved_state_change;\
} while (0)
#else
# define debug_normal_state_change(cond) do { } while (0)
# define debug_special_state_change(cond) do { } while (0)
# define debug_rtlock_wait_set_state() do { } while (0)
# define debug_rtlock_wait_restore_state() do { } while (0)
#endif
/*
* set_current_state() includes a barrier so that the write of current->state
* is correctly serialised wrt the caller's subsequent test of whether to
* actually sleep:
*
* for (;;) {
* set_current_state(TASK_UNINTERRUPTIBLE);
* if (CONDITION)
* break;
*
* schedule();
* }
* __set_current_state(TASK_RUNNING);
*
* If the caller does not need such serialisation (because, for instance, the
* CONDITION test and condition change and wakeup are under the same lock) then
* use __set_current_state().
*
* The above is typically ordered against the wakeup, which does:
*
* CONDITION = 1;
* wake_up_state(p, TASK_UNINTERRUPTIBLE);
*
* where wake_up_state()/try_to_wake_up() executes a full memory barrier before
* accessing p->state.
*
* Wakeup will do: if (@state & p->state) p->state = TASK_RUNNING, that is,
* once it observes the TASK_UNINTERRUPTIBLE store the waking CPU can issue a
* TASK_RUNNING store which can collide with __set_current_state(TASK_RUNNING).
*
* However, with slightly different timing the wakeup TASK_RUNNING store can
* also collide with the TASK_UNINTERRUPTIBLE store. Losing that store is not
* a problem either because that will result in one extra go around the loop
* and our @cond test will save the day.
*
* Also see the comments of try_to_wake_up().
*/
#define __set_current_state(state_value) \
do { \
debug_normal_state_change((state_value)); \
WRITE_ONCE(current->__state, (state_value)); \
} while (0)
#define set_current_state(state_value) \
do { \
debug_normal_state_change((state_value)); \
smp_store_mb(current->__state, (state_value)); \
} while (0)
/*
* set_special_state() should be used for those states when the blocking task
* can not use the regular condition based wait-loop. In that case we must
* serialize against wakeups such that any possible in-flight TASK_RUNNING
* stores will not collide with our state change.
*/
#define set_special_state(state_value) \
do { \
unsigned long flags; /* may shadow */ \
\
raw_spin_lock_irqsave(¤t->pi_lock, flags); \
debug_special_state_change((state_value)); \
WRITE_ONCE(current->__state, (state_value)); \
raw_spin_unlock_irqrestore(¤t->pi_lock, flags); \
} while (0)
/*
* PREEMPT_RT specific variants for "sleeping" spin/rwlocks
*
* RT's spin/rwlock substitutions are state preserving. The state of the
* task when blocking on the lock is saved in task_struct::saved_state and
* restored after the lock has been acquired. These operations are
* serialized by task_struct::pi_lock against try_to_wake_up(). Any non RT
* lock related wakeups while the task is blocked on the lock are
* redirected to operate on task_struct::saved_state to ensure that these
* are not dropped. On restore task_struct::saved_state is set to
* TASK_RUNNING so any wakeup attempt redirected to saved_state will fail.
*
* The lock operation looks like this:
*
* current_save_and_set_rtlock_wait_state();
* for (;;) {
* if (try_lock())
* break;
* raw_spin_unlock_irq(&lock->wait_lock);
* schedule_rtlock();
* raw_spin_lock_irq(&lock->wait_lock);
* set_current_state(TASK_RTLOCK_WAIT);
* }
* current_restore_rtlock_saved_state();
*/
#define current_save_and_set_rtlock_wait_state() \
do { \
lockdep_assert_irqs_disabled(); \
raw_spin_lock(¤t->pi_lock); \
current->saved_state = current->__state; \
debug_rtlock_wait_set_state(); \
WRITE_ONCE(current->__state, TASK_RTLOCK_WAIT); \
raw_spin_unlock(¤t->pi_lock); \
} while (0);
#define current_restore_rtlock_saved_state() \
do { \
lockdep_assert_irqs_disabled(); \
raw_spin_lock(¤t->pi_lock); \
debug_rtlock_wait_restore_state(); \
WRITE_ONCE(current->__state, current->saved_state); \
current->saved_state = TASK_RUNNING; \
raw_spin_unlock(¤t->pi_lock); \
} while (0);
#define get_current_state() READ_ONCE(current->__state)
/* Task command name length: */
#define TASK_COMM_LEN 16
extern void scheduler_tick(void);
#define MAX_SCHEDULE_TIMEOUT LONG_MAX
extern long schedule_timeout(long timeout);
extern long schedule_timeout_interruptible(long timeout);
extern long schedule_timeout_killable(long timeout);
extern long schedule_timeout_uninterruptible(long timeout);
extern long schedule_timeout_idle(long timeout);
asmlinkage void schedule(void);
extern void schedule_preempt_disabled(void);
asmlinkage void preempt_schedule_irq(void);
#ifdef CONFIG_PREEMPT_RT
extern void schedule_rtlock(void);
#endif
extern int __must_check io_schedule_prepare(void);
extern void io_schedule_finish(int token);
extern long io_schedule_timeout(long timeout);
extern void io_schedule(void);
/**
* struct prev_cputime - snapshot of system and user cputime
* @utime: time spent in user mode
* @stime: time spent in system mode
* @lock: protects the above two fields
*
* Stores previous user/system time values such that we can guarantee
* monotonicity.
