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1da177e4 1/*
1da177e4
LT
2 * Common time routines among all ppc machines.
3 *
4 * Written by Cort Dougan (cort@cs.nmt.edu) to merge
5 * Paul Mackerras' version and mine for PReP and Pmac.
6 * MPC8xx/MBX changes by Dan Malek (dmalek@jlc.net).
7 * Converted for 64-bit by Mike Corrigan (mikejc@us.ibm.com)
8 *
9 * First round of bugfixes by Gabriel Paubert (paubert@iram.es)
10 * to make clock more stable (2.4.0-test5). The only thing
11 * that this code assumes is that the timebases have been synchronized
12 * by firmware on SMP and are never stopped (never do sleep
13 * on SMP then, nap and doze are OK).
14 *
15 * Speeded up do_gettimeofday by getting rid of references to
16 * xtime (which required locks for consistency). (mikejc@us.ibm.com)
17 *
18 * TODO (not necessarily in this file):
19 * - improve precision and reproducibility of timebase frequency
20 * measurement at boot time. (for iSeries, we calibrate the timebase
21 * against the Titan chip's clock.)
22 * - for astronomical applications: add a new function to get
23 * non ambiguous timestamps even around leap seconds. This needs
24 * a new timestamp format and a good name.
25 *
26 * 1997-09-10 Updated NTP code according to technical memorandum Jan '96
27 * "A Kernel Model for Precision Timekeeping" by Dave Mills
28 *
29 * This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
30 * modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License
31 * as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version
32 * 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
33 */
34
1da177e4
LT
35#include <linux/errno.h>
36#include <linux/module.h>
37#include <linux/sched.h>
38#include <linux/kernel.h>
39#include <linux/param.h>
40#include <linux/string.h>
41#include <linux/mm.h>
42#include <linux/interrupt.h>
43#include <linux/timex.h>
44#include <linux/kernel_stat.h>
1da177e4
LT
45#include <linux/time.h>
46#include <linux/init.h>
47#include <linux/profile.h>
48#include <linux/cpu.h>
49#include <linux/security.h>
f2783c15
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50#include <linux/percpu.h>
51#include <linux/rtc.h>
092b8f34 52#include <linux/jiffies.h>
c6622f63 53#include <linux/posix-timers.h>
7d12e780 54#include <linux/irq.h>
1da177e4 55
1da177e4
LT
56#include <asm/io.h>
57#include <asm/processor.h>
58#include <asm/nvram.h>
59#include <asm/cache.h>
60#include <asm/machdep.h>
1da177e4
LT
61#include <asm/uaccess.h>
62#include <asm/time.h>
1da177e4 63#include <asm/prom.h>
f2783c15
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64#include <asm/irq.h>
65#include <asm/div64.h>
2249ca9d 66#include <asm/smp.h>
a7f290da 67#include <asm/vdso_datapage.h>
f2783c15 68#ifdef CONFIG_PPC64
1ababe11 69#include <asm/firmware.h>
f2783c15
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70#endif
71#ifdef CONFIG_PPC_ISERIES
8875ccfb 72#include <asm/iseries/it_lp_queue.h>
8021b8a7 73#include <asm/iseries/hv_call_xm.h>
f2783c15 74#endif
732ee21f 75#include <asm/smp.h>
1da177e4 76
1da177e4
LT
77/* keep track of when we need to update the rtc */
78time_t last_rtc_update;
1da177e4
LT
79#ifdef CONFIG_PPC_ISERIES
80unsigned long iSeries_recal_titan = 0;
81unsigned long iSeries_recal_tb = 0;
82static unsigned long first_settimeofday = 1;
83#endif
84
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85/* The decrementer counts down by 128 every 128ns on a 601. */
86#define DECREMENTER_COUNT_601 (1000000000 / HZ)
87
1da177e4
LT
88#define XSEC_PER_SEC (1024*1024)
89
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90#ifdef CONFIG_PPC64
91#define SCALE_XSEC(xsec, max) (((xsec) * max) / XSEC_PER_SEC)
92#else
93/* compute ((xsec << 12) * max) >> 32 */
94#define SCALE_XSEC(xsec, max) mulhwu((xsec) << 12, max)
95#endif
96
1da177e4
LT
97unsigned long tb_ticks_per_jiffy;
98unsigned long tb_ticks_per_usec = 100; /* sane default */
99EXPORT_SYMBOL(tb_ticks_per_usec);
100unsigned long tb_ticks_per_sec;
2cf82c02 101EXPORT_SYMBOL(tb_ticks_per_sec); /* for cputime_t conversions */
f2783c15
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102u64 tb_to_xs;
103unsigned tb_to_us;
092b8f34 104
19923c19 105#define TICKLEN_SCALE TICK_LENGTH_SHIFT
092b8f34
