On 16 Aug 2006 at 12:53, john stultz wrote:
> On Wed, 2006-08-16 at 14:26 +0200, Ulrich Windl wrote:
> > I've been viewing recent changes to the Linux kernel (specifically 2.6.15.1 to
> > 2.6.17.8), and I felt I'll have to say something:
>
> Hey Ulrich,
>
> If you haven't already (and have the time), please also take a peek at
> the current 2.6.18-rc patch as well as -mm, as a number of timekeeping
> changes have been made since 2.6.17.x.
Hi John,
during the nice weather I was quite lazy here, but the weather recently was so bad
that I turned on the computer again ;-) I decided to download a "stable" kernel
release to evaluate (hoping your code was in already). I cannot tell you when, but
I'll have a look sooner or later ;-)
>
> > First there's a new routine in kernel/time.c named "set_normalized_timespec()".
> > That routine sets nothing besides the actual argument being passed by reference.
> > Thus I feel that routine should rather be named "normalize_timespec()" (just to
> > save a few bytes. No, not really ;-). Alternatively that thing could be a pure
> > ("const") function that returns the normalized timespec. In that case I'd call it
> > "normalized_timespec()"...
>
> Sounds reasonable.
>
> > OK, that issue woun't make anybody feel hot I guess, so here's another one:
> >
> > The existing routines for measuring time among the various architectures is an
> > absolute mess. Well, it always had been, but it didn't become any better, but
> > worse it seems.
>
> As you know, myself and others are working on this. Its taken quite a
> bit of time to get some of the groundwork in, and cleanups are still
> needed, but I think we're on the right track. However, criticism is
> welcome, and I'd appreciate your input (I did try to keep you CC'ed on
> most of the early discussions, but forgive me as I left you out on some
> of the more recent discussions)
No problem, I was on holiday anyway. The code I tried had a problem with my ADM
Athlon X2 (Dual core): Both cores run with different frequency, a feature of power
management, thus making hi-res timing instable. I haven't investigated in-depth,
but I thought the hpet timer was used.
>
> > For example there is a POSIX-like sys_clock_gettime() intended to
> > server the end-user directly, but there's no counterpart do_clock_gettime() to
> > server any in-kernel needs.
>
> Hmmm.. ktime_get(), ktime_get_ts() and ktime_get_real(), provide this
> info. Is there something missing here?
>From memory: Are those exported from posix_timer? I think I saw those, but wasn't
sure whether they are for general cross-arch use.
>
> I will agree that the code in kernel/time.c, kernel/timer.c,
> kernel/posix-timers.c, and kernel/hrtimer.c files could be better
> organized so the layered logic is more clear. I am working on this (see
> the ntp-move-all-the-ntp-related-code-to-ntpc-fix patch currently in
> -mm), but untangling the code without breaking anyone (well, that's the
> intent) is a slow process.
>
> > The implementation of clock_getres() is also hardly
> > worth it. I once had implemented a routine like this:
> [snip]
> > That routine tries to get the typical clock resolution the user is expected to
> > see, automatically adjusting to the interpolation method and CPU speed being used.
> > I think that's preferrable to just returning 1ns or "tick" or whatever.
>
> Yea. This area could use improvement. The clocksource infrastructure
> should better allow us to export the actual hardware resolution.
>
> > Finally I have the personal need for an "unadjusted tick interpolator"
> > (preferrably being clocked by the same clock as the timer chip) to estimate the
> > frequency error of the system clock (independently from any offset adjustments
> > being made).
> >
> > For those who might wonder: Yes, that's the code that had been thown out recently:
> > NTP PPS calibration.
>
> The NTP PPS code was dropped because there were no in-kernel users of
> that interface. But as I've always said, I'd be very happy to see your
> PPS work get merged. I know there are a few out-of-tree patches
> currently floating around (Udo mailed me awhile back with some links,
> but I can't find them at the moment), and I'm sure due to the high level
> of activity in this area makes it difficult to keep out of tree patches
> up to date. Is there any reason these patches aren't being pushed into
> mainline?
I'm only waiting for a "pusher" ;-) No actually I have my own quality check, and
currently the code fails those. It's named "alpha" by myself. Unless it's "beta" I
won't ask anybody for inclusion.
I don't like the idea of a loadable module, because most of the code accesses
several timing variables that are (or can be) private now. A module would make
them public (for misuse). The time machinery should be a sealed black box IMHO.
>
> > So summarize: I'd wish for fewer, but more useful routines dealing with time. Some
> > modules just don't export useful (and otherwise missing) routines, while other
> > useful exported routines have different names for each architecture. A mess...
>
> I agree, and folks are working to clean this up (I've got a
> get_persistent_clock patch to try to unify all the different
> get_rtc/cmos/boot_time() hooks across the arches coming soon). Again, I
> very much welcome your experience, suggestions and patches to this area.
Regards,
Ulrich
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