*/
struct prev_cputime {
#ifndef CONFIG_VIRT_CPU_ACCOUNTING_NATIVE
u64 utime;
u64 stime;
raw_spinlock_t lock;
#endif
};
enum vtime_state {
/* Task is sleeping or running in a CPU with VTIME inactive: */
VTIME_INACTIVE = 0,
/* Task is idle */
VTIME_IDLE,
/* Task runs in kernelspace in a CPU with VTIME active: */
VTIME_SYS,
/* Task runs in userspace in a CPU with VTIME active: */
VTIME_USER,
/* Task runs as guests in a CPU with VTIME active: */
VTIME_GUEST,
};
struct vtime {
seqcount_t seqcount;
unsigned long long starttime;
enum vtime_state state;
unsigned int cpu;
u64 utime;
u64 stime;
u64 gtime;
};
/*
* Utilization clamp constraints.
* @UCLAMP_MIN: Minimum utilization
* @UCLAMP_MAX: Maximum utilization
* @UCLAMP_CNT: Utilization clamp constraints count
*/
enum uclamp_id {
UCLAMP_MIN = 0,
UCLAMP_MAX,
UCLAMP_CNT
};
#ifdef CONFIG_SMP
extern struct root_domain def_root_domain;
extern struct mutex sched_domains_mutex;
#endif
struct sched_info {
#ifdef CONFIG_SCHED_INFO
/* Cumulative counters: */
/* # of times we have run on this CPU: */
unsigned long pcount;
/* Time spent waiting on a runqueue: */
unsigned long long run_delay;
/* Timestamps: */
/* When did we last run on a CPU? */
unsigned long long last_arrival;
/* When were we last queued to run? */
unsigned long long last_queued;
#endif /* CONFIG_SCHED_INFO */
};
/*
* Integer metrics need fixed point arithmetic, e.g., sched/fair
* has a few: load, load_avg, util_avg, freq, and capacity.
*
* We define a basic fixed point arithmetic range, and then formalize
* all these metrics based on that basic range.
*/
# define SCHED_FIXEDPOINT_SHIFT 10
# define SCHED_FIXEDPOINT_SCALE (1L << SCHED_FIXEDPOINT_SHIFT)
/* Increase resolution of cpu_capacity calculations */
# define SCHED_CAPACITY_SHIFT SCHED_FIXEDPOINT_SHIFT
# define SCHED_CAPACITY_SCALE (1L << SCHED_CAPACITY_SHIFT)
struct load_weight {
unsigned long weight;
u32 inv_weight;
};
/**
* struct util_est - Estimation utilization of FAIR tasks
* @enqueued: instantaneous estimated utilization of a task/cpu
* @ewma: the Exponential Weighted Moving Average (EWMA)
* utilization of a task
*
* Support data structure to track an Exponential Weighted Moving Average
* (EWMA) of a FAIR task's utilization. New samples are added to the moving
* average each time a task completes an activation. Sample's weight is chosen
* so that the EWMA will be relatively insensitive to transient changes to the
* task's workload.
*
* The enqueued attribute has a slightly different meaning for tasks and cpus:
* - task: the task's util_avg at last task dequeue time
* - cfs_rq: the sum of util_est.enqueued for each RUNNABLE task on that CPU
* Thus, the util_est.enqueued of a task represents the contribution on the
* estimated utilization of the CPU where that task is currently enqueued.
*
* Only for tasks we track a moving average of the past instantaneous
* estimated utilization. This allows to absorb sporadic drops in utilization
* of an otherwise almost periodic task.
