Abstract: "Computer systems depend on high priority background processes to provide both reliability and security. This is especially true in multiserver systems where many such background processes are required for data coherence, fault detection, intrusion detection, etc. From a user's perspective, it is important to understand the effect that these many classes of high priority, backround tasks have on the performance of lower priority user-level tasks. We model this situation as an M/GI/k queue with m preemptive-resume priority classes, presenting the first analysis of this system with more than two priority classes under a general phase-type service distribution. (Prior analyses of the M/GI/k with more than two priority classes are app...