Searched refs:starved (Results 1 – 10 of 10) sorted by relevance
94 unsigned int starved; /* times reads have starved writes */ member402 (dd->starved++ >= dd->writes_starved)) in __dd_dispatch_request()418 dd->starved = 0; in __dd_dispatch_request()993 seq_printf(m, "%u\n", dd->starved); in deadline_starved_show()
1304 goto starved; in scsi_target_queue_ready()1317 goto starved; in scsi_target_queue_ready()1321 starved: in scsi_target_queue_ready()1346 goto starved; in scsi_host_queue_ready()1360 goto starved; in scsi_host_queue_ready()1374 starved: in scsi_host_queue_ready()
157 unsigned long starved; member
2984 qs->rspq.starved++; in sge_timer_rx()
62 be totally starved.
44 result in the ``rcu_.*kthread starved for`` console-log message,298 rcu_sched kthread starved for 23807 jiffies! g7075 f0x0 RCU_GP_WAIT_FQS(3) ->state=0x1 ->cpu=5
215 traffic and the "slower" modem starved.
354 tasks will not be starved and the system might be able to respect all the456 tasks are not starved and that the tardiness of real-time tasks has an upper
46 register-starved machines. My discussions with Richard Outerbridge,
4735 kthread is starved first, then the CPU.
Completed in 35 milliseconds