From: Bill Davidsen <davidsen@tmr.com>
To: george@mvista.com
Cc: Andrew Morton <akpm@osdl.org>,
tony@atomide.com, linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org,
Adrian Bunk <bunk@stusta.de>,
ck@vds.kolivas.org, tuukka.tikkanen@elektrobit.com
Subject: Re: [PATCH] i386 No-Idle-Hz aka Dynamic-Ticks 5
Date: Thu, 11 Aug 2005 17:33:51 -0400 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <42FBC43F.5020009@tmr.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <42FA81B9.9020801@mvista.com>
George Anzinger wrote:
> Srivatsa Vaddagiri wrote:
>
>> On Tue, Aug 09, 2005 at 12:36:58PM -0700, George Anzinger wrote:
>>
>>> IMNOHO, this is the ONLY way to keep proper time. As soon as you
>>> reprogram the PIT you have lost track of the time.
>>
>>
>>
>> George,
>> Can't TSC (or equivalent) serve as a backup while PIT is disabled,
>> especially considering that we disable PIT only for short duration in
>> practice (few seconds maybe) _and_ that we don't have HRT support yet?
>>
> I think it really depends on what you want. If you really want to keep
> good time, the only rock in town is the one connected to the PIT (and
> the pmtimer). The problem is, if you want the jiffie edge to be stable,
> there is just now way to reprogram the PIT to get it back to where it was.
>
> In an old version of HRT I did a trick of loading a short count (based
> on reading the TSC or pmtimer) and then put the LATCH count on top of
> it. In a correctly performing PIT, it should count down the short
> count, interrupt, load the long count and continue from there. Aside
> from the machines that had BAD PITs (they reset on the load instead of
> the expiry of the current count) there were other problems that, in the
> end, cause loss of time (too fast, too slow, take your pick). I also
> found PITs that signaled that they had loaded the count (they set a
> status bit) prior to actually loading it. All in all, I find the PIT is
> just an ugly beast to try to program. On the other hand, if you want
> regular interrupts at some fixed period, it will do this forever (give
> or take a epoch or two;) with out touching anything after the initial
> program set up.
>
> In the end, I concluded that, for the community kernel, it is really
> best to just interrupt the irq line and leave the PIT run. Then you use
> the TSC or pmtimer to figure the gross loss of interrupts and leave the
> PIT interrupt again to define the jiffie edge. If you have other, more
> pressing, concerns I suppose you can program the PIT, but don't expect
> your wall clock to be as stable as it is now.
>
What are the portability and scaling issues if it were done this way? It
clearly looks practical on x86 uni, but if we want per-CPU non-tick, I'm
less sure how it would work.
But when you go to non-x86 hardware, is there always going to be another
source of wakeup available if the PIT is blocked instead of reset? I
have to go back and look at how SPARC hardware works, I don't remember
enough to be useful.
--
-bill davidsen (davidsen@tmr.com)
"The secret to procrastination is to put things off until the
last possible moment - but no longer" -me
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2005-08-11 21:31 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 68+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2005-08-03 5:59 [PATCH] i386 No-Idle-Hz aka Dynamic-Ticks 3 Con Kolivas
2005-08-03 11:54 ` Jan De Luyck
2005-08-03 12:14 ` Con Kolivas
2005-08-03 14:23 ` Jan De Luyck
2005-08-04 15:03 ` Vojtech Pavlik
2005-08-05 5:12 ` Con Kolivas
2005-08-03 19:20 ` Jim MacBaine
2005-08-03 21:16 ` Con Kolivas
2005-08-03 22:22 ` Jim MacBaine
2005-08-03 22:52 ` Con Kolivas
2005-08-04 5:34 ` Jim MacBaine
2005-08-04 6:59 ` Jim MacBaine
2005-08-04 7:04 ` Con Kolivas
2005-08-04 7:12 ` Con Kolivas
2005-08-04 7:29 ` Tony Lindgren
2005-08-10 20:04 ` Bill Davidsen
2005-08-14 19:47 ` Pavel Machek
2005-08-15 1:43 ` Zwane Mwaikambo
2005-08-15 12:52 ` Con Kolivas
2005-08-15 15:39 ` Zwane Mwaikambo
2005-08-03 19:54 ` Jeffrey Hundstad
2005-08-03 20:07 ` Valdis.Kletnieks
2005-08-03 21:13 ` Con Kolivas
2005-08-03 23:22 ` Christian Leber
2005-08-04 16:25 ` Marc Ballarin
2005-08-04 5:09 ` Jan De Luyck
2005-08-04 5:07 ` Con Kolivas
2005-08-04 5:34 ` Jan De Luyck
2005-08-04 21:15 ` [PATCH] Timer Top was: " Daniel Petrini
2005-08-05 4:05 ` [PATCH] Timer Top tweaks Con Kolivas
2005-08-05 6:46 ` [ck] [PATCH] Timer Top was: i386 No-Idle-Hz aka Dynamic-Ticks 3 Jens Axboe
2005-08-05 12:39 ` Daniel Petrini
2005-08-05 13:55 ` Daniel Petrini
2005-08-04 21:44 ` [PATCH] " Adrian Bunk
2005-08-04 22:12 ` Marc Ballarin
2005-08-05 0:31 ` Con Kolivas
2005-08-05 1:30 ` Paul
2005-08-05 3:25 ` Con Kolivas
2005-08-05 12:37 ` Srivatsa Vaddagiri
2005-08-05 13:08 ` Con Kolivas
2005-08-05 16:39 ` [PATCH] i386 No-Idle-Hz aka Dynamic-Ticks 4 Con Kolivas
2005-08-06 17:47 ` Adrian Bunk
2005-08-07 5:12 ` [PATCH] i386 No-Idle-Hz aka Dynamic-Ticks 5 Con Kolivas
2005-08-07 16:58 ` Srivatsa Vaddagiri
2005-08-07 23:51 ` Con Kolivas
2005-08-08 1:20 ` Kyle Moffett
2005-08-08 1:30 ` Con Kolivas
2005-08-08 1:45 ` [ck] " Gabriel Devenyi
2005-08-08 2:44 ` Srivatsa Vaddagiri
2005-08-08 7:05 ` Nigel Cunningham
2005-08-08 7:38 ` Tony Lindgren
2005-08-08 15:06 ` Srivatsa Vaddagiri
2005-08-09 19:36 ` George Anzinger
2005-08-10 14:05 ` Srivatsa Vaddagiri
2005-08-10 22:37 ` George Anzinger
2005-08-11 21:33 ` Bill Davidsen [this message]
2005-08-12 15:13 ` George Anzinger
2005-08-08 15:08 ` Folkert van Heusden
2005-08-08 15:16 ` Daniel Petrini
2005-08-08 7:26 ` [PATCH] i386 No-Idle-Hz aka Dynamic-Ticks 3 Tony Lindgren
2005-08-08 14:54 ` Srivatsa Vaddagiri
2005-08-08 15:20 ` Tony Lindgren
2005-08-09 14:22 ` Zwane Mwaikambo
2005-08-10 7:46 ` Tony Lindgren
2005-08-09 20:05 ` George Anzinger
2005-08-09 20:22 ` Daniel Petrini
2005-08-10 8:02 ` Tony Lindgren
2005-08-10 22:40 ` George Anzinger
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