Re: Reading EeePC900 battery info causes stalls
From: Sitsofe Wheeler
Date: Sat Sep 20 2008 - 19:18:56 EST
Steven Rostedt wrote:
On Sat, 20 Sep 2008, Sitsofe Wheeler wrote:
Thanks - this made the wakeup tracer appear a you said. I have put two wakeup
traces up:
http://sucs.org/~sits/test/eeepc-debug/20080920/latency_trace.txt.gz
http://sucs.org/~sits/test/eeepc-debug/20080920/trace.txt.gz
(each file is around 6Mbytes uncompressed)
Here's a small extract of latency_trace.txt:
# tracer: wakeup
#
wakeup latency trace v1.1.5 on 2.6.27-rc6skw-dirty
--------------------------------------------------------------------
latency: 3232905 us, #65620/6180619, CPU#0 | (M:desktop VP:0, KP:0, SP:0
Peter, these times are crazy, mainly due to the cpu_clock. He probably
wants to use the sched_clock. Below is a patch to use it instead.
Sitsofe, I notice that the trace states "desktop". This means that you
are running with CONFIG_PREEMPT_VOLUNTARY. You want
CONFIG_PREEMPT.
Dagnabit I keep confusing people. This was actually intentional because
I wanted to know whether the latency I was seeing should have been
present in a non-preempt (but voluntary) kernel. You can see the subject
at that start of this thread: http://tinyurl.com/4akxa5 (How how latent
should non-preemptive scheduling be?). I'm not running a sound studio
where I need the lowest possible latency at all costs. Further my
current understanding is that the desktop distros don't tend to ship
"regular desktop kernels" with preemption (I know Ubuntu 8.04 and Fedora
9 didn't).
Basically I have the following queries: Do you have to have preemption
on if you are listening to music (without noticeable skips) and playing
the odd game (without noticeable pauses) on a desktop? What's the
allowed highest latency going to be over a few minutes in such kernels?
Is it simply the case that if it's a non-preemptive kernel latency no
longer matters?
Just for the record I just tested a preempt kernel I had lying around
and the speakter-test -b75000 while looking at battery did not stall.
However latencytop still reported a "waiting for cpu" value of 75ms.
[...]
Is it intentional that the last event has a time earlier closer to that of the
first event?
Change the config, and see what you get with this patch:
I'll see if I can test the patch tomorrow. Does the config change also
have to be made or the timestamps to be "narrower"?
--
Sitsofe | http://sucs.org/~sits/
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