From: Anthony Liguori <aliguori@us.ibm.com>
To: Jan Kiszka <jan.kiszka@web.de>
Cc: Paolo Bonzini <pbonzini@redhat.com>, qemu-devel@nongnu.org
Subject: Re: [Qemu-devel] [PATCH 2/2] [RFC] time: refactor QEMU timer to use GHRTimer
Date: Mon, 22 Aug 2011 16:55:25 -0500 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <4E52D04D.7040606@us.ibm.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <4E52C0E1.3080503@web.de>
On 08/22/2011 03:49 PM, Jan Kiszka wrote:
> On 2011-08-22 22:36, Anthony Liguori wrote:
>> On 08/22/2011 03:28 PM, Jan Kiszka wrote:
>>> On 2011-08-22 21:21, Anthony Liguori wrote:
>>>> This replaces all of the QEMU timer code with GHRTimer, dramatically
>>>> simplifying
>>>> time keeping in QEMU while making it possible to use QEMUTimer code
>>>> outside of
>>>> the main loop. The later is critical to building unit tests.
>>>>
>>>> This is an RFC because I'm sure this breaks things as it changes
>>>> things. QEMU
>>>> time keeping is quite a mess today. Here's what we do today:
>>>>
>>>> 1) We have three clocks:
>>>> a) the real time clock, based on system time, not monotonic
>>>> b) the host clock, based on the real time clock, monotonic by
>>>> detecting
>>>> movements backward in time
>>>> c) the vm clock, based on real time clock but may start/stop with
>>>> the guest
>>>
>>> Not quite correct. We have:
>>>
>>> - QEMU_CLOCK_REALTIME: Based on monotonic source *if* the host
>>> supports it (there were probably once some stone-old Linuxes or
>>> BSDs), otherwise based on gettimeofday, i.e. non-monotonic. Always
>>> monotonic on Windows.
>>
>> The only clock on Linux that is truly monotonic is CLOCK_MONOTONIC_RAW
>> which is very new (2.6.28+). CLOCK_MONOTONIC is not actually monotonic
>> as it's subject to adjustments.
>
> CLOCK_MONOTONIC may be subject to frequency tuning while
> CLOCK_MONOTONIC_RAW is not. That does not and must not (for POSIX
> compliance) make the former non-monotonic.
Yes, you are right. I got myself confused.
>>> These two assessments are partly just wrong, partly fail to see the real
>>> use case. QEMU_CLOCK_HOST serves the very valid scenarios where a guest
>>> clock shall be kept synchronized on the host time, also following its
>>> jumps accordingly without stalling timers.
>>
>> The only reason we see jumps at all is because we're using
>> CLOCK_MONOTONIC or CLOCK_REALTIME. If we used CLOCK_MONOTONIC_RAW, we
>> don't see any jumps at all.
>
> CLOCK_MONOTONIC will not jump backward as well, so is perfectly fine and
> better portable. Backward jumps cannot be avoided when using a host
> system clock that is subject to follow a more accurate external source.
> But having such source for RTC emulation e.g. is a useful feature.
I think its of limited utility. The RTC isn't universally used for time
keeping. There's also no guarantee that the guest isn't going to be
upset by this.
I think a better approach is to simply have a verb in qemu-ga to set/get
the guest time. That let's you implement clock adjustment without
having to worry about NTP. I'm happy to add that as part of this series.
I don't think messing around with this stuff belongs in the QEMU clock
layer though.
Regards,
Anthony Liguori
> Jan
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2011-08-22 21:55 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 13+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2011-08-22 19:21 [Qemu-devel] [PATCH 1/2] main: add high resolution GSource based timer Anthony Liguori
2011-08-22 19:21 ` [Qemu-devel] [PATCH 2/2] [RFC] time: refactor QEMU timer to use GHRTimer Anthony Liguori
2011-08-22 20:28 ` Jan Kiszka
2011-08-22 20:36 ` Anthony Liguori
2011-08-22 20:49 ` Jan Kiszka
2011-08-22 21:55 ` Anthony Liguori [this message]
2011-08-22 23:48 ` Jan Kiszka
2011-08-23 8:12 ` Paolo Bonzini
2011-08-23 9:07 ` Edgar E. Iglesias
2011-08-23 7:43 ` Paolo Bonzini
2011-08-23 12:33 ` Anthony Liguori
2011-08-23 12:44 ` Paolo Bonzini
2011-08-22 19:26 ` [Qemu-devel] [PATCH 1/2] main: add high resolution GSource based timer Anthony Liguori
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