Re: locking changes in tty broke low latency feature

From: Grant Edwards
Date: Thu Feb 20 2014 - 14:34:24 EST


On 2014-02-20, Peter Hurley <peter@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> On 02/19/2014 09:55 PM, Peter Hurley wrote:
>> On 02/19/2014 06:06 PM, Hal Murray wrote:
>>>> Can you give me an idea of your device's average and minimum required
>>>> latency (please be specific)? Is your target arch x86 [so I can evaluate the
>>>> the impact of bus-locked instructions relative to your expected]?
>>>
>>> The code I'm familiar with is ntpd and gpsd. They run on almost any hardware
>>> or OS and talk to a wide collection of devices.
>>>
>>> There is no hard requirement for latency. They just work better with lower
>>> latency. The lower the better.
>>>
>>> People gripe about the latency due to USB polling which is about a ms.
>>
>> Have you tried 3.12+ without low_latency? I ripped out a lot of locks
>> from 3.12+ so it's possible it already meets your requirements.
>
> Using Alan's idea to mock up a latency test, I threw together a test jig
> using two computers running 3.14-rc1 and my fwserial driver (modified to
> not aggregrate writes) in raw mode where the target does this:
>
> while (1) {
> read 64 bytes
> compare to pattern
> write 1 byte response
> }
>
> and the sender does this:
>
> for (i = 0; i < 2000; i++) {
> write 64-byte pattern
> read 1 byte response
> }
>
> Sender completes 2000 loops in 160ms total run time;
> that's 80us average per complete round-trip.

If I understand correctly, that 80us _includes_ the actual time for
the bits on the wire (which means the actual "baud rate" involved is
high enough that it's negligible).


> I think this shows that low_latency is unnecessary and should
> just be removed/ignored by the tty core.

If that's the sort of latency that you get for typical kernel
configurations for typical distros, then I agree that the low_latency
flag is not needed by the tty later.

However, it might still be useful for the lower-level tty or
serial-core driver to control CPU usage vs. latency trade-offs (for
exaple, one of my drivers uses it to decide where to set the rx FIFO
threshold).

--
Grant Edwards grant.b.edwards Yow! I wonder if I could
at ever get started in the
gmail.com credit world?

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