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106u64 last_tick_len; /* units are ns / 2^TICKLEN_SCALE */
107u64 ticklen_to_xs; /* 0.64 fraction */
108
109/* If last_tick_len corresponds to about 1/HZ seconds, then
110 last_tick_len << TICKLEN_SHIFT will be about 2^63. */
111#define TICKLEN_SHIFT (63 - 30 - TICKLEN_SCALE + SHIFT_HZ)
112
1da177e4 113DEFINE_SPINLOCK(rtc_lock);
6ae3db11 114EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(rtc_lock);
1da177e4 115
f2783c15
PM
116u64 tb_to_ns_scale;
117unsigned tb_to_ns_shift;
1da177e4
LT
118
119struct gettimeofday_struct do_gtod;
120
1da177e4 121extern struct timezone sys_tz;
f2783c15 122static long timezone_offset;
1da177e4 123
10f7e7c1
AB
124unsigned long ppc_proc_freq;
125unsigned long ppc_tb_freq;
126
eb36c288
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127static u64 tb_last_jiffy __cacheline_aligned_in_smp;
128static DEFINE_PER_CPU(u64, last_jiffy);
96c44507 129
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130#ifdef CONFIG_VIRT_CPU_ACCOUNTING
131/*
132 * Factors for converting from cputime_t (timebase ticks) to
133 * jiffies, milliseconds, seconds, and clock_t (1/USER_HZ seconds).
134 * These are all stored as 0.64 fixed-point binary fractions.
135 */
136u64 __cputime_jiffies_factor;
2cf82c02 137EXPORT_SYMBOL(__cputime_jiffies_factor);
c6622f63 138u64 __cputime_msec_factor;
2cf82c02 139EXPORT_SYMBOL(__cputime_msec_factor);
c6622f63 140u64 __cputime_sec_factor;
2cf82c02 141EXPORT_SYMBOL(__cputime_sec_factor);
c6622f63 142u64 __cputime_clockt_factor;
2cf82c02 143EXPORT_SYMBOL(__cputime_clockt_factor);
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144
145static void calc_cputime_factors(void)
146{
147 struct div_result res;
148
149 div128_by_32(HZ, 0, tb_ticks_per_sec, &res);
150 __cputime_jiffies_factor = res.result_low;
151 div128_by_32(1000, 0, tb_ticks_per_sec, &res);
152 __cputime_msec_factor = res.result_low;
153 div128_by_32(1, 0, tb_ticks_per_sec, &res);
154 __cputime_sec_factor = res.result_low;
155 div128_by_32(USER_HZ, 0, tb_ticks_per_sec, &res);
156 __cputime_clockt_factor = res.result_low;
157}
158
159/*
160 * Read the PURR on systems that have it, otherwise the timebase.
161 */
162static u64 read_purr(void)
163{
164 if (cpu_has_feature(CPU_FTR_PURR))
165 return mfspr(SPRN_PURR);
166 return mftb();
167}
168
169/*
170 * Account time for a transition between system, hard irq
171 * or soft irq state.
172 */
173void account_system_vtime(struct task_struct *tsk)
174{
175 u64 now, delta;
176 unsigned long flags;
177
178 local_irq_save(flags);
179 now = read_purr();
180 delta = now - get_paca()->startpurr;
181 get_paca()->startpurr = now;
182 if (!in_interrupt()) {
183 delta += get_paca()->system_time;
184 get_paca()->system_time = 0;
185 }
186 account_system_time(tsk, 0, delta);
187 local_irq_restore(flags);
188}
189
190/*
191 * Transfer the user and system times accumulated in the paca
192 * by the exception entry and exit code to the generic process
193 * user and system time records.
194 * Must be called with interrupts disabled.
195 */
196void account_process_vtime(struct task_struct *tsk)
197{
198 cputime_t utime;
199
200 utime = get_paca()->user_time;
201 get_paca()->user_time = 0;
202 account_user_time(tsk, utime);
203}
204
205static void account_process_time(struct pt_regs *regs)
206{
207 int cpu = smp_processor_id();
208
209 account_process_vtime(current);
210 run_local_timers();
211 if (rcu_pending(cpu))
212 rcu_check_callbacks(cpu, user_mode(regs));
213 scheduler_tick();
214 run_posix_cpu_timers(current);
215}
216
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217/*
218 * Stuff for accounting stolen time.
219 */
220struct cpu_purr_data {
221 int initialized; /* thread is running */
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222 u64 tb; /* last TB value read */
223 u64 purr; /* last PURR value read */
c6622f63
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224};
225
df211c8a
NL
226/*
227 * Each entry in the cpu_purr_data array is manipulated only by its
228 * "owner" cpu -- usually in the timer interrupt but also occasionally
229 * in process context for cpu online. As long as cpus do not touch
230 * each others' cpu_purr_data, disabling local interrupts is
231 * sufficient to serialize accesses.
