Re: Linux 3.1-rc9

From: Ingo Molnar
Date: Mon Oct 17 2011 - 17:41:35 EST



* H. Peter Anvin <hpa@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:

> On 10/17/2011 02:19 PM, Ingo Molnar wrote:
> >
> > it's 64/32 division - it's the /1000000000 /1000000 /1000 divisions
> > in the large majority of cases, to convert between
> > seconds/milliseconds/microseconds and scalar nanoseconds.
> >
> > the kernel-internal ktime_t in the 32-bit optimized case is:
> >
> > union ktime {
> > s32 sec, nsec;
> > };
> >
> > which is the same as timespec and arithmetically close to timeval,
> > which many ABIs use. So conversion is easy in that case - but
> > arithmetics gets a bit harder.
> >
> > If we used a scalar 64-bit form for all kernel internal time
> > representations:
> >
> > s64 nsecs;
> >
> > then conversions back to timespec/timeval would involve dividing this
> > 64-bit value with 1000000000 or 1000000.
> >
> > Is there no faster approximation for those than bit by bit?
> >
> > In particular we could try something like:
> >
> > (high*2^32 + low)/1e9 ~== ( high * (2^64/1e9) ) / 2^32
> >
> > ... which reduces it all to a 64-bit multiplication (or two 32-bit
> > multiplications) with a known constant, at the cost of 1 nsec
> > imprecision of the result - but that's an OK approximation in my
> > opinion.
> >
>
> We can do much better than that with reciprocal multiplication.

Yes, 2^64/1e9 is the reciprocal.

Thanks,

Ingo
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