On Mon, Oct 18, 2010 at 11:28:13PM +0300, Alexander Motin wrote: > Marius Strobl wrote: > > On Mon, Oct 18, 2010 at 10:03:12AM -0400, John Baldwin wrote: > >> On Sunday, October 17, 2010 12:46:54 pm Marius Strobl wrote: > >>> Author: marius > >>> Date: Sun Oct 17 16:46:54 2010 > >>> New Revision: 213985 > >>> URL: http://svn.freebsd.org/changeset/base/213985 > >>> > >>> Log: > >>> - In oneshot-mode it doesn't make sense to try to compensate the clock > >>> drift in order to achieve a more stable clock as the tick intervals > >>> may > >>> vary in the first place. In fact I haven't seen this code kick in when > >>> in oneshot-mode so just skip it in that case. > >>> - There's no need to explicitly stop the (S)TICK counter in oneshot-mode > >>> with every tick as it just won't trigger again with the (S)TICK > >>> compare > >>> register set to a value in the past (with a wrap-around once every > >>> ~195 > >>> years of uptime at 1.5 GHz this isn't something we have to worry about > >>> in practice). > >>> - Given that we'll disable interrupts completely anyway there's no > >>> need to enter critical sections. > >> This last is not entirely true. The purpose of the critical section is to > >> prevent the kernel from preempting to the softclock swi thread until all > >> of > >> the hardclock handler has finished execution. Thus, places that actually > >> actually call hardclock() should probably still be wrapped in a critical > >> section. > > > > It's currently unclear to me how on architectures converted to the > > event timer world order hardclock() is called eventually but in any case > > shouldn't it be the responsibility of the code actually calling it (or > > the equivalent code) to wrap it in a critical section instead then? After > > all the MD part just enrolls in calling _something_ in one-shot and/or > > periodic mode without knowing what it actually calls (and IMO it also > > should no longer need to). In handleevents() of kern_clocksource.c > > hardclock_anycpu() is called so i think that is what actually needs to > > be wrapped in a critical section. > > At this time on most (all?) platforms critical section is grabbed by MD > interrupt code. It is important to be there, as soon as there touched > td_intr_nesting_level and td_intr_frame fields of curthread. We can't > allow thread migration until all counted interrupt handlers complete. >
AFAICT this is not true; intr_event_handle() in sys/kern/kern_intr.c is what enters a critical section and f.e. on amd64 I don't see where anywhere in the path from ISR_VEC() to intr_execute_handlers() calling intr_event_handle() a critical section would be entered, which also means that in intr_execute_handlers() td_intr_nesting_level is incremented outside of a critical section. Marius _______________________________________________ svn-src-head@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/svn-src-head To unsubscribe, send any mail to "svn-src-head-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"