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Re: [xen-devel] System time monotonicity

To: Dave Winchell <dwinchell@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: Re: [xen-devel] System time monotonicity
From: Keir Fraser <keir.fraser@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: Fri, 11 Apr 2008 22:20:42 +0100
Cc: "Tian, Kevin" <kevin.tian@xxxxxxxxx>, "dan.magenheimer@xxxxxxxxxx" <dan.magenheimer@xxxxxxxxxx>, "xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx" <xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, Ian Pratt <Ian.Pratt@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
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Thread-topic: [xen-devel] System time monotonicity
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On 11/4/08 21:00, "Dave Winchell" <dwinchell@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

> I turned to the hpet as I became frustrated trying to solve the problem
> in xen with pit.
> One of the solutions proposed to the customer was a max(curr time, last
> time) modification to Linux.
> They didn't want that.
> (Keir, what Linux version are you looking at when you say Linux already
> has this modification?)

This is part of our own Xen-specific time patches for Linux.

> I had tried hpet before to solve the time backwards problem and knew it
> was effective.
> But the accuracy of hpet was very poor. When I looked into the hpet I
> was surprised that it was
> based on tsc, as I was tring to get away from tsc. But note, even based
> on tsc the time was not
> going backwards, at least for this simple test case.

Yes, having all the virtual timers based on 'guest TSC' (which really is
basically host TSC + an offset) is not great.

> Its a fairly simple matter to base the hpet on the physical hpet. Its
> easy to share it among guests
> as no one really writes the physical hpet.  Offsets are kept in each
> vhpet such that each guest thinks
> he owns the hpet.

This is really no better than basing on Xen system time. Actually it's worse
since most systems don't even expose the HPET, so we can't probe it (without
hacks) and so we can't use it. Xen's system time abstraction, perhaps with
the max(last, curr) addition, is perfectly good enough.

> This goes along with some of the experiences
> Keir has had with drift, I think. I'm not sure why this happens - can
> the hpet hardware be that poor in quality?

It does appear to be, and I have no idea why.

> There are three factors that give hpet its great accuracy, in my opinion.
> 1) The hardware is very stable.
> 2) There is only one of them in the system, not one per cpu.
> 3) The Linux implementation for clock and hpet is very clean.  It
> calculates missed ticks and offsets without
>    including the interrupt delay.

Encouraging the guest to use HPET makes sense. It's a nice wide counter
which hence does not have the wrap issues of the 16-bit PIT counters. Also
in some cases the guest OS interface to the HPET is saner (for our purposes
at least) than the equivalent code to interface to PIT/TSC. This doesn't
mean it has to be plumbed right down to the physical HPET. HVM time sources
can be fixed for drift by moving them away from guest/host TSC and onto the
Xen system time abstraction.

 -- Keir

> Items 2 and 3 here are important factors in why the time stays
> monotonic. Another reason is that
> gettimeofday reads the hpet main counter for extrapolation, eliminating
> extrapolation error since
> the same counter is the sole determinator for the next interrupt time
> stamp. Furthermore, Linux can take the
> clock interrupt on any processor and the monotonicity is preserved
> because of item 2.
> 
> Thanks for reading this far!



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