On Aug 22, 2008, at 6:28 AM, Wojciech Puchar wrote:
tu run (at startup) asterisk PBX as user centrala with realtime
priority.
asterisk is started, but without realtime priority.
Yes, you'd be running the su process with realtime priority. :-)
and su forks shell and asterisk - isn't it?
That's right. RT priority isn't inherited by children processes, or
so it seems.
[ ... ]
Well, you have to run rtprio as root, or else make it setuid-root
(which probably isn't a great idea). Presumably this thing has a
startup script which runs it, and it probably creates a PID file
under /var/run which you could use to adjust the priority during
system startup via:
rtprio 31 -`cat /var/run/asterix.pid`
did this
/usr/bin/su centrala -c \
"/usr/local/sbin/asterisk -C /centrala/etc/asterisk.conf"
/bin/sleep 5
/usr/sbin/rtprio 31 -`cat /centrala/run/asterisk.pid`
works fine, but looks like workaround for me not proper solution?
am i wrong? thank you for explanation why it doesn't work directly
Very few people do anything with RT priorities, in part because Unix
was designed to maximize workload throughput originally in a batch-
processing context. People who need hard realtime tend to use more
specialized systems and hardware designed for realtime tasks (ie,
bounded interrupt service times and the like)...
--
-Chuck
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