232 */
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233static DEFINE_PER_CPU(struct cpu_purr_data, cpu_purr_data);
234
235static void snapshot_tb_and_purr(void *data)
236{
df211c8a 237 unsigned long flags;
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238 struct cpu_purr_data *p = &__get_cpu_var(cpu_purr_data);
239
df211c8a 240 local_irq_save(flags);
cbcdb93d
SR
241 p->tb = mftb();
242 p->purr = mfspr(SPRN_PURR);
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243 wmb();
244 p->initialized = 1;
df211c8a 245 local_irq_restore(flags);
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246}
247
248/*
249 * Called during boot when all cpus have come up.
250 */
251void snapshot_timebases(void)
252{
c6622f63
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253 if (!cpu_has_feature(CPU_FTR_PURR))
254 return;
c6622f63
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255 on_each_cpu(snapshot_tb_and_purr, NULL, 0, 1);
256}
257
df211c8a
NL
258/*
259 * Must be called with interrupts disabled.
260 */
c6622f63
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261void calculate_steal_time(void)
262{
cbcdb93d 263 u64 tb, purr;
c6622f63 264 s64 stolen;
cbcdb93d 265 struct cpu_purr_data *pme;
c6622f63
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266
267 if (!cpu_has_feature(CPU_FTR_PURR))
268 return;
cbcdb93d 269 pme = &per_cpu(cpu_purr_data, smp_processor_id());
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270 if (!pme->initialized)
271 return; /* this can happen in early boot */
c6622f63 272 tb = mftb();
cbcdb93d
SR
273 purr = mfspr(SPRN_PURR);
274 stolen = (tb - pme->tb) - (purr - pme->purr);
275 if (stolen > 0)
c6622f63 276 account_steal_time(current, stolen);
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277 pme->tb = tb;
278 pme->purr = purr;
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279}
280
4cefebb1 281#ifdef CONFIG_PPC_SPLPAR
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282/*
283 * Must be called before the cpu is added to the online map when
284 * a cpu is being brought up at runtime.
285 */
286static void snapshot_purr(void)
287{
cbcdb93d 288 struct cpu_purr_data *pme;
c6622f63
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289 unsigned long flags;
290
291 if (!cpu_has_feature(CPU_FTR_PURR))
292 return;
df211c8a 293 local_irq_save(flags);
cbcdb93d 294 pme = &per_cpu(cpu_purr_data, smp_processor_id());
cbcdb93d
SR
295 pme->tb = mftb();
296 pme->purr = mfspr(SPRN_PURR);
c6622f63 297 pme->initialized = 1;
df211c8a 298 local_irq_restore(flags);
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299}
300
301#endif /* CONFIG_PPC_SPLPAR */
302
303#else /* ! CONFIG_VIRT_CPU_ACCOUNTING */
304#define calc_cputime_factors()
305#define account_process_time(regs) update_process_times(user_mode(regs))
306#define calculate_steal_time() do { } while (0)
307#endif
308
309#if !(defined(CONFIG_VIRT_CPU_ACCOUNTING) && defined(CONFIG_PPC_SPLPAR))
310#define snapshot_purr() do { } while (0)
311#endif
312
313/*
314 * Called when a cpu comes up after the system has finished booting,
315 * i.e. as a result of a hotplug cpu action.
316 */
317void snapshot_timebase(void)
318{
319 __get_cpu_var(last_jiffy) = get_tb();
320 snapshot_purr();
321}
322
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323void __delay(unsigned long loops)
324{
325 unsigned long start;
326 int diff;
327
328 if (__USE_RTC()) {
329 start = get_rtcl();
330 do {
331 /* the RTCL register wraps at 1000000000 */
332 diff = get_rtcl() - start;
333 if (diff < 0)
334 diff += 1000000000;
335 } while (diff < loops);
336 } else {
337 start = get_tbl();
338 while (get_tbl() - start < loops)
339 HMT_low();
340 HMT_medium();
341 }
342}
343EXPORT_SYMBOL(__delay);
344
345void udelay(unsigned long usecs)
346{
347 __delay(tb_ticks_per_usec * usecs);
348}
349EXPORT_SYMBOL(udelay);
350
1da177e4
LT
351static __inline__ void timer_check_rtc(void)
352{
353 /*
354 * update the rtc when needed, this should be performed on the
355 * right fraction of a second. Half or full second ?
356 * Full second works on mk48t59 clocks, others need testing.
