Re: [PATCH] configure HAVE_UNSTABLE_SCHED_CLOCK for SGI_SN systems

From: Robin Holt
Date: Tue Jan 06 2009 - 17:51:18 EST


On Tue, Jan 06, 2009 at 09:57:20PM +0100, Peter Zijlstra wrote:
> On Tue, 2009-01-06 at 12:34 -0800, Luck, Tony wrote:
> > > > All ia64 systems are potentially affected ... but perhaps you might
> > > > never see the problem on most because the itc clocks are synced as close
> > > > as s/w can get them when cpus are brought on line.
> > >
> > > Do you want Dimitri to resubmit with this set for all IA64 or leave it
> > > as is?
> >
> > I'd like to understand the impact of turning on HAVE_UNSTABLE_SCHED_CLOCK
> >
> > It looks like both the i386_defconfig and x86_64_defconfig choose this,
> > so at least ia64 will be hitting the well tested code paths
> >
> > Have the other architectures just not hit this yet? Or do they all have
> > "stable" sched_clock() functions?
> >
> >
> > sched_clock() seemed like such a straightforward thing to begin with. A
> > quick & easy way to measure a time delta ON THE SAME CPU. I'm not at
> > all sure why it has been co-opted for general time measurement.
>
> It came from the complication of needing to tell a remote cpu's time due
> to remote wakeups in the scheduler.

But doesn't scheduler tick advance the rq->clock? Why do the others
need to fiddle with a remote runqueue's clock? When that cpu starts
taking ticks again, it will update it's rq->clock field and start the
processes. I guess I am a lot underinformed about the new scheduler
design.

Robin
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