From: john stultz <johnstul@us.ibm.com>
To: James Bottomley <James.Bottomley@SteelEye.com>
Cc: Andrew Morton <akpm@osdl.org>,
linux-kernel <linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org>,
Roman Zippel <zippel@linux-m68k.org>
Subject: Re: Hang and Soft Lockup problems with generic time code
Date: Sat, 08 Jul 2006 14:47:02 -0700 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <1152395222.8636.7.camel@localhost> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <1152333404.3866.80.camel@mulgrave.il.steeleye.com>
On Fri, 2006-07-07 at 23:36 -0500, James Bottomley wrote:
> > Did you really mean jumps of 200 seconds? Hmmm. The issue Roman and I
> > have been looking into does occur when we lose a number of ticks and
> > that confuses the clocksource adjustment code. The fix we're working
> > on
> > corrects the adjustment confusion, but doesn't fix the lost ticks.
> >
> > However 200 seconds of lost ticks sounds very off. Could the driver be
> > disabling interrupt for such a long period of time?
>
> Well, what I was seeing was that
>
> clocksource_read(clock) - clock->cycle_last
>
> is returning a value about 200 x clock->cycle_interval
That then would be ~200 ticks. Is this at HZ=1000 ?
> According to the debugging printks I put into update_wall_time(). I was
> assuming this was caused by a jump in the TSC count, but I suppose it
> could also be cause by spurious alterations to cycle_last or other
> effects I haven't traced.
Since this issue effected both the TSC and ACPI PM timer, I'd more
likely suspect something is holding off the timer interrupt. This could
be some kernel code like a driver, or it could be something like an SMI
from the BIOS.
thanks
-john
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2006-07-08 21:47 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 5+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2006-07-07 23:11 Hang and Soft Lockup problems with generic time code James Bottomley
2006-07-07 23:39 ` john stultz
2006-07-08 4:36 ` James Bottomley
2006-07-08 21:47 ` john stultz [this message]
2006-07-08 22:13 ` James Bottomley
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