357 * Note that this update is basically only used through
358 * the adjtimex system calls. Setting the HW clock in
359 * any other way is a /dev/rtc and userland business.
360 * This is still wrong by -0.5/+1.5 jiffies because of the
361 * timer interrupt resolution and possible delay, but here we
362 * hit a quantization limit which can only be solved by higher
363 * resolution timers and decoupling time management from timer
364 * interrupts. This is also wrong on the clocks
365 * which require being written at the half second boundary.
366 * We should have an rtc call that only sets the minutes and
367 * seconds like on Intel to avoid problems with non UTC clocks.
368 */
d2e61512 369 if (ppc_md.set_rtc_time && ntp_synced() &&
f2783c15 370 xtime.tv_sec - last_rtc_update >= 659 &&
092b8f34 371 abs((xtime.tv_nsec/1000) - (1000000-1000000/HZ)) < 500000/HZ) {
f2783c15
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372 struct rtc_time tm;
373 to_tm(xtime.tv_sec + 1 + timezone_offset, &tm);
374 tm.tm_year -= 1900;
375 tm.tm_mon -= 1;
376 if (ppc_md.set_rtc_time(&tm) == 0)
377 last_rtc_update = xtime.tv_sec + 1;
378 else
379 /* Try again one minute later */
380 last_rtc_update += 60;
1da177e4
LT
381 }
382}
383
384/*
385 * This version of gettimeofday has microsecond resolution.
386 */
5db9fa95 387static inline void __do_gettimeofday(struct timeval *tv)
1da177e4 388{
f2783c15
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389 unsigned long sec, usec;
390 u64 tb_ticks, xsec;
391 struct gettimeofday_vars *temp_varp;
392 u64 temp_tb_to_xs, temp_stamp_xsec;
1da177e4
LT
393
394 /*
395 * These calculations are faster (gets rid of divides)
396 * if done in units of 1/2^20 rather than microseconds.
397 * The conversion to microseconds at the end is done
398 * without a divide (and in fact, without a multiply)
399 */
400 temp_varp = do_gtod.varp;
5db9fa95
NL
401
402 /* Sampling the time base must be done after loading
403 * do_gtod.varp in order to avoid racing with update_gtod.
404 */
405 data_barrier(temp_varp);
406 tb_ticks = get_tb() - temp_varp->tb_orig_stamp;
1da177e4
LT
407 temp_tb_to_xs = temp_varp->tb_to_xs;
408 temp_stamp_xsec = temp_varp->stamp_xsec;
f2783c15 409 xsec = temp_stamp_xsec + mulhdu(tb_ticks, temp_tb_to_xs);
1da177e4 410 sec = xsec / XSEC_PER_SEC;
f2783c15
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411 usec = (unsigned long)xsec & (XSEC_PER_SEC - 1);
412 usec = SCALE_XSEC(usec, 1000000);
1da177e4
LT
413
414 tv->tv_sec = sec;
415 tv->tv_usec = usec;
416}
417
418void do_gettimeofday(struct timeval *tv)
419{
96c44507
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420 if (__USE_RTC()) {
421 /* do this the old way */
422 unsigned long flags, seq;
092b8f34 423 unsigned int sec, nsec, usec;
96c44507
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424
425 do {
426 seq = read_seqbegin_irqsave(&xtime_lock, flags);
427 sec = xtime.tv_sec;
eb36c288 428 nsec = xtime.tv_nsec + tb_ticks_since(tb_last_jiffy);
96c44507 429 } while (read_seqretry_irqrestore(&xtime_lock, seq, flags));
092b8f34 430 usec = nsec / 1000;
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431 while (usec >= 1000000) {
432 usec -= 1000000;
433 ++sec;
434 }
435 tv->tv_sec = sec;
436 tv->tv_usec = usec;
437 return;
438 }
5db9fa95 439 __do_gettimeofday(tv);
1da177e4
LT
440}
441
442EXPORT_SYMBOL(do_gettimeofday);
443
1da177e4 444/*
f2783c15
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445 * There are two copies of tb_to_xs and stamp_xsec so that no
446 * lock is needed to access and use these values in
447 * do_gettimeofday. We alternate the copies and as long as a
448 * reasonable time elapses between changes, there will never
449 * be inconsistent values. ntpd has a minimum of one minute
450 * between updates.