*
* The UTIL_AVG_UNCHANGED flag is used to synchronize util_est with util_avg
* updates. When a task is dequeued, its util_est should not be updated if its
* util_avg has not been updated in the meantime.
* This information is mapped into the MSB bit of util_est.enqueued at dequeue
* time. Since max value of util_est.enqueued for a task is 1024 (PELT util_avg
* for a task) it is safe to use MSB.
*/
struct util_est {
unsigned int enqueued;
unsigned int ewma;
#define UTIL_EST_WEIGHT_SHIFT 2
#define UTIL_AVG_UNCHANGED 0x80000000
} __attribute__((__aligned__(sizeof(u64))));
/*
* The load/runnable/util_avg accumulates an infinite geometric series
* (see __update_load_avg_cfs_rq() in kernel/sched/pelt.c).
*
* [load_avg definition]
*
* load_avg = runnable% * scale_load_down(load)
*
* [runnable_avg definition]
*
* runnable_avg = runnable% * SCHED_CAPACITY_SCALE
*
* [util_avg definition]
*
* util_avg = running% * SCHED_CAPACITY_SCALE
*
* where runnable% is the time ratio that a sched_entity is runnable and
* running% the time ratio that a sched_entity is running.
*
* For cfs_rq, they are the aggregated values of all runnable and blocked
* sched_entities.
*
* The load/runnable/util_avg doesn't directly factor frequency scaling and CPU
* capacity scaling. The scaling is done through the rq_clock_pelt that is used
* for computing those signals (see update_rq_clock_pelt())
*
* N.B., the above ratios (runnable% and running%) themselves are in the
* range of [0, 1]. To do fixed point arithmetics, we therefore scale them
* to as large a range as necessary. This is for example reflected by
* util_avg's SCHED_CAPACITY_SCALE.
*
* [Overflow issue]
*
* The 64-bit load_sum can have 4353082796 (=2^64/47742/88761) entities
* with the highest load (=88761), always runnable on a single cfs_rq,
* and should not overflow as the number already hits PID_MAX_LIMIT.
*
* For all other cases (including 32-bit kernels), struct load_weight's
* weight will overflow first before we do, because:
*
* Max(load_avg) <= Max(load.weight)
*
* Then it is the load_weight's responsibility to consider overflow
* issues.
*/
struct sched_avg {
u64 last_update_time;
u64 load_sum;
u64 runnable_sum;
u32 util_sum;
u32 period_contrib;
unsigned long load_avg;
unsigned long runnable_avg;
unsigned long util_avg;
struct util_est util_est;
} ____cacheline_aligned;
struct sched_statistics {
#ifdef CONFIG_SCHEDSTATS
u64 wait_start;
u64 wait_max;
u64 wait_count;
u64 wait_sum;
u64 iowait_count;
u64 iowait_sum;
u64 sleep_start;
u64 sleep_max;
s64 sum_sleep_runtime;
u64 block_start;
u64 block_max;
s64 sum_block_runtime;
u64 exec_max;
u64 slice_max;
u64 nr_migrations_cold;
u64 nr_failed_migrations_affine;
u64 nr_failed_migrations_running;
u64 nr_failed_migrations_hot;
u64 nr_forced_migrations;
u64 nr_wakeups;
u64 nr_wakeups_sync;
u64 nr_wakeups_migrate;
u64 nr_wakeups_local;
u64 nr_wakeups_remote;
u64 nr_wakeups_affine;
u64 nr_wakeups_affine_attempts;
u64 nr_wakeups_passive;
u64 nr_wakeups_idle;
#endif
} ____cacheline_aligned;
struct sched_entity {
/* For load-balancing: */
struct load_weight load;
struct rb_node run_node;
struct list_head group_node;
unsigned int on_rq;
u64 exec_start;
u64 sum_exec_runtime;
u64 vruntime;
u64 prev_sum_exec_runtime;
u64 nr_migrations;
#ifdef CONFIG_FAIR_GROUP_SCHED
int depth;
struct sched_entity *parent;
/* rq on which this entity is (to be) queued: */
struct cfs_rq *cfs_rq;
/* rq "owned" by this entity/group: */
struct cfs_rq *my_q;
/* cached value of my_q->h_nr_running */
unsigned long runnable_weight;
#endif
#ifdef CONFIG_SMP
/*
* Per entity load average tracking.
*
* Put into separate cache line so it does not
* collide with read-mostly values above.
