Re: 2.6.1 "clock preempt"?

From: timothy parkinson
Date: Fri Jan 23 2004 - 15:39:50 EST



On Fri, Jan 23, 2004 at 12:06:45PM -0800, john stultz wrote:
> On Fri, 2004-01-23 at 11:36, timothy parkinson wrote:
> > On Fri, Jan 23, 2004 at 11:17:29AM -0800, john stultz wrote:
> > > Well, lost ticks can be caused by many things, but your point is valid,
> > > the message could be a bit more elightening.
> >
> > googling for this issue turns up quite a few questions about it - there's
> > already one possible answer in the source, couldn't hurt to stick in a few
> > more:
> >
> >
> > if (lost_count++ > 100) {
> > printk(KERN_WARNING "Losing too many ticks!\n");
> > printk(KERN_WARNING "TSC cannot be used as a timesource.\n"
> > "Are you running with SpeedStep?\n"
> > + "Perhaps you should enable DMA using \"hdparm\"?\n"
> > + "etc..........)\n");
> > printk(KERN_WARNING "Falling back to a sane timesource.\n");
> > clock_fallback();
> > }
> >
> > not that you have to actually listen to me or anything... :-)
>
> Looks good by me. Would you mind sending such a patch to Andrew?
>
> thanks
> -john
>

no problem, i'll take it from here.

* Running with SpeedStep (this is a cpu thing i assume?) could cause this.
* Not having DMA enabled on your hard disk(s) could cause this. See the hdparm
utility to enable it.
* Incorrect TSC synchronization on SMP systems could cause this.
* Anything else?

thanks,

timothy

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