1da177e4 451 */
f2783c15 452static inline void update_gtod(u64 new_tb_stamp, u64 new_stamp_xsec,
5d14a18d 453 u64 new_tb_to_xs)
1da177e4 454{
1da177e4 455 unsigned temp_idx;
f2783c15 456 struct gettimeofday_vars *temp_varp;
1da177e4
LT
457
458 temp_idx = (do_gtod.var_idx == 0);
459 temp_varp = &do_gtod.vars[temp_idx];
460
f2783c15
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461 temp_varp->tb_to_xs = new_tb_to_xs;
462 temp_varp->tb_orig_stamp = new_tb_stamp;
1da177e4 463 temp_varp->stamp_xsec = new_stamp_xsec;
0d8d4d42 464 smp_mb();
1da177e4
LT
465 do_gtod.varp = temp_varp;
466 do_gtod.var_idx = temp_idx;
467
f2783c15
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468 /*
469 * tb_update_count is used to allow the userspace gettimeofday code
470 * to assure itself that it sees a consistent view of the tb_to_xs and
471 * stamp_xsec variables. It reads the tb_update_count, then reads
472 * tb_to_xs and stamp_xsec and then reads tb_update_count again. If
473 * the two values of tb_update_count match and are even then the
474 * tb_to_xs and stamp_xsec values are consistent. If not, then it
475 * loops back and reads them again until this criteria is met.
0a45d449
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476 * We expect the caller to have done the first increment of
477 * vdso_data->tb_update_count already.
f2783c15 478 */
a7f290da
BH
479 vdso_data->tb_orig_stamp = new_tb_stamp;
480 vdso_data->stamp_xsec = new_stamp_xsec;
481 vdso_data->tb_to_xs = new_tb_to_xs;
482 vdso_data->wtom_clock_sec = wall_to_monotonic.tv_sec;
483 vdso_data->wtom_clock_nsec = wall_to_monotonic.tv_nsec;
0d8d4d42 484 smp_wmb();
a7f290da 485 ++(vdso_data->tb_update_count);
f2783c15
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486}
487
488/*
489 * When the timebase - tb_orig_stamp gets too big, we do a manipulation
490 * between tb_orig_stamp and stamp_xsec. The goal here is to keep the
491 * difference tb - tb_orig_stamp small enough to always fit inside a
492 * 32 bits number. This is a requirement of our fast 32 bits userland
493 * implementation in the vdso. If we "miss" a call to this function
494 * (interrupt latency, CPU locked in a spinlock, ...) and we end up
495 * with a too big difference, then the vdso will fallback to calling
496 * the syscall
497 */
498static __inline__ void timer_recalc_offset(u64 cur_tb)
499{
500 unsigned long offset;
501 u64 new_stamp_xsec;
092b8f34 502 u64 tlen, t2x;
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503 u64 tb, xsec_old, xsec_new;
504 struct gettimeofday_vars *varp;
f2783c15 505
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506 if (__USE_RTC())
507 return;
19923c19 508 tlen = current_tick_length();
f2783c15 509 offset = cur_tb - do_gtod.varp->tb_orig_stamp;
0a45d449
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510 if (tlen == last_tick_len && offset < 0x80000000u)
511 return;
092b8f34
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512 if (tlen != last_tick_len) {
513 t2x = mulhdu(tlen << TICKLEN_SHIFT, ticklen_to_xs);
514 last_tick_len = tlen;
515 } else
516 t2x = do_gtod.varp->tb_to_xs;
517 new_stamp_xsec = (u64) xtime.tv_nsec * XSEC_PER_SEC;
518 do_div(new_stamp_xsec, 1000000000);
519 new_stamp_xsec += (u64) xtime.tv_sec * XSEC_PER_SEC;
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520
521 ++vdso_data->tb_update_count;
522 smp_mb();
523
524 /*
525 * Make sure time doesn't go backwards for userspace gettimeofday.
526 */
527 tb = get_tb();
528 varp = do_gtod.varp;
529 xsec_old = mulhdu(tb - varp->tb_orig_stamp, varp->tb_to_xs)
530 + varp->stamp_xsec;
531 xsec_new = mulhdu(tb - cur_tb, t2x) + new_stamp_xsec;
532 if (xsec_new < xsec_old)
533 new_stamp_xsec += xsec_old - xsec_new;
534
092b8f34 535 update_gtod(cur_tb, new_stamp_xsec, t2x);
1da177e4
LT
536}
537
538#ifdef CONFIG_SMP
539unsigned long profile_pc(struct pt_regs *regs)
540{
541 unsigned long pc = instruction_pointer(regs);
542
543 if (in_lock_functions(pc))
544 return regs->link;
545
546 return pc;
547}
548EXPORT_SYMBOL(profile_pc);
549#endif
550
551#ifdef CONFIG_PPC_ISERIES
552
553/*
554 * This function recalibrates the timebase based on the 49-bit time-of-day
555 * value in the Titan chip. The Titan is much more accurate than the value
556 * returned by the service processor for the timebase frequency.