*/
struct sched_avg avg;
#endif
};
struct sched_rt_entity {
struct list_head run_list;
unsigned long timeout;
unsigned long watchdog_stamp;
unsigned int time_slice;
unsigned short on_rq;
unsigned short on_list;
struct sched_rt_entity *back;
#ifdef CONFIG_RT_GROUP_SCHED
struct sched_rt_entity *parent;
/* rq on which this entity is (to be) queued: */
struct rt_rq *rt_rq;
/* rq "owned" by this entity/group: */
struct rt_rq *my_q;
#endif
} __randomize_layout;
struct sched_dl_entity {
struct rb_node rb_node;
/*
* Original scheduling parameters. Copied here from sched_attr
* during sched_setattr(), they will remain the same until
* the next sched_setattr().
*/
u64 dl_runtime; /* Maximum runtime for each instance */
u64 dl_deadline; /* Relative deadline of each instance */
u64 dl_period; /* Separation of two instances (period) */
u64 dl_bw; /* dl_runtime / dl_period */
u64 dl_density; /* dl_runtime / dl_deadline */
/*
* Actual scheduling parameters. Initialized with the values above,
* they are continuously updated during task execution. Note that
* the remaining runtime could be < 0 in case we are in overrun.
*/
s64 runtime; /* Remaining runtime for this instance */
u64 deadline; /* Absolute deadline for this instance */
unsigned int flags; /* Specifying the scheduler behaviour */
/*
* Some bool flags:
*
* @dl_throttled tells if we exhausted the runtime. If so, the
* task has to wait for a replenishment to be performed at the
* next firing of dl_timer.
*
* @dl_boosted tells if we are boosted due to DI. If so we are
* outside bandwidth enforcement mechanism (but only until we
* exit the critical section);
*
* @dl_yielded tells if task gave up the CPU before consuming
* all its available runtime during the last job.
*
* @dl_non_contending tells if the task is inactive while still
* contributing to the active utilization. In other words, it
* indicates if the inactive timer has been armed and its handler
* has not been executed yet. This flag is useful to avoid race
* conditions between the inactive timer handler and the wakeup
* code.
*
* @dl_overrun tells if the task asked to be informed about runtime
* overruns.
*/
unsigned int dl_throttled : 1;
unsigned int dl_yielded : 1;
unsigned int dl_non_contending : 1;
unsigned int dl_overrun : 1;
/*
* Bandwidth enforcement timer. Each -deadline task has its
* own bandwidth to be enforced, thus we need one timer per task.
*/
struct hrtimer dl_timer;
/*
* Inactive timer, responsible for decreasing the active utilization
* at the "0-lag time". When a -deadline task blocks, it contributes
* to GRUB's active utilization until the "0-lag time", hence a
* timer is needed to decrease the active utilization at the correct
* time.
*/
struct hrtimer inactive_timer;
#ifdef CONFIG_RT_MUTEXES
/*
* Priority Inheritance. When a DEADLINE scheduling entity is boosted
* pi_se points to the donor, otherwise points to the dl_se it belongs
* to (the original one/itself).
*/
struct sched_dl_entity *pi_se;
#endif
};
#ifdef CONFIG_UCLAMP_TASK
/* Number of utilization clamp buckets (shorter alias) */
#define UCLAMP_BUCKETS CONFIG_UCLAMP_BUCKETS_COUNT
/*
* Utilization clamp for a scheduling entity
* @value: clamp value "assigned" to a se
* @bucket_id: bucket index corresponding to the "assigned" value
* @active: the se is currently refcounted in a rq's bucket
* @user_defined: the requested clamp value comes from user-space
*
* The bucket_id is the index of the clamp bucket matching the clamp value
* which is pre-computed and stored to avoid expensive integer divisions from
* the fast path.
*
* The active bit is set whenever a task has got an "effective" value assigned,
* which can be different from the clamp value "requested" from user-space.
* This allows to know a task is refcounted in the rq's bucket corresponding
* to the "effective" bucket_id.
*
* The user_defined bit is set whenever a task has got a task-specific clamp
* value requested from userspace, i.e. the system defaults apply to this task
* just as a restriction. This allows to relax default clamps when a less
* restrictive task-specific value has been requested, thus allowing to
* implement a "nice" semantic. For example, a task running with a 20%
* default boost can still drop its own boosting to 0%.
