J
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: Keir Fraser [mailto:
keir.xen@xxxxxxxxx]
>> Sent: Thursday, February 24, 2011 7:52 AM
>> To: Olivier Hanesse; Jan Beulich
>> Cc: Mark Adams; Jeremy Fitzhardinge;
xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx; Xen
>> Users; Dan Magenheimer; Keir Fraser
>> Subject: Re: [Xen-devel] Xen 4 TSC problems
>>
>> On 24/02/2011 14:20, "Olivier Hanesse" <
olivier.hanesse@xxxxxxxxx>
>> wrote:
>>
>>> Both dom0 and domUs are affected by this" jump".
>>>
>>> I expect to see something like "TSC marked as reliable, warp = 0".
>>> I got this on newer hardware with same config/distros.
>> It depends on the CPU itself, older CPUs do not have the super-stable
>> TSC
>> features. But that should never cause a massive 3000s time jump.
>>
>>> Is there a way to measure if it is a TSC warp ? to point out a cpu
>> tsc issue ?
>>
>> The TSC warps or out-of-sync issues that we could reasonably expect
>> would be
>> on the order of microseconds. A 3000s warp is something else entirely.
>> Xen
>> is very confused and/or some TSC or platform timer has jumped a long
>> way
>> (indicating a hardware/firmware issue).
>>
>> -- Keir
>>
>>> 2011/2/24 Jan Beulich <
JBeulich@xxxxxxxxxx>
>>>>>>> On 24.02.11 at 12:57, Olivier Hanesse <
olivier.hanesse@xxxxxxxxx>
>> wrote:
>>>>> I tried to turn off cstates with max_cstate=0 without success
>> (still "not
>>>>> reliable").
>>>>>
>>>>> With cpuidle=0, I also got :
>>>>>
>>>>> (XEN) TSC has constant rate, deep Cstates possible, so not
>> reliable,
>>>>> warp=3022 (count=1)
>>>> This message by itself isn't telling much I believe.
>>>>
>>>>> xm info | grep command
>>>>> xen_commandline : dom0_mem=512M cpuidle=0 loglvl=all
>> guest_loglvl=all
>>>>> dom0_max_vcpus=1 dom0_vcpus_pin console=vga,com1 com1=19200,8n1
>>>>>
>>>>> Keir :
>>>>>
>>>>> Using clocksource=pit :
>>>>>
>>>>> (XEN) Platform timer is 1.193MHz PIT
>>>>>
>>>>> I also got :
>>>>>
>>>>> (XEN) TSC has constant rate, deep Cstates possible, so not
>> reliable,
>>>>> warp=3262 (count=2)
>>>> The question is whether any of this eliminates the time jumps seen
>>>> by your DomU-s (from your past mails I wasn't actually sure whether
>>>> Dom0 also experienced this problem, albeit it would be odd if it
>> didn't).
>>>> Jan
>>>>
>>>> Jan
>>>>
>>>
>>