557 */
558
559static void iSeries_tb_recal(void)
560{
561 struct div_result divres;
562 unsigned long titan, tb;
563 tb = get_tb();
564 titan = HvCallXm_loadTod();
565 if ( iSeries_recal_titan ) {
566 unsigned long tb_ticks = tb - iSeries_recal_tb;
567 unsigned long titan_usec = (titan - iSeries_recal_titan) >> 12;
568 unsigned long new_tb_ticks_per_sec = (tb_ticks * USEC_PER_SEC)/titan_usec;
569 unsigned long new_tb_ticks_per_jiffy = (new_tb_ticks_per_sec+(HZ/2))/HZ;
570 long tick_diff = new_tb_ticks_per_jiffy - tb_ticks_per_jiffy;
571 char sign = '+';
572 /* make sure tb_ticks_per_sec and tb_ticks_per_jiffy are consistent */
573 new_tb_ticks_per_sec = new_tb_ticks_per_jiffy * HZ;
574
575 if ( tick_diff < 0 ) {
576 tick_diff = -tick_diff;
577 sign = '-';
578 }
579 if ( tick_diff ) {
580 if ( tick_diff < tb_ticks_per_jiffy/25 ) {
581 printk( "Titan recalibrate: new tb_ticks_per_jiffy = %lu (%c%ld)\n",
582 new_tb_ticks_per_jiffy, sign, tick_diff );
583 tb_ticks_per_jiffy = new_tb_ticks_per_jiffy;
584 tb_ticks_per_sec = new_tb_ticks_per_sec;
c6622f63 585 calc_cputime_factors();
1da177e4
LT
586 div128_by_32( XSEC_PER_SEC, 0, tb_ticks_per_sec, &divres );
587 do_gtod.tb_ticks_per_sec = tb_ticks_per_sec;
588 tb_to_xs = divres.result_low;
589 do_gtod.varp->tb_to_xs = tb_to_xs;
a7f290da
BH
590 vdso_data->tb_ticks_per_sec = tb_ticks_per_sec;
591 vdso_data->tb_to_xs = tb_to_xs;
1da177e4
LT
592 }
593 else {
594 printk( "Titan recalibrate: FAILED (difference > 4 percent)\n"
595 " new tb_ticks_per_jiffy = %lu\n"
596 " old tb_ticks_per_jiffy = %lu\n",
597 new_tb_ticks_per_jiffy, tb_ticks_per_jiffy );
598 }
599 }
600 }
601 iSeries_recal_titan = titan;
602 iSeries_recal_tb = tb;
603}
604#endif
605
606/*
607 * For iSeries shared processors, we have to let the hypervisor
608 * set the hardware decrementer. We set a virtual decrementer
609 * in the lppaca and call the hypervisor if the virtual
610 * decrementer is less than the current value in the hardware
611 * decrementer. (almost always the new decrementer value will
612 * be greater than the current hardware decementer so the hypervisor
613 * call will not be needed)
614 */
615
1da177e4
LT
616/*
617 * timer_interrupt - gets called when the decrementer overflows,
618 * with interrupts disabled.
619 */
c7aeffc4 620void timer_interrupt(struct pt_regs * regs)
1da177e4 621{
7d12e780 622 struct pt_regs *old_regs;
1da177e4 623 int next_dec;
f2783c15
PM
624 int cpu = smp_processor_id();
625 unsigned long ticks;
5db9fa95 626 u64 tb_next_jiffy;
f2783c15
PM
627
628#ifdef CONFIG_PPC32
629 if (atomic_read(&ppc_n_lost_interrupts) != 0)
630 do_IRQ(regs);
631#endif
1da177e4 632
7d12e780 633 old_regs = set_irq_regs(regs);
1da177e4
LT
634 irq_enter();
635
7d12e780 636 profile_tick(CPU_PROFILING);
c6622f63 637 calculate_steal_time();
1da177e4 638
f2783c15 639#ifdef CONFIG_PPC_ISERIES
501b6d29
SR
640 if (firmware_has_feature(FW_FEATURE_ISERIES))
641 get_lppaca()->int_dword.fields.decr_int = 0;
f2783c15
PM
642#endif
643
644 while ((ticks = tb_ticks_since(per_cpu(last_jiffy, cpu)))
645 >= tb_ticks_per_jiffy) {
646 /* Update last_jiffy */
647 per_cpu(last_jiffy, cpu) += tb_ticks_per_jiffy;
648 /* Handle RTCL overflow on 601 */
649 if (__USE_RTC() && per_cpu(last_jiffy, cpu) >= 1000000000)
650 per_cpu(last_jiffy, cpu) -= 1000000000;
1da177e4 651
1da177e4
LT
652 /*
653 * We cannot disable the decrementer, so in the period
654 * between this cpu's being marked offline in cpu_online_map
655 * and calling stop-self, it is taking timer interrupts.
