Examples of using Sub-allocation in English and their translations into Dutch
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Colloquial
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Official
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Ecclesiastic
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Medicine
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Financial
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Computer
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Ecclesiastic
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Official/political
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Programming
For more information, see the sub-allocation section later in this topic.
Sub-allocations have precedence over the default resource allocation policy.
When this management rule is selected, sub-allocation is not allowed.
Each allocation or sub-allocation is listed in the order in which you would create it.
Percent CPU target allocations may be further divided into sub-allocations.
Each sub-allocation must be configured to use a different process matching criterion.
The parent resource allocation that is further divided by its sub-allocations.
These sub-allocations are grouped hierarchically under the top-level resource allocation.
The following table gives an example of how you can prioritize processes by using sub-allocations.
This sub-allocation matches a different process matching criterion than the parent resource allocation.
Windows System Resource Manager evaluates the entire hierarchy of sub-allocations while applying management policies.
A sub-allocation is a resource allocation hierarchy that consists of one or more grouped resource allocations.
You can configure a single resource allocation with multiple child sub-allocations, each with its own relative allocation.
You can use a sub-allocation to divide a CPU resource allocation into one or more resource allocations, each with its own CPU allocation.
The following table gives an example of how you can use simple sub-allocation to divide resources within a resource allocation policy.
A sub-allocation allocates resources that are calculated as a percentage of the resources allocated by the parent resource allocation.
One situation in which you would use sub-allocation is when you have a single server that performs multiple functions.
To create sub-allocations under a sub-allocation, click Sub-allocate resources,
The percentage of the CPU that is allocated to the parent resource allocation is then distributed among the sub-allocations, following the proportions that are specified in the CPU allocation of each sub-allocation. .
Each resource allocation and sub-allocation is given 99 percent of the available CPU because the goal is not to restrict CPU usage, but to define the order in which processes get access to CPU bandwidth.
When you are finished creating sub-allocations, on the parent resource allocation Properties page, click OK.
Because the sub-allocations in the example add up to 50 percent of the parent resource allocation, processes that match pmc_A can use a minimum of
Another situation in which you would use sub-allocations is when you have a server that performs multiple functions that you want to prioritize according to their importance.
Because the resources not used by a sub-allocation become available to its parent resource allocation,
create a series of nested sub-allocations in order from the last resource allocation you want to apply(the parent resource allocation) to the first resource allocation you want to apply(the last sub-allocation), giving each allocation 99 percent CPU.