On Tue, 2006-07-25 at 14:04 -0700, H. Peter Anvin wrote:
That's why I'm suggesting adding a cheap, possibly low-res, gettimeofday virtual system call in case there is no way for the kernel to provide userspace with a cheap full-resolution gettimeofday. Obviously, if a high-quality gettimeofday is available, then they can be linked together by the kernel.
Low res is fine: X Timestamps are 1 millisecond values, and wrap after a
few hundred days. What we do care about is monotonically increasing
values (until it wraps). On machines of the past, this was very
convenient; we'd just store a 32 bit value for clients to read, and not
bother with locking. I guess these days, you'd at least have to protect
the store with a memory barrier, maybe....
It was amusing years ago to find toolkit bugs after applications had
been up for that long (32 bits of milliseconds)... Yes, there are
applications and machines that stay up that long, really there are....