SMP-i386: Linux timekeeping

Ulrich Windl (Ulrich.Windl@rz.uni-regensburg.de)
Fri, 19 Oct 2001 08:29:36 +0200


Hi,

I haven't stidied the latest changes in the kernel (since 2.4.7), but I
got positive feedback from a user regarding my experimental patches
"PPSkit-CVS-2.4.7-TEST_SMP*" that can be found on ftp.kernel.org
somewhere near daemons/ntp/PPS.

These two patches add new functionality so that SMP systems with
different, but relative constant (i.e. drifting at the same rate) clock
speeds for the CPUs are handled better.

Of course nothing comes for free: I use TSC calibration per CPU during
startup and a per-CPU TSC conversion factor plus last_TSC values per
CPU. To avoid inter-CPU interrupts, I chose to let the CPU that
processes the timer interrupt update the other CPUs' data.

Currently I use no locks to protect the data. Doing so might cause some
time spikes when a value is read while being updated.

Can some guru here tell me what lock to use, or is a new one required?
Usually things like cpu_data[] are read-only, but I update them now
from time to time.

The code deals with nanoseconds, and the performance that a test user
reported was (under load):

assert 10035 time 1003435349.891827405 delta 0.999942712 jitter -2413
assert 10036 time 1003435350.891774086 delta 0.999946681 jitter 3969
assert 10037 time 1003435351.891723976 delta 0.999949890 jitter 3209
assert 10038 time 1003435352.891663539 delta 0.999939563 jitter -10327
assert 10039 time 1003435353.891610403 delta 0.999946864 jitter 7301
assert 10040 time 1003435354.891553922 delta 0.999943519 jitter -3345
assert 10041 time 1003435355.891498601 delta 0.999944679 jitter 1160
assert 10042 time 1003435356.891446761 delta 0.999948160 jitter 3481
assert 10043 time 1003435357.891387342 delta 0.999940581 jitter -7579
assert 10044 time 1003435358.891332625 delta 0.999945283 jitter 4702

(Comparing the system clock to a one-pulse-per-second external pulse
applied to the serial port)

So if anybody wants to play with the code, do so. But don't use the
kernel for your production database right now! The non-SMP variant
works on i386 for weeks at home.

A port to a more recent kernel is planned as soon as the branch seems
stable enough.

Regards,
Ulrich
(I am not subscribed to linux-kernel, so make sure I get your comments)

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