Re: [patch] Real-Time Preemption, -RT-2.6.10-rc2-mm3-V0.7.31-19

From: Florian Schmidt
Date: Thu Dec 02 2004 - 12:44:16 EST


On Thu, 2 Dec 2004 14:49:34 +0100
Ingo Molnar <mingo@xxxxxxx> wrote:

>
> * Florian Schmidt <mista.tapas@xxxxxxx> wrote:
>
> > Ok, so if i want to find out whether a client violates the RT
> > constraints for its process callback i would have to add a call to
> > gettimeofday(1,1) at the start of the process callback and
> > gettimeofday(1,0) at the end.
> >
> > Everything which causes a reschedule inbetween will then cause SIGUSR2
> > to be sent to the client for which i could either add a signal handler
> > in the client or just use gdb to get notified of it.
>
> correct. I'd expect there to be a number of less critical reschedules
> happening around startup/shutdown of a client, which one could consider
> a false positive, but there should be no unexpected rescheduling while
> the client is up and running.

Ok,

this simple patch adds the gettimeofday calls around the calling of the
process callback:

--- libjack/client.c.orig 2004-12-02 17:55:04.000000000 +0100
+++ libjack/client.c 2004-12-02 17:56:23.000000000 +0100
@@ -1238,6 +1238,9 @@
if (control->sync_cb)
jack_call_sync_client (client);

+ // enable atomicity check for RP kernels
+ gettimeofday(1,1);
+
if (control->process) {
if (control->process (control->nframes,
control->process_arg)
@@ -1247,7 +1250,10 @@
} else {
control->state = Finished;
}
-
+
+ // disable atomicity check
+ gettimeofday(0,1);
+
if (control->timebase_cb)
jack_call_timebase_master (client);


The results i see are rather interesting though. Even with a noop jack
client (which does nothing but return 0 in the process callback) i get a
syslog report everytime i start the client. Client source attached.

Dec 2 18:39:06 mango kernel: jack_test:22743 userspace BUG: scheduling in user-atomic context!
Dec 2 18:39:06 mango kernel: [<c02a38b6>] schedule+0x76/0x130 (8)
Dec 2 18:39:06 mango kernel: [<c02a44c5>] schedule_timeout+0x85/0xe0 (36)
Dec 2 18:39:06 mango kernel: [<c016677f>] do_pollfd+0x4f/0x90 (48)
Dec 2 18:39:06 mango kernel: [<c011ceb0>] process_timeout+0x0/0x10 (8)
Dec 2 18:39:06 mango kernel: [<c016686a>] do_poll+0xaa/0xd0 (20)
Dec 2 18:39:06 mango kernel: [<c01669e2>] sys_poll+0x152/0x230 (48)
Dec 2 18:39:06 mango kernel: [<c0165db0>] __pollwait+0x0/0xd0 (36)
Dec 2 18:39:06 mango kernel: [<c01025cb>] syscall_call+0x7/0xb (32)


The atomicity check operates on a per task (thread) basis right?

Flo
#include <jack/jack.h>
#include <iostream>
#include <sstream>
#include <unistd.h>

jack_client_t *client;
jack_port_t *iport;
jack_port_t *oport;

int wasted_loops = 0;

int sleep_seconds = 1;
int sleep_in_period = 2000;
int counter = 0;

int process(jack_nframes_t frames, void *arg) {
/*
// std::cout << "process callback" << std::endl;
jack_default_audio_sample_t *ibuf;
ibuf = (jack_default_audio_sample_t*)jack_port_get_buffer(iport, frames);

jack_default_audio_sample_t *obuf;
obuf = (jack_default_audio_sample_t*)jack_port_get_buffer(oport, frames);

for (jack_nframes_t frame = 0; frame < frames; frame++) {
for (int i = 0; i < wasted_loops; ++i) {
// do nothing
}
obuf[frame] = ibuf[frame];
}
counter++;
if (counter == sleep_in_period) {
//sleep(sleep_seconds);
}
*/
return 0;
}

int main(int argc, char *argv[]) {
// default = 60 seconds
unsigned int seconds_to_run = 60;
if (argc > 1) {
std::stringstream sec_stream;
sec_stream << argv[1];
sec_stream >> seconds_to_run;
if (argc > 2) {
std::stringstream waste_stream;
waste_stream << argv[2];
waste_stream >> wasted_loops;
std::cout << "wasted loops: " << wasted_loops << std::endl;
}
}
std::cout << "seconds to run: " << seconds_to_run << std::endl;

std::stringstream pid_stream;
pid_stream << getpid();

std::cout << "client_new" << std::endl;
client = jack_client_new(pid_stream.str().c_str());

std::cout << "port_register." << std::endl;
iport = jack_port_register(client, "in", JACK_DEFAULT_AUDIO_TYPE, JackPortIsInput|JackPortIsTerminal, 0);
oport = jack_port_register(client, "out", JACK_DEFAULT_AUDIO_TYPE, JackPortIsTerminal|JackPortIsOutput, 0);

std::cout << "set_process_callback" << std::endl;
jack_set_process_callback(client, process, 0);

std::cout << "activate" << std::endl;
jack_activate(client);

std::cout << "running" << std::endl;

// while(1) {sleep(1);};
sleep(seconds_to_run);

jack_deactivate(client);
jack_client_close(client);
}