nanosleep.c remarks

Gedare Bloom gedare at rtems.org
Mon Aug 1 15:21:14 UTC 2016


On Mon, Aug 1, 2016 at 1:18 AM, Sebastian Huber
<sebastian.huber at embedded-brains.de> wrote:
> Hello Pavel,
>
> On 30/07/16 19:40, Pavel Pisa wrote:
[...]
>>
>> Then the time stuff.
>>
>> nanosleep_helper() does not distinguish between CLOCK_REALTIME
>> and CLOCK_MONOTONIC when it computes remaining time (rmtp).
>> But the intention of this field is that if you call again
>> nanoslepp/clock_nanosleep with same parameters and rtmp
>> used as time to wait (in case of TIMER_ABSTIME is not set) then
>> the final wake time should be +/- same as if there has been
>> no interruption. If we consider POSIX required behavior/difference
>> between CLOCK_REALTIME and CLOCK_MONOTONIC and possibility
>> to adjust realtime clock then it would not work as expected.
>>
It would be good to add some test cases calling clock_settime() and
delivering signals while a thread nanosleep()s. I don't know that we
have those cases tested yet.

The rmtp is calculated only in consideration of elapsed score ticks.
Maybe it would be better to call the clock functions using the
clock_id.

>> By the way, _Timespec_From_ticks works expected way only for
>> first 1.19 hour after boot if used for absolute time (not used
>> that way in nanosleep).
>> For relative time, If the nanosleep is used for longer delay
>> than 4294 seconds then rtmp the result is complete garbage
>>
>> void _Timespec_From_ticks(
>>    uint32_t         ticks,
>>    struct timespec *time
>> )
>> {
>>    uint32_t    usecs;
>>
>>    usecs = ticks * rtems_configuration_get_microseconds_per_tick();
>>
>>    time->tv_sec  = usecs / TOD_MICROSECONDS_PER_SECOND;
>>    time->tv_nsec = (usecs % TOD_MICROSECONDS_PER_SECOND) *
>>                      TOD_NANOSECONDS_PER_MICROSECOND;
>> }
>
>
> This function is probably superfluous now due to the timekeeping via the
> FreeBSD timecounters. We tried to keep the existing behaviour during the
> introduction of the FreeBSD timecounters. However, some parts of the POSIX
> implementation in RTEMS are not according to POSIX. This must be fixed step
> by step (its not on my current TODO list).
>
I have a small budget remaining for POSIX work. However, I am focusing
on putting together some mman interfaces. If there is a
straightforward coding task for switching away from this
_Timespec_From_ticks I might be able to get it done, but right now I
don't know what it takes.

>>
>> If we consider that crystal oscillator is not perfect then
>> value of rtems_configuration_get_microseconds_per_tick has to be
>> tuned runtime but problem is that to not shift time by change
>> of scale if it is not changed at ticks == 0, it means
>> to use y = a * x + b there and at each time a from a1 to a2
>> is changed change b such that a2 * x + b2 = a1 * x + b1
>> to ensure tick to usec monotonicity for conversion of
>> monotonic time from ticks to timespec.
>>
>> Another problem is that for higher frequency tick or ting time
>> source is the value rtems_configuration_get_microseconds_per_tick
>> is small so relative precision is insufficient.
>>
>> For clock_nanosleep we get to _TOD_Absolute_timeout_to_ticks
>> which calls for CLOCK_MONOTONIC in
>>
>> I have mostly lost track in the call chain there.
>> bintime2timespec is provided by NewLib as part of BSD time
>> framework introduction
>>
>> https://devel.rtems.org/ticket/2271
>> https://www.daemon-systems.org/man/timecounter.9.html
>>
You may also like http://phk.freebsd.dk/pubs/timecounter.pdf

>> Structure struct timecounter seems to be almost sane from
>> the documentation. But u_int64_t tc_frequency without
>> shifting right requires unnecessarily wide multiplication
>> or even worse division and relative resolution can be
>> low for some cases.
>
>
> The tc_frequency is not used in the hot paths, please have a look at
> _Timecounter_Windup().
>
>>
>> I am trying to study the code
>>
>> static inline void _TOD_Get_zero_based_uptime_as_timespec(
>>    struct timespec *time
>> )
>> {
>>    _Timecounter_Nanouptime( time );
>>    --time->tv_sec;
>> }
>>
>> where seconds decrement seems suspicious to me.
>
>
> For FreeBSD compatibility the uptime starts with one second. For RTEMS
> compatibility the uptime starts at zero.
>
Yeah, we had this discussion before. Possibly it makes sense to add a
brief comment there for clarity in the code.

>>
>> There seems to be data structures for precise time computation
>> and synchronization (sys/timeffc.h, etc.) but I  am not sure
>> if some of them are used.
>
>
> The use of ntp_update_second() is currently disabled. This code could be
> easily ported from FreeBSD to RTEMS if someone is interested.
>
>>
>> General rule for POSIX systems is that CLOCK_MONOTONIC and
>> CLOCK_REALTIME scaling is done in sync only the base and
>> step corrections are applied to CLOCK_REALTIME only.
>> But there seem to be two relatively independed paths
>> in the actual sources.
>>
The CLOCK_MONOTONIC uses the uptime, and the CLOCK_REALTIME uses
uptime + boottime corrections are made by adjusting the estimated
boottime. Every calculation using uptime is identical between the two
clocks. I don't know if that helps address your questions about the
relationship between those two clocks.

>> Other strict requirement for nanosleep is that it has
>> to suspend task in minimum for specified time. But I am
>> not sure if there is such round up in the actual code.
>
>
> Yes, the some test cases of the libstdc++ testsuite rely on this.
>
>
I don't know if there is a rounding problem. I don't think I ran those tests.

>> This is critical if user build his/her own timers
>> queue and premature wakeup leads to repeated abundant nanosleep
>> calls and (in the case of round down) it can even result in busy
>> loop for last tick cycle for example.
>>
>> Generally there seems to be many multiplications, divisions
>> etc at leas in clock_nanosleep path.
>>
There are some redundant calculations since the relative_interval is
always constructed but only used to detect a yield for CLOCK_REALTIME.
If the WATCHDOG_RELATIVE uses a different format than score ticks, the
calculations could be simpler.

>> I do not have full picture gained yet. But my feeling is
>> that there are at least some problematic things
>> which I have tried to analyze.
>>
I'm sure. I'm glad you could look at it. This is a hard part of the
code to properly design and test.

>> But generally, it is great that clock_nanosleep
>> is supported same as some other POSIX timed IPC
>> variants.
>>
>> Best wishes,
>>
>>                 Pavel
>
>
> --
> Sebastian Huber, embedded brains GmbH
>
> Address : Dornierstr. 4, D-82178 Puchheim, Germany
> Phone   : +49 89 189 47 41-16
> Fax     : +49 89 189 47 41-09
> E-Mail  : sebastian.huber at embedded-brains.de
> PGP     : Public key available on request.
>
> Diese Nachricht ist keine geschäftliche Mitteilung im Sinne des EHUG.
>



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