On Mon, Nov 12, 2018 at 10:56 AM, Michael Zhivich <mzhiv...@akamai.com> wrote: > Revert commit 1f45f1f33c8c ("clocksource: Make clocksource validation work > for all clocksources") to restore correct clocksource_delta() computation > for clocksources that wrap frequently, while retaining the check for tsc > drifting. > > Truncating result of clocksource_delta() to 0 causes incorrect behavior for > clocksources that wrap frequently (e.g. acpi_pm which is only 24-bit wide). > In particular, large time deltas (e.g. last = 0x000000, now = 0x800000) > will be incorrectly computed as 0. > > If acpi_pm is used as the clocksource watchdog, and machine is under heavy > load, the time period for the watchdog check may be significantly longer > than the requested 0.5 seconds. If the watchdog check is delayed by 2 > seconds (observed behavior), then acpi_pm time delta will be > > 2.5 sec * 3579545 ticks/sec = 8948863 = 0x888c3f > > which will be treated as negative and truncated to 0. This behavior will > cause tsc to be incorrectly declared unstable in clocksource_watchdog(), as > it no longer agrees with acpi_pm.
Thanks for raising this issue and submitting the patch! Yea, this is a concern particularly with quick wrapping clocksources. Though I worry that if you're already blocking the watchdog from running for 2.5 seconds, you're likely to also block the watchdog for more then 5 seconds, which if I'm remembering would result in the same problem? In other words, does this really solve the problem, or does it just push the bar a little further out? So, I'm wondering to really fix this, do we need to find some way to raise the priority of the clocksource watchdog, so it isn't deferred for quite so long? thanks -john