* Re: [Xenomai-core] NIOS2/Xenomai 2.5.6/Native Skin
2011-04-14 10:52 ` [Xenomai-core] NIOS2/Xenomai 2.5.6/Native Skin Martin Elshuber
@ 2011-04-14 12:59 ` Patrice Kadionik
0 siblings, 0 replies; 2+ messages in thread
From: Patrice Kadionik @ 2011-04-14 12:59 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: xenomai
Le 14/04/2011 12:52, Martin Elshuber a écrit :
> Hallo,
Hi Martin,
>
> as this discussion could be of interest to other people I continue it
> here.
>
> On 04/12/2011 07:58 PM, Philippe Gerum wrote:
>> On Tue, 2011-04-12 at 17:01 +0200, Martin Elshuber wrote:
>>> Hallo Mr. Gerum!
>>>
>>> First, thx for the answer of the ADEOS list&
>>> thx for investing a lot of time in the NIOS port.
>>>
>>> Can I ask you something else?
>>>
>>> According to the documentation of the native skin rt_task_sleep
>>> delays a task
>>> for some delay measured in clock ticks.
>>>
>>> On my system (NIOS II/f nommu, CPU, hrtimer, hrclock, sys_timer all
>>> @150MHz).
>>> It seems that rt_task_sleep delays a task for some time measured in
>>> nanoseconds.
>>> In my experiment I created a single task which calls
>>> rt_task_sleep(1000000000); // 1e9
>>> This call delays the task for 1 second. Therefore I guess that the
>>> unit is
>>> nanoseconds.
>>>
>>> I did some further debugging and recognized that the hrtimer
>>> is programmed with a value of just below 150000000 (150e6).
>>> This appears correct, if the unit is nanoseconds.
>>>
>>> What is the desired behavior of rt_task_sleep (and other timed
>>> functions) of
>>> the native skin?
>>
>> Yes, when the timing mode is oneshot/aperiodic, the base tick is the
>> highest clock resolution, i.e. 1 ns. Most people use aperiodic timing
>> these days with Xenomai, periodic is for legacy apps such as those
>> originating from VxWorks, VRTX, pSOS, i.e. traditional RTOSes, where
>> timeout values are a count of (a periodic) tick.
> In other words a Xenomai clock tick always 1ns and already abstracts
> from the
> hardware clock tick?
It's lied to your hardware for Xenomai clock event. For NIOS 2 without
MMU, one clock tick corresponds to one period of the hrtimer timer i.e.
1/HRTIMER_FREQ. That is the minimum value for a delay.
>>>
>>> The conversion to nanoseconds seems (a am not sure about this) to
>>> take place
>>> very soon. Inside the nucleus, for example, rthal_timer_calibrate
>>> converts the
>>> execution duration rthal_read_tsc to nanoseconds.
>>>
>>> Is there a reason for not using ipipe_tsc2ns from the adeos API
>>> inside this
>>> function?
>>
>> Yes, the per-arch Xenomai routines are usually optimized for speed and
>> precision. ipipe_tsc2ns() is merely for tracing/timestamping purpose in
>> the Adeos code, using a naive conversion method.
>>
>>>
>>> On the other hand this conversion is reverted (ns->tsc) by
>>> xnarch_calibrate_timer. This confuses me!
>>>
>>
>> Because the internal interface does not assume anything from the way the
>> calibration code determines the typical timer programming latency, so it
>> always asks for a count of ns, before pre-calculating the corresponding
>> hardware clock ticks from this. It just happens that arch-dep code for
>> timer calibration often uses hardware clock ticks internally when
>> computing an average latency value dynamically, but it could also return
>> a time constant, expressed in ns the same way.
>>
>>> The reason for these questions is, that I am trying to remove
>>> hrclock and
>>> hrtimer, and replace it with another non-standard source. For this I
>>> want
>>> understand, how the time ticks in Xenomai, first.
>>>
>>
>> Xenomai needs to know:
>>
>> - the frequency of the timer hardware, to compute delay values to
>> program it with. Usually, we have a count of hardware clock tick in
>> input from the Xenomai generic timer code, we convert it to a count of
>> hardware timer ticks to have the corresponding delay, and we poke this
>> delay to the timer hardware to program the next tick date.
>> - the frequence of the high resolution hardware clock used in all
>> timestamping, to convert a timestamp (i.e. tsc) to ns, and conversely.
>> - the irq the timer hardware will raise for signaling a tick.
> I have contemplated about these three points. But i think i need to
> become
> more concrete about my time-source, to describe my questions.
>
> What do I have:
> * I have an integrated communication (Network on Chip) and 'timer'
> device.
> * This device follows a static (during application design phase defined)
> time-triggered schedule.
> * The device supports several (8 in my case) up counter with wrap around
> at a, in the schedule defined, max value.
> * The schedule defines the counter values at which periodic
> interrupts are
> are generated. For example the schedule can define:
> Use a max value of 1024 and generate interrupts at 17, 105, and 800.
> * Dynamic reprogramming of these values is not possible.
> * Masking several interrupts is possible.
> * The maximal horizon of one period is 1.6sec. It is possible to read
> the
> current counter value for each period at any time.
> * The device synchronizes to other on-chip (trivially) and off-chip
> (some
> external synchronization protocol) devices.
> * One Altera fully featured 32 Bit Timer.
>
> What do I want:
> * By using this device as clock source all events generated by the local
> component (i.e. Xenomai) will be implicitly synchronized to other
> components.
> * Phase align all timer interrupts, to avoid two interrupts at the
> same time.
> * Xenomai Timed events are of secondary interest, as most tasks a
> trigged by
> our 'timer' device.
>
> I am planing
> * to deviate the Linux timer interrupt from our 'timer' source, by
> using a virtual IRQ line, to
> a) phase align it to other events in the schedule
> b) make the timer available to Xenomai, and
> * to implement a read-tsc function and use a spare timer for Xenomai.
>
> My Questions:
> * Are there any implications to Xenomai-services, aside from timed
> events
> (i.e. sleep, alarms, timeout functions, ...) which need to be
> regarded when
> working on the time source?
> * Is there any hardware dependent code in Xenomai that relies on the
> current
> timer (hrclock, hrtimer) implementation? I.e. can all modifications
> inside
> the ADEOS code?
> I have only identified only ADEOS code so far.
Yes, I think that all the hardware dependent code is in the adeos patch.
In the adeos patch for NIOS 2 without MMU, you must instantiate with
Altera SoPC builder tool a 32-bit timer named hrtimer for clock event
and a 64-bit timer named hrclock for clock source. Link between HW and
SW is done by the name.
Cheers;
Patrice
>
> thx & best regards
> Martin
>
>>
>> PS: This discussion should rather happen on xenomai-help or -core, at
>> your will. Maybe those explanations could be of some interest to others.
>>
>>> Best regards
>>> Martin Elshuber
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> _______________________________________________
>>> Message sent via/by Gna!
>>> http://gna.org/
>>>
>>
>
>
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>
--
Patrice Kadionik. F6KQH / F4CUQ
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