/* * Copyright (c) 2013-2014 Apple Inc. All rights reserved. * * @APPLE_LICENSE_HEADER_START@ * * This file contains Original Code and/or Modifications of Original Code * as defined in and that are subject to the Apple Public Source License * Version 2.0 (the 'License'). You may not use this file except in * compliance with the License. Please obtain a copy of the License at * http://www.opensource.apple.com/apsl/ and read it before using this * file. * * The Original Code and all software distributed under the License are * distributed on an 'AS IS' basis, WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EITHER * EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, AND APPLE HEREBY DISCLAIMS ALL SUCH WARRANTIES, * INCLUDING WITHOUT LIMITATION, ANY WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, * FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE, QUIET ENJOYMENT OR NON-INFRINGEMENT. * Please see the License for the specific language governing rights and * limitations under the License. * * @APPLE_LICENSE_HEADER_END@ */ #ifndef _SYS_QOS_H #define _SYS_QOS_H #include <sys/cdefs.h> #include <Availability.h> /*! * @typedef qos_class_t * * @abstract * An abstract thread quality of service (QOS) classification. * * @discussion * Thread quality of service (QOS) classes are ordered abstract representations * of the nature of work that is expected to be performed by a pthread, dispatch * queue, or NSOperation. Each class specifies a maximum thread scheduling * priority for that band (which may be used in combination with a relative * priority offset within the band), as well as quality of service * characteristics for timer latency, CPU throughput, I/O throughput, network * socket traffic management behavior and more. * * A best effort is made to allocate available system resources to every QOS * class. Quality of service degredation only occurs during system resource * contention, proportionally to the QOS class. That said, QOS classes * representing user-initiated work attempt to achieve peak throughput while * QOS classes for other work attempt to achieve peak energy and thermal * efficiency, even in the absence of contention. Finally, the use of QOS * classes does not allow threads to supersede any limits that may be applied * to the overall process. */ /*! * @constant QOS_CLASS_USER_INTERACTIVE * @abstract A QOS class which indicates work performed by this thread * is interactive with the user. * @discussion Such work is requested to run at high priority relative to other * work on the system. Specifying this QOS class is a request to run with * nearly all available system CPU and I/O bandwidth even under contention. * This is not an energy-efficient QOS class to use for large tasks. The use of * this QOS class should be limited to critical interaction with the user such * as handling events on the main event loop, view drawing, animation, etc. * * @constant QOS_CLASS_USER_INITIATED * @abstract A QOS class which indicates work performed by this thread * was initiated by the user and that the user is likely waiting for the * results. * @discussion Such work is requested to run at a priority below critical user- * interactive work, but relatively higher than other work on the system. This * is not an energy-efficient QOS class to use for large tasks. Its use * should be limited to operations of short enough duration that the user is * unlikely to switch tasks while waiting for the results. Typical * user-initiated work will have progress indicated by the display of * placeholder content or modal user interface. * * @constant QOS_CLASS_DEFAULT * @abstract A default QOS class used by the system in cases where more specific * QOS class information is not available. * @discussion Such work is requested to run at a priority below critical user- * interactive and user-initiated work, but relatively higher than utility and * background tasks. Threads created by pthread_create() without an attribute * specifying a QOS class will default to QOS_CLASS_DEFAULT. This QOS class * value is not intended to be used as a work classification, it should only be * set when propagating or restoring QOS class values provided by the system. * * @constant QOS_CLASS_UTILITY * @abstract A QOS class which indicates work performed by this thread * may or may not be initiated by the user and that the user is unlikely to be * immediately waiting for the results. * @discussion Such work is requested to run at a priority below critical user- * interactive and user-initiated work, but relatively higher than low-level * system maintenance tasks. The use of this QOS class indicates the work * should be run in an energy and thermally-efficient manner. The progress of * utility work may or may not be indicated to the user, but the effect of such * work is user-visible. * * @constant QOS_CLASS_BACKGROUND * @abstract A QOS class which indicates work performed by this thread was not * initiated by the user and that the user may be unaware of the results. * @discussion Such work is requested to run at a priority below other work. * The use of this QOS class indicates the work should be run in the most energy * and thermally-efficient manner. * * @constant QOS_CLASS_UNSPECIFIED * @abstract A QOS class value which indicates the absence or removal of QOS * class information. * @discussion As an API return value, may indicate that threads or pthread * attributes were configured with legacy API incompatible or in conflict with * the QOS class system. */ #define __QOS_ENUM(name, type, ...) enum { __VA_ARGS__ }; typedef type name##_t #define __QOS_CLASS_AVAILABLE(...) #if defined(__has_feature) && defined(__has_extension) #if __has_feature(objc_fixed_enum) || __has_extension(cxx_strong_enums) #undef __QOS_ENUM #define __QOS_ENUM(name, type, ...) typedef enum : type { __VA_ARGS__ } name##_t #endif #if __has_feature(enumerator_attributes) #undef __QOS_CLASS_AVAILABLE #define __QOS_CLASS_AVAILABLE __API_AVAILABLE #endif #endif __QOS_ENUM(qos_class, unsigned int, QOS_CLASS_USER_INTERACTIVE __QOS_CLASS_AVAILABLE(macos(10.10), ios(8.0)) = 0x21, QOS_CLASS_USER_INITIATED __QOS_CLASS_AVAILABLE(macos(10.10), ios(8.0)) = 0x19, QOS_CLASS_DEFAULT __QOS_CLASS_AVAILABLE(macos(10.10), ios(8.0)) = 0x15, QOS_CLASS_UTILITY __QOS_CLASS_AVAILABLE(macos(10.10), ios(8.0)) = 0x11, QOS_CLASS_BACKGROUND __QOS_CLASS_AVAILABLE(macos(10.10), ios(8.0)) = 0x09, QOS_CLASS_UNSPECIFIED __QOS_CLASS_AVAILABLE(macos(10.10), ios(8.0)) = 0x00, ); #undef __QOS_ENUM /*! * @constant QOS_MIN_RELATIVE_PRIORITY * @abstract The minimum relative priority that may be specified within a * QOS class. These priorities are relative only within a given QOS class * and meaningful only for the current process. */ #define QOS_MIN_RELATIVE_PRIORITY (-15) /* Userspace (only) definitions */ #ifndef KERNEL __BEGIN_DECLS /*! * @function qos_class_self * * @abstract * Returns the requested QOS class of the current thread. * * @return * One of the QOS class values in qos_class_t. */ __API_AVAILABLE(macos(10.10), ios(8.0)) qos_class_t qos_class_self(void); /*! * @function qos_class_main * * @abstract * Returns the initial requested QOS class of the main thread. * * @discussion * The QOS class that the main thread of a process is created with depends on * the type of process (e.g. application or daemon) and on how it has been * launched. * * This function returns that initial requested QOS class value chosen by the * system to enable propagation of that classification to matching work not * executing on the main thread. * * @return * One of the QOS class values in qos_class_t. */ __API_AVAILABLE(macos(10.10), ios(8.0)) qos_class_t qos_class_main(void); __END_DECLS #endif // KERNEL #endif // _SYS_QOS_H