Re: [PATCH] Hyper-V: fix for unwanted manipulation of sched_clock when TSC marked unstable

From: Ani Sinha
Date: Tue Jul 13 2021 - 11:31:27 EST




On Tue, 13 Jul 2021, Peter Zijlstra wrote:

> On Tue, Jul 13, 2021 at 01:04:46PM +0000, Wei Liu wrote:
> > On Tue, Jul 13, 2021 at 08:35:21AM +0530, Ani Sinha wrote:
> > > Marking TSC as unstable has a side effect of marking sched_clock as
> > > unstable when TSC is still being used as the sched_clock. This is not
> > > desirable. Hyper-V ultimately uses a paravirtualized clock source that
> > > provides a stable scheduler clock even on systems without TscInvariant
> > > CPU capability. Hence, mark_tsc_unstable() call should be called _after_
> > > scheduler clock has been changed to the paravirtualized clocksource. This
> > > will prevent any unwanted manipulation of the sched_clock. Only TSC will
> > > be correctly marked as unstable.
> >
> > Correct me if I'm wrong, what you're trying to address is that
> > sched_clock remains marked as unstable even after Linux has switched to
> > a stable clock source.
> >
> > I think a better approach will be to mark the sched_clock as stable when
> > we switch to the paravirtualized clock source.
>
> No.. unstable->stable transitions are unsound. You get to switch to your
> paravirt clock earlier.
>

I believe manipulating sched_clock was never the intention of the original
author who added the code to mark tsc as unstable on hyper-V:

commit 88c9281a9fba67636ab26c1fd6afbc78a632374f
Author: Vitaly Kuznetsov <vkuznets@xxxxxxxxxx>
Date: Wed Aug 19 09:54:24 2015 -0700

x86/hyperv: Mark the Hyper-V TSC as unstable


The original author simply wanted to mark TSC as unstable on hyper-V
systems because of reasons the above commit log will describe. Sched clock
manipulation happened accidentally because from where the
mark_tsc_unstable() was being called. This patch simply fixes this.

Michael Kelly from Microsoft has tested this patch already.

--Ani