656 * Avoid calling into the scheduler rebalancing code if this
657 * is the case.
658 */
659 if (!cpu_is_offline(cpu))
c6622f63 660 account_process_time(regs);
f2783c15 661
1da177e4
LT
662 /*
663 * No need to check whether cpu is offline here; boot_cpuid
664 * should have been fixed up by now.
665 */
f2783c15
PM
666 if (cpu != boot_cpuid)
667 continue;
668
669 write_seqlock(&xtime_lock);
5db9fa95
NL
670 tb_next_jiffy = tb_last_jiffy + tb_ticks_per_jiffy;
671 if (per_cpu(last_jiffy, cpu) >= tb_next_jiffy) {
672 tb_last_jiffy = tb_next_jiffy;
3171a030 673 do_timer(1);
5db9fa95
NL
674 timer_recalc_offset(tb_last_jiffy);
675 timer_check_rtc();
676 }
f2783c15 677 write_sequnlock(&xtime_lock);
1da177e4
LT
678 }
679
f2783c15 680 next_dec = tb_ticks_per_jiffy - ticks;
1da177e4
LT
681 set_dec(next_dec);
682
683#ifdef CONFIG_PPC_ISERIES
501b6d29 684 if (firmware_has_feature(FW_FEATURE_ISERIES) && hvlpevent_is_pending())
35a84c2f 685 process_hvlpevents();
1da177e4
LT
686#endif
687
f2783c15 688#ifdef CONFIG_PPC64
8d15a3e5 689 /* collect purr register values often, for accurate calculations */
1ababe11 690 if (firmware_has_feature(FW_FEATURE_SPLPAR)) {
1da177e4
LT
691 struct cpu_usage *cu = &__get_cpu_var(cpu_usage_array);
692 cu->current_tb = mfspr(SPRN_PURR);
693 }
f2783c15 694#endif
1da177e4
LT
695
696 irq_exit();
7d12e780 697 set_irq_regs(old_regs);
1da177e4
LT
698}
699
f2783c15
PM
700void wakeup_decrementer(void)
701{
092b8f34 702 unsigned long ticks;
f2783c15 703
f2783c15 704 /*
092b8f34
PM
705 * The timebase gets saved on sleep and restored on wakeup,
706 * so all we need to do is to reset the decrementer.
f2783c15 707 */
092b8f34
PM
708 ticks = tb_ticks_since(__get_cpu_var(last_jiffy));
709 if (ticks < tb_ticks_per_jiffy)
710 ticks = tb_ticks_per_jiffy - ticks;
711 else
712 ticks = 1;
713 set_dec(ticks);
f2783c15
PM
714}
715
a5b518ed 716#ifdef CONFIG_SMP
f2783c15
PM
717void __init smp_space_timers(unsigned int max_cpus)
718{
719 int i;
eb36c288 720 u64 previous_tb = per_cpu(last_jiffy, boot_cpuid);
f2783c15 721
cbe62e2b
PM
722 /* make sure tb > per_cpu(last_jiffy, cpu) for all cpus always */
723 previous_tb -= tb_ticks_per_jiffy;
e147ec8f 724
0e551954 725 for_each_possible_cpu(i) {
c6622f63
PM
726 if (i == boot_cpuid)
727 continue;
e147ec8f 728 per_cpu(last_jiffy, i) = previous_tb;
f2783c15
PM
729 }
730}
731#endif
732
1da177e4
LT
733/*
734 * Scheduler clock - returns current time in nanosec units.
735 *
736 * Note: mulhdu(a, b) (multiply high double unsigned) returns
737 * the high 64 bits of a * b, i.e. (a * b) >> 64, where a and b
738 * are 64-bit unsigned numbers.
739 */
740unsigned long long sched_clock(void)
741{
96c44507
PM
742 if (__USE_RTC())
743 return get_rtc();
1da177e4
LT
744 return mulhdu(get_tb(), tb_to_ns_scale) << tb_to_ns_shift;
745}
746
747int do_settimeofday(struct timespec *tv)
748{
749 time_t wtm_sec, new_sec = tv->tv_sec;
750 long wtm_nsec, new_nsec = tv->tv_nsec;
751 unsigned long flags;
092b8f34
PM
752 u64 new_xsec;
753 unsigned long tb_delta;
1da177e4
LT
754
755 if ((unsigned long)tv->tv_nsec >= NSEC_PER_SEC)
756 return -EINVAL;
757
758 write_seqlock_irqsave(&xtime_lock, flags);
f2783c15
PM
759
760 /*
761 * Updating the RTC is not the job of this code. If the time is
762 * stepped under NTP, the RTC will be updated after STA_UNSYNC
763 * is cleared. Tools like clock/hwclock either copy the RTC
1da177e4
LT
764 * to the system time, in which case there is no point in writing
765 * to the RTC again, or write to the RTC but then they don't call
766 * settimeofday to perform this operation.
