On Fri, Mar 21, 2003 at 12:01:13AM -0800, george anzinger wrote:
> To carry this to the absurd, it also precludes most anything other
> than a GPS or WWV based clock. If we are to have any clock that is
No, cycle counters do just fine.
> >1 gettimeofday = 1000000000
> >2 driver delays 10s
> >3 gettimeofday = 1000000000
> >4 timer notices lag and adjusts
>
> Uh, how is this done? At this time there IS correction for delays up
> to about a second built into the gettimeofday() code. You seem to be
> assuming that we can do better than this with clock monotonic. Given
> the right hardware, this may even be possible, but why not correct
> gettimeofday in the same way?
monotonic_clock as proposed uses a hardware clock.
Specifically, the TSC on vanilla intel, the Cyclone timer on x440, and
associated clocks on S/390 (to speak of platforms I've visited
recently). Right now, the hangcheck-timer accesses the hardware counter
directly. monotonic_clock is intended as a portable and consistent
accessor instead.
The current gettimeofday() corrects for ~1s. Even if we found a
way to correct for ~1000s or more, there would still be a race between
when the caller reads and when the correction happens. A clock that
reads a hardware counter doesn't have this problem.
If code doesn't need this accuracy, it can just use
gettimeofday().
Joel
--"Glory is fleeting, but obscurity is forever." - Napoleon Bonaparte
Joel Becker Senior Member of Technical Staff Oracle Corporation E-mail: joel.becker@oracle.com Phone: (650) 506-8127 - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/
This archive was generated by hypermail 2b29 : Sun Mar 23 2003 - 22:00:38 EST