On Fri, 03 Aug 2007 12:37:12 -0600 Jonathan Corbet <[email protected]> wrote:
> Here's the second (and probably final) posting of the msleep() with
> hrtimers patch. The problem being addressed here is that the current
> msleep() will stop for a minimum of two jiffies, meaning that, on a
> HZ=100 system, msleep(1) delays for for about 20ms. In a driver with
> one such delay for each of 150 or so register setting operations, the
> extra time adds up to a few seconds.
>
> This patch addresses the situation by using hrtimers. On tickless
> systems with working timers, msleep(1) now sleeps for 1ms, even with
> HZ=100.
>
> Most comments last time were favorable. The one dissenter was Roman,
> who worries about the overhead of using hrtimers for this operation; my
> understanding is that he would rather see a really_msleep() function for
> those who actually want millisecond resolution. I'm not sure how to
> characterize what the cost could be, but it can only be buried by the
> fact that every call sleeps for some number of milliseconds. On my
> system, the several hundred total msleep() calls can't cause any real
> overhead, and almost all happen at initialization time.
>
> I still think it would be useful for msleep() to do what it says it does
> and not vastly oversleep with small arguments. A quick grep turns up
> 450 msleep(1) calls in the current mainline. Andrew, if you agree, can
> you drop this into -mm? If not, I guess I'll let it go.
>
> jon
>
> ---
>
> Use hrtimers so that msleep() sleeps for the requested time
>
> Current msleep() snoozes for at least two jiffies, causing msleep(1) to
> sleep for at least 20ms on HZ=100 systems. Using hrtimers allows
> msleep() to sleep for something much closer to the requested time.
>
> Signed-off-by: Jonathan Corbet <[email protected]>
>
> --- 2.6.23-rc1/kernel/timer.c.orig 2007-08-02 13:45:20.000000000 -0600
> +++ 2.6.23-rc1/kernel/timer.c 2007-08-03 12:34:48.000000000 -0600
> @@ -1349,18 +1349,43 @@ void __init init_timers(void)
> open_softirq(TIMER_SOFTIRQ, run_timer_softirq, NULL);
> }
>
> +
> +
> +
> +static void do_msleep(unsigned int msecs, struct hrtimer_sleeper *sleeper,
> + int sigs)
> +{
> + enum hrtimer_mode mode = HRTIMER_MODE_REL;
> + int state = sigs ? TASK_INTERRUPTIBLE : TASK_UNINTERRUPTIBLE;
> +
> + /*
> + * This is really just a reworked and simplified version
> + * of do_nanosleep().
> + */
> + hrtimer_init(&sleeper->timer, CLOCK_MONOTONIC, mode);
> + sleeper->timer.expires = ktime_set(0, msecs*NSEC_PER_MSEC);
> + hrtimer_init_sleeper(sleeper, current);
> +
> + do {
> + set_current_state(state);
> + hrtimer_start(&sleeper->timer, sleeper->timer.expires, mode);
> + if (sleeper->task)
> + schedule();
> + hrtimer_cancel(&sleeper->timer);
> + mode = HRTIMER_MODE_ABS;
> + } while (sleeper->task && !(sigs && signal_pending(current)));
> +}
> +
> /**
> * msleep - sleep safely even with waitqueue interruptions
> * @msecs: Time in milliseconds to sleep for
> */
> void msleep(unsigned int msecs)
> {
> - unsigned long timeout = msecs_to_jiffies(msecs) + 1;
> + struct hrtimer_sleeper sleeper;
>
> - while (timeout)
> - timeout = schedule_timeout_uninterruptible(timeout);
> + do_msleep(msecs, &sleeper, 0);
> }
> -
> EXPORT_SYMBOL(msleep);
>
> /**
> @@ -1369,11 +1394,15 @@ EXPORT_SYMBOL(msleep);
> */
> unsigned long msleep_interruptible(unsigned int msecs)
> {
> - unsigned long timeout = msecs_to_jiffies(msecs) + 1;
> + struct hrtimer_sleeper sleeper;
> + ktime_t left;
>
> - while (timeout && !signal_pending(current))
> - timeout = schedule_timeout_interruptible(timeout);
> - return jiffies_to_msecs(timeout);
> -}
> + do_msleep(msecs, &sleeper, 1);
>
> + if (!sleeper.task)
> + return 0;
> + left = ktime_sub(sleeper.timer.expires,
> + sleeper.timer.base->get_time());
> + return max(((long) ktime_to_ns(left))/NSEC_PER_MSEC, 1L);
> +}
> EXPORT_SYMBOL(msleep_interruptible);
This failed the Vaio test. I guess it triggered a USB bug.
With this patch applied, when I hotplug my wireless mouse, the little LED
on the mouse comes on for a second or so then goes out and no pointy clicky
for me.
It says:
[ 152.481522] usb 1-1: new low speed USB device using uhci_hcd and address 2
Without this patch applied, I get
[ 195.935445] usb 2-1: new low speed USB device using uhci_hcd and address 2
[ 196.116183] usb 2-1: configuration #1 chosen from 1 choice
[ 196.198362] input: Microsoft Microsoft Wireless Optical Mouse 1.00 as /class/input/input7
[ 196.223724] input: USB HID v1.11 Mouse [Microsoft Microsoft Wireless Optical Mouse 1.00] on usb-0000:00:1d.1-1
[ 196.224570] usb 2-1: new device found, idVendor=045e, idProduct=00e1
[ 196.224579] usb 2-1: new device strings: Mfr=1, Product=2, SerialNumber=0
[ 196.224585] usb 2-1: Product: Microsoft Wireless Optical Mouse 1.00
[ 196.224590] usb 2-1: Manufacturer: Microsoft
and lots of pointy clickiness.
I would assume that there is some msleep() in USB which is too short, and
the present wild rounding-up which msleep() does covered up the
incorrectly-chosen sleep duration.
I'm using HZ=250 (http://userweb.kernel.org/~akpm/config-sony.txt) and it
could well be that the mouse would fail just by going to HZ=1000, but I
didn't bother testing that.
Could one of the USB developers please suggest which msleep()(s) I should
start looking at?
Thanks.
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