On 9/27/19 1:22 PM, Marc Zyngier wrote:
On 2019-09-27 09:48, Benjamin Gaignard wrote:
Adding always-on makes arm arch_timer claim to be an high resolution
timer.
That is possible because power mode won't stop clocking the timer.
The "always-on" is not about the clock. It is about the comparator.
The clock itself is *guaranteed* to always tick. If it didn't, that'd be
an integration bug, and a pretty bad one.
What you're claiming here is that your CPU never enters a low-power mode?
Ever? I find this very hard to believe.
Furthermore, claiming that always-on is the way to force the arch-timer
to be an hrtimer is factually wrong. This is what happens *if* this is
the only timer in the system. The only case this is true is for virtual
machines. Anything else has a global timer somewhere that will allow
the arch timers to be used as an hrtimer.
I'm pretty sure you too have a global timer somewhere in your system.
Enable it, and enjoy hrtimers without having to lie about the properties
of your system! ;-)
Hi Marc,
This SoC doesn't have any other global timer. Use arch_time is the only
we have to provide hrtimer on this system.