From: Luiz Capitulino <lcapitulino@redhat.com>
To: John Ogness <john.ogness@linutronix.de>
Cc: linux-rt-users@vger.kernel.org,
Marcelo Tosatti <mtosatti@redhat.com>,
williams@redhat.com, riel@redhat.com
Subject: Re: cyclictest abstime vs. reltime
Date: Thu, 18 Dec 2014 09:33:57 -0500 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <20141218093357.1fa51822@redhat.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <87fvcd9suh.fsf@linutronix.de>
On Thu, 18 Dec 2014 11:04:38 +0100
John Ogness <john.ogness@linutronix.de> wrote:
> On 2014-12-17, Luiz Capitulino <lcapitulino@redhat.com> wrote:
> > We're doing some scheduling latency measurements with KVM. While
> > analyzing some traces and reading cyclictest code in the process, I
> > found out that by default cyclictest uses the absolute time algorithm,
> > which basically does:
> >
> > clock_gettime(&now)
> > next = now + interval /* interval == 1000us */
> > /* do some quick stuff */
> > while() {
> > clock_nanosleep(&next) /* ie. sleeps until now + 1000us, 'next' is abs */
> > clock_gettime(&now)
> > diff = calcdiff(now, next)
> > /* update a bunch of stats and the histogram data, also
> > check if we're finished */
> > next += interval
> > }
> >
> > Now, doesn't this mean that the timerthread will actually sleep less
> > than interval?
>
> Correct. In cyclictest you are not specifying sleep time. You are
> specifing the wake interval.
>
> > This is so because we have fixed sleeping points which don't take into
> > consideration the sleeping latency
>
> Sleep latency is taken into account. That is exactly what cyclictest
> measures.
>
> > nor the bunch of things the timerthread does (eg. update histogram).
>
> cyclictest does not (and should not) care about this.
>
> > If I'm making sense, won't this behavior cause better numbers to be
> > reported?
>
> Using _relative_ mode causes _worse_ numbers to be reported because it
> assumes that a new relative time can be prepared and set
> instantaneously, which is not correct. So you are not only measuring
> sleep latency, but also mixing in timer setup duration. I think these
> numbers would be misleading, since I would expect real-world RT projects
> to be using absolute time.
This makes sense. Thanks a lot for your answers!
>
> Absolute (and relative) mode mixes in timer interrupt handling
> duration. But that is appropriate here since we are not only interested
> in how good the hardware timer is, but also how fast PREEMPT_RT can
> allow software to respond to it.
>
> John Ogness
> --
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prev parent reply other threads:[~2014-12-18 14:34 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 4+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2014-12-17 20:16 cyclictest abstime vs. reltime Luiz Capitulino
2014-12-18 8:22 ` Uwe Kleine-König
2014-12-18 10:04 ` John Ogness
2014-12-18 14:33 ` Luiz Capitulino [this message]
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