1To choose IO schedulers at boot time, use the argument 'elevator=deadline'. 2'noop' and 'cfq' (the default) are also available. IO schedulers are assigned 3globally at boot time only presently. 4 5Each io queue has a set of io scheduler tunables associated with it. These 6tunables control how the io scheduler works. You can find these entries 7in: 8 9/sys/block/<device>/queue/iosched 10 11assuming that you have sysfs mounted on /sys. If you don't have sysfs mounted, 12you can do so by typing: 13 14# mount none /sys -t sysfs 15 16As of the Linux 2.6.10 kernel, it is now possible to change the 17IO scheduler for a given block device on the fly (thus making it possible, 18for instance, to set the CFQ scheduler for the system default, but 19set a specific device to use the deadline or noop schedulers - which 20can improve that device's throughput). 21 22To set a specific scheduler, simply do this: 23 24echo SCHEDNAME > /sys/block/DEV/queue/scheduler 25 26where SCHEDNAME is the name of a defined IO scheduler, and DEV is the 27device name (hda, hdb, sga, or whatever you happen to have). 28 29The list of defined schedulers can be found by simply doing 30a "cat /sys/block/DEV/queue/scheduler" - the list of valid names 31will be displayed, with the currently selected scheduler in brackets: 32 33# cat /sys/block/hda/queue/scheduler 34noop deadline [cfq] 35# echo deadline > /sys/block/hda/queue/scheduler 36# cat /sys/block/hda/queue/scheduler 37noop [deadline] cfq 38