From: David Daney <ddaney@caviumnetworks.com>
To: Brian Daniels <bdaniels@ciena.com>
Cc: linux-mips@linux-mips.org
Subject: Re: udelay() too slow by a factor of 2 on Cavium chips
Date: Wed, 24 Feb 2010 17:45:25 -0800 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <4B85D635.6050602@caviumnetworks.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <4B85D445.2090700@ciena.com>
On 02/24/2010 05:37 PM, Brian Daniels wrote:
> We've noticed that udelay() and related functions are too slow by a
> factor of 2 on Cavium CPUs. I did some investigation and it seems to be
> related to the fact that Cavium is the only MIPS CPU family that has
> ARCH_HAS_READ_CURRENT_TIMER defined to use its hardware cycle counter
> (CvmCount) to calibrate loops-per-jiffy. Since udelay() uses lpj to
> calculate the number of loops to wait in __delay() it is affected by the
> lpj calibration.
>
> On a 600MHz Cavium system running 2.6.33-rc8 with HZ=250 the lpj is
> 2404728. This results in udelay() passing 601 to __delay() for a 1us
> delay which would work if __delay took 1 cycle per loop however it takes
> 2 cycles giving a delay of 2us.
>
> It seems the easiest way to fix the problem would be to remove the
> definition of ARCH_HAS_READ_CURRENT_TIMER for Cavium which would use the
> same lpj calibration delay loop as other MIPS CPUs. With this change on
> the same 600MHz system lpj is 1196032 which results in udelay() passing
> 299 to __delay() which would yield close to the desired 1us delay.
>
> I'm not sure what all of the implications would be of effectively
> halving lpj on Cavium CPUs or what the rationale was for defining
> ARCH_HAS_READ_CURRENT_TIMER for Cavium CPUs in the first place. I'm
> hoping someone more informed can take a look at it and propose a fix if
> what I've proposed isn't good enough.
>
Thanks for the report. I will look at it.
David Daney
prev parent reply other threads:[~2010-02-25 1:45 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 2+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2010-02-25 1:37 udelay() too slow by a factor of 2 on Cavium chips Brian Daniels
2010-02-25 1:45 ` David Daney [this message]
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