Re: clock event deviceʼs next_event

From: Thomas Gleixner
Date: Tue Oct 24 2017 - 03:23:22 EST


On Mon, 23 Oct 2017, Sodagudi Prasad wrote:

> Hi Viresh and Thomas,
>
> In the functions tick_nohz_stop_sched_tick(), when expires = KTIME_MAX we are
> canceling the tick_sched_timer timer but we are not updating the clock event
> deviceâs next_event to KTIME_MAX.
> Due to that broadcast deviceâs next_event is not programmed properly and
> resulting unnecessary wakeups for this cpu.
>
> /*
> * If the expiration time == KTIME_MAX, then we simply stop
> * the tick timer.
> */
> if (unlikely(expires == KTIME_MAX)) {
> if (ts->nohz_mode == NOHZ_MODE_HIGHRES)
> hrtimer_cancel(&ts->sched_timer);
> goto out;
> }

Right, because this code does not have access to the broadcast device at
all. It doesn't even know and care about it.

> After digging further, I see that following call flow is updating
> tick_cpu_device state to shutdown state but clock event device next_event is
> not updated to KTIME_MAX.
> hrtimer_cancel -> __remove_hrtimer -> hrtimer_force_reprogram ->
> tick_program_event.
>
> int tick_program_event(ktime_t expires, int force)
> {
> struct clock_event_device *dev =
> __this_cpu_read(tick_cpu_device.evtdev);
>
> if (unlikely(expires == KTIME_MAX)) {
> /*
> * We don't need the clock event device any more, stop it.
> */
> clockevents_switch_state(dev,
> CLOCK_EVT_STATE_ONESHOT_STOPPED);
> return 0;
> }
> In the above tick_program_event() function clock event deviceâs next_event is
> not getting updated as clockevents_program_event() function not called after
> state update.

If the device is shutdown, then next_event does not matter. But yes, for
consistency reasons we could set it to KTIME_MAX.

Thanks,

tglx