Re: [RFC PATCH v3 00/11] Add support for Intel PPS Generator

From: Andy Shevchenko
Date: Sat Jan 06 2024 - 10:20:34 EST


On Wed, Jan 03, 2024 at 05:25:51PM +0530, lakshmi.sowjanya.d@xxxxxxxxx wrote:
> From: Lakshmi Sowjanya D <lakshmi.sowjanya.d@xxxxxxxxx>
>
> The goal of the PPS(Pulse Per Second) hardware/software is to generate a
> signal from the system on a wire so that some third-party hardware can
> observe that signal and judge how close the system's time is to another
> system or piece of hardware.
>
> Existing methods (like parallel ports) require software to flip a bit at
> just the right time to create a PPS signal. Many things can prevent
> software from doing this precisely. This (Timed I/O) method is better
> because software only "arms" the hardware in advance and then depends on
> the hardware to "fire" and flip the signal at just the right time.
>
> To generate a PPS signal with this new hardware, the kernel wakes up
> twice a second, once for 1->0 edge and other for the 0->1 edge. It does
> this shortly (~10ms) before the actual change in the signal needs to be
> made. It computes the TSC value at which edge will happen, convert to a
> value hardware understands and program this value to Timed I/O hardware.
> The actual edge transition happens without any further action from the
> kernel.
>
> The result here is a signal coming out of the system that is roughly
> 1,000 times more accurate than the old methods. If the system is heavily
> loaded, the difference in accuracy is larger in old methods.
> Facebook and Google are the customers that use this feature.
>
> Application Interface:
> The API to use Timed I/O is very simple. It is enabled and disabled by
> writing a '1' or '0' value to the sysfs enable attribute associated with
> the Timed I/O PPS device. Each Timed I/O pin is represented by a PPS
> device. When enabled, a pulse-per-second(PPS) synchronized with the
> system clock is continuously produced on the Timed I/O pin, otherwise it
> is pulled low.
>
> The Timed I/O signal on the motherboard is enabled in the BIOS setup.

At some point you should announce v1 of the series. RFC is usually being
neglected by many (busy) maintainers.

--
With Best Regards,
Andy Shevchenko