On Tue, 2014-07-10 at 19:13:24 UTC, Paul Clarke wrote: > The POWER ISA defines an always-running decrementer which can be used > to schedule interrupts after a certain time interval has elapsed. > The decrementer counts down at the same frequency as the Time Base, > which is 512 MHz. The maximum value of the decrementer is 0x7fffffff. > This works out to a maximum interval of about 4.19 seconds. > > If a larger interval is desired, the kernel will set the decrementer > to its maximum value and reset it after it expires (underflows) > a sufficient number of times until the desired interval has elapsed. > > The negative effect of this is that an unwanted latency spike will > impact normal processing at most every 4.19 seconds. On an IBM > POWER8-based system, this spike was measured at about 25-30 > microseconds, much of which was basic, opportunistic housekeeping > tasks that could otherwise have waited. > > This patch short-circuits the reset of the decrementer, exiting after > the decrementer reset, but before the housekeeping tasks if the only > need for the interrupt is simply to reset it. After this patch, > the latency spike was measured at about 150 nanoseconds.
Hi Paul, Thanks for the excellent changelog. But this patch makes me a bit nervous :) Do you know where the latency is coming from? Is it primarily the irq work? If so I'd prefer if we could move the short circuit into __timer_interrupt() itself. That way we'd still have the trace points usable, and it would hopefully result in less duplicated logic. cheers _______________________________________________ Linuxppc-dev mailing list Linuxppc-dev@lists.ozlabs.org https://lists.ozlabs.org/listinfo/linuxppc-dev