On Mon, Aug 15, 2011 at 5:00 PM, Alexander Motin <m...@freebsd.org> wrote: > On 15.08.2011 23:57, Joe Schaefer wrote: >> >> On Mon, Aug 15, 2011 at 4:35 PM, Alexander Motin<m...@freebsd.org> wrote: >>> >>> On 15.08.2011 22:18, Joe Schaefer wrote: >>>> >>>> On Mon, Aug 15, 2011 at 9:31 AM, Joe Schaefer<joes...@gmail.com> >>>> wrote: >>>>> >>>>> On Mon, Aug 15, 2011 at 8:32 AM, Andriy Gapon<a...@freebsd.org> >>>>> wrote: >>>>>> >>>>>> on 13/08/2011 20:16 Joe Schaefer said the following: >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Brand new machine with a Phenom II X6 1100T and under chronic load >>>>>>> the clock will stop running periodically until the machine eventually >>>>>>> completely >>>>>>> freezes. Note: during these stalls the kernel is still running, the >>>>>>> machine is still >>>>>>> mostly responsive, it's just that the clock is frozen in time. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> I've disabled Turbo mode in the bios and toyed with just about every >>>>>>> other setting but nothing seems to resolve this problem. Based on >>>>>>> the >>>>>>> behavior >>>>>>> of the machine (just making buildworld will eventually kill it, >>>>>>> upping >>>>>>> the -j flag >>>>>>> just kills it faster), I'm guessing it has something to do with the >>>>>>> Digi+ VRM features >>>>>>> but again nothing I've tried modifying in the bios seems to help. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> I've tried both 8.2-RELEASE and FreeBSD 9 (head). Running head now >>>>>>> with >>>>>>> a dtrace enabled kernel. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Suggestions? >>>>>> >>>>>> On head, start with checking what source is used for driving clocks: >>>>>> sysctl kern.eventtimer >>>>> >>>>> % sysctl kern.eventtimer [master] >>>>> kern.eventtimer.choice: HPET(450) HPET1(450) HPET2(450) LAPIC(400) >>>>> i8254(100) RTC(0) >>>>> kern.eventtimer.et.LAPIC.flags: 15 >>>>> kern.eventtimer.et.LAPIC.frequency: 0 >>>>> kern.eventtimer.et.LAPIC.quality: 400 >>>>> kern.eventtimer.et.HPET.flags: 3 >>>>> kern.eventtimer.et.HPET.frequency: 14318180 >>>>> kern.eventtimer.et.HPET.quality: 450 >>>>> kern.eventtimer.et.HPET1.flags: 3 >>>>> kern.eventtimer.et.HPET1.frequency: 14318180 >>>>> kern.eventtimer.et.HPET1.quality: 450 >>>>> kern.eventtimer.et.HPET2.flags: 3 >>>>> kern.eventtimer.et.HPET2.frequency: 14318180 >>>>> kern.eventtimer.et.HPET2.quality: 450 >>>>> kern.eventtimer.et.i8254.flags: 1 >>>>> kern.eventtimer.et.i8254.frequency: 1193182 >>>>> kern.eventtimer.et.i8254.quality: 100 >>>>> kern.eventtimer.et.RTC.flags: 17 >>>>> kern.eventtimer.et.RTC.frequency: 32768 >>>>> kern.eventtimer.et.RTC.quality: 0 >>>>> kern.eventtimer.periodic: 0 >>>>> kern.eventtimer.timer: HPET >>>> >>>> ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ >>>> Changing this to "i8254" seems to have resolved the stalls. >>>> I'm running buildworld -j12 without issue. More than willing >>>> to test out a patch or two against head if anyone's still >>>> interested, otherwise I've thrown the change into loader.conf >>>> and will move along quietly. >>> >>> 8.2-RELEASE you've mentioned doesn't have event timers subsystem and HPET >>> timer driver. That makes me think it is strange at least. Can you try >>> also >>> LAPIC timer and do alike experiments with kern.timeocunter? >> >> My problems with 8.2-RELEASE may have been network based. I don't recall >> precisely if the clock was stalling there, my guess is no based on >> what you wrote. >> >> I'll test LAPIC next ... so far so good. Just so I'm clear, you'd >> like me to tweak >> kern.timecounter.hardware as well? (Currently it's HPET). > > Yes. Instead. Ticking clock depends on both timecounter and eventtimer.
Haven't found a combination that hangs my machine other than with the eventtimer at HPET. > >>> Also, please check whether kern.timecounter.tc.X.counter value changes >>> for >>> the selected timercounter and whether you are receiving timer interrupts >>> in >>> `vmstat -i` Yep. _______________________________________________ freebsd-hackers@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-hackers To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-hackers-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"