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  2. Deadline Scheduler - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deadline_scheduler

    By default, read requests have an expiration time of 500ms, and write requests expire in 5 seconds. A rough version of the scheduler was published on the Linux Kernel Mailing List by Axboe in January 2002. [2] Measurements have shown that the deadline I/O scheduler outperforms the CFQ I/O scheduler for certain multi-threaded workloads. [3]

  3. Completely Fair Scheduler - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Completely_Fair_Scheduler

    In contrast to the previous O(1) scheduler used in older Linux 2.6 kernels, which maintained and switched run queues of active and expired tasks, the CFS scheduler implementation is based on per-CPU run queues, whose nodes are time-ordered schedulable entities that are kept sorted by red–black trees. The CFS does away with the old notion of ...

  4. Completely fair queueing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Completely_fair_queueing

    In February 2003 Andrea Arcangeli put forward his idea for a Stochastic Fair Queueing I/O scheduler to Jens Axboe who then implemented it. Jens Axboe made improvements to his first implementation, calling the new version the Completely Fair Queueing scheduler, and produced a patch to apply it to the 2.5.60 development series kernel.

  5. Darik's Boot and Nuke - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Darik's_Boot_and_Nuke

    Darik's Boot and Nuke, also known as DBAN / ˈ d iː b æ n /, is a free and open-source project hosted on SourceForge. [2] The program is designed to securely erase a hard disk until its data is permanently removed and no longer recoverable, which is achieved by overwriting the data with pseudorandom numbers generated by Mersenne Twister or ISAAC.

  6. Live USB - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Live_USB

    Non-Macintosh systems, notably Windows and Linux, may not be typically booted in EFI mode and thus USB booting may be limited to supported hardware and software combinations that can easily be booted via EFI. [8] However, programs like Mac Linux USB Loader can alleviate the difficulties of the task of booting a Linux-live USB on a Mac.

  7. Diskless Remote Boot in Linux - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diskless_remote_boot_in_linux

    DRBL excels in two main categories. Disk Cloning. Clonezilla (packaged with DRBL) uses Partimage to avoid copying free space, and gzip to compress Hard Disk images. The stored image can then be restored to multiple machines simultaneously using multicast packets, thus greatly reducing the time it takes to image large numbers of computers.

  8. Noop scheduler - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NOOP_scheduler

    Understanding and Optimizing Disk I/O; Workload Dependent Performance Evaluation of the Linux 2.6 I/O Schedulers; Best practices for the Kernel-based Virtual Machine (provides general info on I/O schedulers) Linux I/O schedulers benchmarked – anticipatory vs. CFQ vs. deadline vs. noop

  9. Brain Fuck Scheduler - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brain_Fuck_Scheduler

    The location of process schedulers in a simplified structure of the Linux kernel. The Brain Fuck Scheduler (BFS) is a process scheduler designed for the Linux kernel in August 2009 based on earliest eligible virtual deadline first scheduling (EEVDF), [2] as an alternative to the Completely Fair Scheduler (CFS) and the O(1) scheduler. [3]