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1Clock sources, Clock events, sched_clock() and delay timers
2-----------------------------------------------------------
3
4This document tries to briefly explain some basic kernel timekeeping
5abstractions. It partly pertains to the drivers usually found in
6drivers/clocksource in the kernel tree, but the code may be spread out
7across the kernel.
8
9If you grep through the kernel source you will find a number of architecture-
10specific implementations of clock sources, clockevents and several likewise
11architecture-specific overrides of the sched_clock() function and some
12delay timers.
13
14To provide timekeeping for your platform, the clock source provides
15the basic timeline, whereas clock events shoot interrupts on certain points
16on this timeline, providing facilities such as high-resolution timers.
17sched_clock() is used for scheduling and timestamping, and delay timers
18provide an accurate delay source using hardware counters.
19
20
21Clock sources
22-------------
23
24The purpose of the clock source is to provide a timeline for the system that
25tells you where you are in time. For example issuing the command 'date' on
26a Linux system will eventually read the clock source to determine exactly
27what time it is.
28
29Typically the clock source is a monotonic, atomic counter which will provide
30n bits which count from 0 to 2^(n-1) and then wraps around to 0 and start over.
31It will ideally NEVER stop ticking as long as the system is running. It
32may stop during system suspend.
33
34The clock source shall have as high resolution as possible, and the frequency
35shall be as stable and correct as possible as compared to a real-world wall
36clock. It should not move unpredictably back and forth in time or miss a few
37cycles here and there.
38
39It must be immune to the kind of effects that occur in hardware where e.g.
40the counter register is read in two phases on the bus lowest 16 bits first
41and the higher 16 bits in a second bus cycle with the counter bits
42potentially being updated in between leading to the risk of very strange
43values from the counter.
44
45When the wall-clock accuracy of the clock source isn't satisfactory, there
46are various quirks and layers in the timekeeping code for e.g. synchronizing
47the user-visible time to RTC clocks in the system or against networked time
48servers using NTP, but all they do basically is update an offset against
49the clock source, which provides the fundamental timeline for the system.
50These measures does not affect the clock source per se, they only adapt the
51system to the shortcomings of it.
52
53The clock source struct shall provide means to translate the provided counter
54into a nanosecond value as an unsigned long long (unsigned 64 bit) number.
55Since this operation may be invoked very often, doing this in a strict
56mathematical sense is not desirable: instead the number is taken as close as
57possible to a nanosecond value using only the arithmetic operations
58multiply and shift, so in clocksource_cyc2ns() you find:
59
60 ns ~= (clocksource * mult) >> shift
61
62You will find a number of helper functions in the clock source code intended
63to aid in providing these mult and shift values, such as
64clocksource_khz2mult(), clocksource_hz2mult() that help determine the
65mult factor from a fixed shift, and clocksource_register_hz() and
66clocksource_register_khz() which will help out assigning both shift and mult
67factors using the frequency of the clock source as the only input.
68
69For real simple clock sources accessed from a single I/O memory location
70there is nowadays even clocksource_mmio_init() which will take a memory
71location, bit width, a parameter telling whether the counter in the
72register counts up or down, and the timer clock rate, and then conjure all
73necessary parameters.
74
75Since a 32-bit counter at say 100 MHz will wrap around to zero after some 43
76seconds, the code handling the clock source will have to compensate for this.
77That is the reason why the clock source struct also contains a 'mask'
78member telling how many bits of the source are valid. This way the timekeeping
79code knows when the counter will wrap around and can insert the necessary
80compensation code on both sides of the wrap point so that the system timeline
81remains monotonic.
82
83
84Clock events
85------------
86
87Clock events are the conceptual reverse of clock sources: they take a
88desired time specification value and calculate the values to poke into
89hardware timer registers.
90
91Clock events are orthogonal to clock sources. The same hardware
92and register range may be used for the clock event, but it is essentially
93a different thing. The hardware driving clock events has to be able to
94fire interrupts, so as to trigger events on the system timeline. On an SMP
95system, it is ideal (and customary) to have one such event driving timer per
96CPU core, so that each core can trigger events independently of any other
97core.
98
99You will notice that the clock event device code is based on the same basic
100idea about translating counters to nanoseconds using mult and shift
101arithmetic, and you find the same family of helper functions again for
102assigning these values. The clock event driver does not need a 'mask'
103attribute however: the system will not try to plan events beyond the time
104horizon of the clock event.
105
106
107sched_clock()
108-------------
109
110In addition to the clock sources and clock events there is a special weak
111function in the kernel called sched_clock(). This function shall return the
112number of nanoseconds since the system was started. An architecture may or
113may not provide an implementation of sched_clock() on its own. If a local
114implementation is not provided, the system jiffy counter will be used as
115sched_clock().
116
117As the name suggests, sched_clock() is used for scheduling the system,
118determining the absolute timeslice for a certain process in the CFS scheduler
119for example. It is also used for printk timestamps when you have selected to
120include time information in printk for things like bootcharts.
121
122Compared to clock sources, sched_clock() has to be very fast: it is called
123much more often, especially by the scheduler. If you have to do trade-offs
124between accuracy compared to the clock source, you may sacrifice accuracy
125for speed in sched_clock(). It however requires some of the same basic
126characteristics as the clock source, i.e. it should be monotonic.
127
128The sched_clock() function may wrap only on unsigned long long boundaries,
129i.e. after 64 bits. Since this is a nanosecond value this will mean it wraps
130after circa 585 years. (For most practical systems this means "never".)
131
132If an architecture does not provide its own implementation of this function,
133it will fall back to using jiffies, making its maximum resolution 1/HZ of the
134jiffy frequency for the architecture. This will affect scheduling accuracy
135and will likely show up in system benchmarks.
136
137The clock driving sched_clock() may stop or reset to zero during system
138suspend/sleep. This does not matter to the function it serves of scheduling
139events on the system. However it may result in interesting timestamps in
140printk().
141
142The sched_clock() function should be callable in any context, IRQ- and
143NMI-safe and return a sane value in any context.
144
145Some architectures may have a limited set of time sources and lack a nice
146counter to derive a 64-bit nanosecond value, so for example on the ARM
147architecture, special helper functions have been created to provide a
148sched_clock() nanosecond base from a 16- or 32-bit counter. Sometimes the
149same counter that is also used as clock source is used for this purpose.
150
151On SMP systems, it is crucial for performance that sched_clock() can be called
152independently on each CPU without any synchronization performance hits.
153Some hardware (such as the x86 TSC) will cause the sched_clock() function to
154drift between the CPUs on the system. The kernel can work around this by
155enabling the CONFIG_HAVE_UNSTABLE_SCHED_CLOCK option. This is another aspect
156that makes sched_clock() different from the ordinary clock source.
157
158
159Delay timers (some architectures only)
160--------------------------------------
161
162On systems with variable CPU frequency, the various kernel delay() functions
163will sometimes behave strangely. Basically these delays usually use a hard
164loop to delay a certain number of jiffy fractions using a "lpj" (loops per
165jiffy) value, calibrated on boot.
166
167Let's hope that your system is running on maximum frequency when this value
168is calibrated: as an effect when the frequency is geared down to half the
169full frequency, any delay() will be twice as long. Usually this does not
170hurt, as you're commonly requesting that amount of delay *or more*. But
171basically the semantics are quite unpredictable on such systems.
172
173Enter timer-based delays. Using these, a timer read may be used instead of
174a hard-coded loop for providing the desired delay.
175
176This is done by declaring a struct delay_timer and assigning the appropriate
177function pointers and rate settings for this delay timer.
178
179This is available on some architectures like OpenRISC or ARM.