*/
struct uclamp_se {
unsigned int value : bits_per(SCHED_CAPACITY_SCALE);
unsigned int bucket_id : bits_per(UCLAMP_BUCKETS);
unsigned int active : 1;
unsigned int user_defined : 1;
};
#endif /* CONFIG_UCLAMP_TASK */
union rcu_special {
struct {
u8 blocked;
u8 need_qs;
u8 exp_hint; /* Hint for performance. */
u8 need_mb; /* Readers need smp_mb(). */
} b; /* Bits. */
u32 s; /* Set of bits. */
};
enum perf_event_task_context {
perf_invalid_context = -1,
perf_hw_context = 0,
perf_sw_context,
perf_nr_task_contexts,
};
struct wake_q_node {
struct wake_q_node *next;
};
struct kmap_ctrl {
#ifdef CONFIG_KMAP_LOCAL
int idx;
pte_t pteval[KM_MAX_IDX];
#endif
};
struct task_struct {
#ifdef CONFIG_THREAD_INFO_IN_TASK
/*
* For reasons of header soup (see current_thread_info()), this
* must be the first element of task_struct.
*/
struct thread_info thread_info;
#endif
unsigned int __state;
#ifdef CONFIG_PREEMPT_RT
/* saved state for "spinlock sleepers" */
unsigned int saved_state;
#endif
/*
* This begins the randomizable portion of task_struct. Only
* scheduling-critical items should be added above here.
*/
randomized_struct_fields_start
void *stack;
refcount_t usage;
/* Per task flags (PF_*), defined further below: */
unsigned int flags;
unsigned int ptrace;
#ifdef CONFIG_SMP
int on_cpu;
struct __call_single_node wake_entry;
unsigned int wakee_flips;
unsigned long wakee_flip_decay_ts;
struct task_struct *last_wakee;
/*
* recent_used_cpu is initially set as the last CPU used by a task
* that wakes affine another task. Waker/wakee relationships can
* push tasks around a CPU where each wakeup moves to the next one.
* Tracking a recently used CPU allows a quick search for a recently
* used CPU that may be idle.
*/
int recent_used_cpu;
int wake_cpu;
#endif
int on_rq;
int prio;
int static_prio;
int normal_prio;
unsigned int rt_priority;
struct sched_entity se;
struct sched_rt_entity rt;
struct sched_dl_entity dl;
const struct sched_class *sched_class;
#ifdef CONFIG_SCHED_CORE
struct rb_node core_node;
unsigned long core_cookie;
unsigned int core_occupation;
#endif
#ifdef CONFIG_CGROUP_SCHED
struct task_group *sched_task_group;
#endif
#ifdef CONFIG_UCLAMP_TASK
/*
* Clamp values requested for a scheduling entity.
* Must be updated with task_rq_lock() held.
*/
struct uclamp_se uclamp_req[UCLAMP_CNT];
/*
* Effective clamp values used for a scheduling entity.
* Must be updated with task_rq_lock() held.
*/
struct uclamp_se uclamp[UCLAMP_CNT];
#endif
struct sched_statistics stats;
#ifdef CONFIG_PREEMPT_NOTIFIERS
/* List of struct preempt_notifier: */
struct hlist_head preempt_notifiers;
#endif
#ifdef CONFIG_BLK_DEV_IO_TRACE
unsigned int btrace_seq;
#endif
unsigned int policy;
int nr_cpus_allowed;
const cpumask_t *cpus_ptr;
cpumask_t *user_cpus_ptr;
cpumask_t cpus_mask;
void *migration_pending;
#ifdef CONFIG_SMP
unsigned short migration_disabled;
#endif
unsigned short migration_flags;
#ifdef CONFIG_PREEMPT_RCU
int rcu_read_lock_nesting;
union rcu_special rcu_read_unlock_special;
struct list_head rcu_node_entry;
struct rcu_node *rcu_blocked_node;
#endif /* #ifdef CONFIG_PREEMPT_RCU */
#ifdef CONFIG_TASKS_RCU
unsigned long rcu_tasks_nvcsw;
u8 rcu_tasks_holdout;
u8 rcu_tasks_idx;
int rcu_tasks_idle_cpu;
struct list_head rcu_tasks_holdout_list;
#endif /* #ifdef CONFIG_TASKS_RCU */
#ifdef CONFIG_TASKS_TRACE_RCU
int trc_reader_nesting;
int trc_ipi_to_cpu;
union rcu_special trc_reader_special;
bool trc_reader_checked;
struct list_head trc_holdout_list;
#endif /* #ifdef CONFIG_TASKS_TRACE_RCU */
struct sched_info sched_info;
struct list_head tasks;
#ifdef CONFIG_SMP
