-/*
- * Disregards a certain amount of sleep time (sched_latency_ns) and
- * considers the task to be running during that period. This gives it
- * a service deficit on wakeup, allowing it to run sooner.
- */
-SCHED_FEAT(FAIR_SLEEPERS, 1)
-
/*
* Only give sleepers 50% of their service deficit. This allows
* them to run sooner, but does not allow tons of sleepers to
*/
SCHED_FEAT(GENTLE_FAIR_SLEEPERS, 1)
-/*
- * By not normalizing the sleep time, heavy tasks get an effective
- * longer period, and lighter task an effective shorter period they
- * are considered running.
- */
-SCHED_FEAT(NORMALIZED_SLEEPER, 0)
-
/*
* Place new tasks ahead so that they do not starve already running
* tasks
*/
SCHED_FEAT(WAKEUP_PREEMPT, 1)
-/*
- * When converting the wakeup granularity to virtual time, do it such
- * that heavier tasks preempting a lighter task have an edge.
- */
-SCHED_FEAT(ASYM_GRAN, 1)
-
-/*
- * Always wakeup-preempt SYNC wakeups, see SYNC_WAKEUPS.
- */
-SCHED_FEAT(WAKEUP_SYNC, 0)
-
-/*
- * Use the SYNC wakeup hint, pipes and the likes use this to indicate
- * the remote end is likely to consume the data we just wrote, and
- * therefore has cache benefit from being placed on the same cpu, see
- * also AFFINE_WAKEUPS.
- */
-SCHED_FEAT(SYNC_WAKEUPS, 1)
-
/*
* Based on load and program behaviour, see if it makes sense to place
* a newly woken task on the same cpu as the task that woke it --