Re: 2.6.14-rt21: slow-running clock
From: Jonathan Woithe
Date: Wed Dec 07 2005 - 17:52:47 EST
> > > > When running Ingo's 2.6.14-rt21 (and in fact rt kernels back to at least
> > > > 2.6.13-rc days), the clock on my i915-based laptop runs slow. The degree
> > > > of slowness appears directly related to how busy the machine is. If
> > > > it is just sitting around doing very little the time is kept rather
> > > > well. However, as soon as the load increases the RTC and system time
> > > > diverge significantly. For example, running jackd for 2 minutes results
> > > > in the system time loosing as much as 20 seconds compared to the CMOS RTC.
> > > > Processes doing HDD I/O also seem to affect the system time similarly.
> > > >
> > > > Selectively disabling different timer-related kernel options does not make
> > > > any difference. However, the clock seems fine under vanilla 2.6.14,
> > > > suggesting an issue somewhere in the rt patches.
> > >
> > > Could you please send me your dmesg and the output of:
> > >
> > > cat /sys/devices/system/clocksource/clocksource0/*
> >
> > First the contents of the above /sys/ files:
> >
> > /sys/devices/system/clocksource/clocksource0/current_clocksource:
> > c3tsc
> >
> > /sys/devices/system/clocksource/clocksource0/available_clocksource
> > acpi_pm jiffies c3tsc pit
>
> Odd. I'm not sure why the acpi_pm wasn't chosen by default if it was
> available and the TSC fell back to the c3tsc. It might be something in
> the -RT tree that's changed that bit. Could you try the following and
> see if it doesn't resolve the timekeeping problems you're seeing?
>
> echo "acpi_pm" > /sys/devices/system/clocksource/clocksource0/current_clocksource
Upon executing the above command the system time started behaving correctly
once more.
> Still it sounds like something isn't right w/ either the c3tsc code or
> the cpufreq notification code.
That is indeed what it appears. When c3tsc is in use timing goes haywire.
I'm also wondering whether this might be related to one other thing I
noticed a week or so back (also reported to the list, but thus far no
followups). If I enabled the (new) "High resolution timers" feature (as
distinct from HPET), things like /usr/bin/sleep run for far longer than
they should irrespective of machine load. For example, "sleep 1" from bash
actually delays 38 seconds, not 1 second as expected.
> Would you be willing to test further patches?
Yes.
> Also could you try booting w/ idle=poll and see if that changes the
> behavior?
Booting with idle=poll did indeed alter the behaviour. Firstly, the
current_clocksource became tsc, not c3tsc. Secondly, the
available_clocksource listed
acpi_pm jiffies tsc pit
In other words, c3tsc wasn't there but tsc was. In terms of time accuracy
it seemed that with idle=poll the system time was kept accurately in this
case as well. I also noted in dmesg output the following:
Time: tsc clocksource has been installed.
Unlike the normal case (where idle=poll was not specified) there was no
mention of a "fallback" to a "C3-safe tsc".
For interest I also booted a plain 2.6.14 kernel to see how the clocksources
were set up there. However, the /sys/devices/system/clocksource/ directory
did not exist under this kernel version so I wasn't able to conclude anything
(other than the fact that /sys/devices/system/clocksource/ must be something
added by the rt patchset). There also wasn't any dmesg output of the
form
Time: ...
Regards
jonathan
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