struct plist_node pushable_tasks;
struct rb_node pushable_dl_tasks;
#endif
struct mm_struct *mm;
struct mm_struct *active_mm;
/* Per-thread vma caching: */
struct vmacache vmacache;
#ifdef SPLIT_RSS_COUNTING
struct task_rss_stat rss_stat;
#endif
int exit_state;
int exit_code;
int exit_signal;
/* The signal sent when the parent dies: */
int pdeath_signal;
/* JOBCTL_*, siglock protected: */
unsigned long jobctl;
/* Used for emulating ABI behavior of previous Linux versions: */
unsigned int personality;
/* Scheduler bits, serialized by scheduler locks: */
unsigned sched_reset_on_fork:1;
unsigned sched_contributes_to_load:1;
unsigned sched_migrated:1;
#ifdef CONFIG_PSI
unsigned sched_psi_wake_requeue:1;
#endif
/* Force alignment to the next boundary: */
unsigned :0;
/* Unserialized, strictly 'current' */
/*
* This field must not be in the scheduler word above due to wakelist
* queueing no longer being serialized by p->on_cpu. However:
*
* p->XXX = X; ttwu()
* schedule() if (p->on_rq && ..) // false
* smp_mb__after_spinlock(); if (smp_load_acquire(&p->on_cpu) && //true
* deactivate_task() ttwu_queue_wakelist())
* p->on_rq = 0; p->sched_remote_wakeup = Y;
*
* guarantees all stores of 'current' are visible before
* ->sched_remote_wakeup gets used, so it can be in this word.
*/
unsigned sched_remote_wakeup:1;
/* Bit to tell LSMs we're in execve(): */
unsigned in_execve:1;
unsigned in_iowait:1;
#ifndef TIF_RESTORE_SIGMASK
unsigned restore_sigmask:1;
#endif
#ifdef CONFIG_MEMCG
unsigned in_user_fault:1;
#endif
#ifdef CONFIG_COMPAT_BRK
unsigned brk_randomized:1;
#endif
#ifdef CONFIG_CGROUPS
/* disallow userland-initiated cgroup migration */
unsigned no_cgroup_migration:1;
/* task is frozen/stopped (used by the cgroup freezer) */
unsigned frozen:1;
#endif
#ifdef CONFIG_BLK_CGROUP
unsigned use_memdelay:1;
#endif
#ifdef CONFIG_PSI
/* Stalled due to lack of memory */
unsigned in_memstall:1;
#endif
#ifdef CONFIG_PAGE_OWNER
/* Used by page_owner=on to detect recursion in page tracking. */
unsigned in_page_owner:1;
#endif
#ifdef CONFIG_EVENTFD
/* Recursion prevention for eventfd_signal() */
unsigned in_eventfd_signal:1;
#endif
unsigned long atomic_flags; /* Flags requiring atomic access. */
struct restart_block restart_block;
pid_t pid;
pid_t tgid;
#ifdef CONFIG_STACKPROTECTOR
/* Canary value for the -fstack-protector GCC feature: */
unsigned long stack_canary;
#endif
/*
* Pointers to the (original) parent process, youngest child, younger sibling,
* older sibling, respectively. (p->father can be replaced with
* p->real_parent->pid)
*/
/* Real parent process: */
struct task_struct __rcu *real_parent;
/* Recipient of SIGCHLD, wait4() reports: */
struct task_struct __rcu *parent;
/*
* Children/sibling form the list of natural children:
*/
struct list_head children;
struct list_head sibling;
struct task_struct *group_leader;
/*
* 'ptraced' is the list of tasks this task is using ptrace() on.
*
* This includes both natural children and PTRACE_ATTACH targets.
* 'ptrace_entry' is this task's link on the p->parent->ptraced list.
*/
struct list_head ptraced;
struct list_head ptrace_entry;
/* PID/PID hash table linkage. */
struct pid *thread_pid;
struct hlist_node pid_links[PIDTYPE_MAX];
struct list_head thread_group;
struct list_head thread_node;
struct completion *vfork_done;
/* CLONE_CHILD_SETTID: */
int __user *set_child_tid;
/* CLONE_CHILD_CLEARTID: */
int __user *clear_child_tid;
/* PF_IO_WORKER */
void *pf_io_worker;
u64 utime;
u64 stime;
#ifdef CONFIG_ARCH_HAS_SCALED_CPUTIME
u64 utimescaled;
u64 stimescaled;
#endif
u64 gtime;
struct prev_cputime prev_cputime;