Re: infinite loop in read_hpet from ktime_get_boot_fast_ns

From: Jason A. Donenfeld
Date: Thu Jun 13 2019 - 12:22:48 EST


Hey Arnd,

On Thu, Jun 13, 2019 at 5:40 PM Arnd Bergmann <arnd@xxxxxxxx> wrote:
> A seqlock is a very cheap synchronization primitive, I would actually
> guess that this is faster than most implementations of sched_clock()
> that access a hardware register for reading the time.

It appears to me that ktime_get_coarse_boottime() has a granularity of
a whole second, which is a lot worse than jiffies. Looking at the
source, you assign base but don't then add ns like the other
functions. At first I thought this was an intentional quirk to avoid
hitting the slow hardware paths. But noticing this poor granularity
now and observing that there's actually a blank line (\n\n) where the
nanosecond addition normally would be, I wonder if something was lost
in cut-and-paste?

I'm still poking around trying to see what's up. As a quick test,
running this on every packet during a high speed test shows the left
incrementing many times per second, whereas the right increments once
per second:

static int x = 0;
if (!(x++ % 30000))
pr_err("%llu %llu\n", local_clock(), ktime_get_coarse_boottime());

Jason