767 */
768#ifdef CONFIG_PPC_ISERIES
501b6d29 769 if (firmware_has_feature(FW_FEATURE_ISERIES) && first_settimeofday) {
1da177e4
LT
770 iSeries_tb_recal();
771 first_settimeofday = 0;
772 }
773#endif
092b8f34 774
0a45d449
PM
775 /* Make userspace gettimeofday spin until we're done. */
776 ++vdso_data->tb_update_count;
777 smp_mb();
778
092b8f34
PM
779 /*
780 * Subtract off the number of nanoseconds since the
781 * beginning of the last tick.
092b8f34 782 */
eb36c288 783 tb_delta = tb_ticks_since(tb_last_jiffy);
092b8f34
PM
784 tb_delta = mulhdu(tb_delta, do_gtod.varp->tb_to_xs); /* in xsec */
785 new_nsec -= SCALE_XSEC(tb_delta, 1000000000);
1da177e4
LT
786
787 wtm_sec = wall_to_monotonic.tv_sec + (xtime.tv_sec - new_sec);
788 wtm_nsec = wall_to_monotonic.tv_nsec + (xtime.tv_nsec - new_nsec);
789
790 set_normalized_timespec(&xtime, new_sec, new_nsec);
791 set_normalized_timespec(&wall_to_monotonic, wtm_sec, wtm_nsec);
792
793 /* In case of a large backwards jump in time with NTP, we want the
794 * clock to be updated as soon as the PLL is again in lock.
795 */
796 last_rtc_update = new_sec - 658;
797
b149ee22 798 ntp_clear();
1da177e4 799
092b8f34
PM
800 new_xsec = xtime.tv_nsec;
801 if (new_xsec != 0) {
802 new_xsec *= XSEC_PER_SEC;
5f6b5b97
PM
803 do_div(new_xsec, NSEC_PER_SEC);
804 }
092b8f34 805 new_xsec += (u64)xtime.tv_sec * XSEC_PER_SEC;
96c44507 806 update_gtod(tb_last_jiffy, new_xsec, do_gtod.varp->tb_to_xs);
1da177e4 807
a7f290da
BH
808 vdso_data->tz_minuteswest = sys_tz.tz_minuteswest;
809 vdso_data->tz_dsttime = sys_tz.tz_dsttime;
1da177e4
LT
810
811 write_sequnlock_irqrestore(&xtime_lock, flags);
812 clock_was_set();
813 return 0;
814}
815
816EXPORT_SYMBOL(do_settimeofday);
817
0bb474a4 818static int __init get_freq(char *name, int cells, unsigned long *val)
10f7e7c1
AB
819{
820 struct device_node *cpu;
a7f67bdf 821 const unsigned int *fp;
0bb474a4 822 int found = 0;
10f7e7c1 823
0bb474a4 824 /* The cpu node should have timebase and clock frequency properties */
10f7e7c1
AB
825 cpu = of_find_node_by_type(NULL, "cpu");
826
d8a8188d 827 if (cpu) {
e2eb6392 828 fp = of_get_property(cpu, name, NULL);
d8a8188d 829 if (fp) {
0bb474a4 830 found = 1;
a4dc7ff0 831 *val = of_read_ulong(fp, cells);
10f7e7c1 832 }
0bb474a4
AB
833
834 of_node_put(cpu);
10f7e7c1 835 }
0bb474a4
AB
836
837 return found;
838}
839
840void __init generic_calibrate_decr(void)
841{
842 ppc_tb_freq = DEFAULT_TB_FREQ; /* hardcoded default */
843
844 if (!get_freq("ibm,extended-timebase-frequency", 2, &ppc_tb_freq) &&
845 !get_freq("timebase-frequency", 1, &ppc_tb_freq)) {
846
10f7e7c1
AB
847 printk(KERN_ERR "WARNING: Estimating decrementer frequency "
848 "(not found)\n");
0bb474a4 849 }
10f7e7c1 850
0bb474a4
AB
851 ppc_proc_freq = DEFAULT_PROC_FREQ; /* hardcoded default */
852
853 if (!get_freq("ibm,extended-clock-frequency", 2, &ppc_proc_freq) &&
854 !get_freq("clock-frequency", 1, &ppc_proc_freq)) {
855
856 printk(KERN_ERR "WARNING: Estimating processor frequency "
857 "(not found)\n");
10f7e7c1 858 }
0bb474a4 859
0fd6f717
KG
860#ifdef CONFIG_BOOKE
861 /* Set the time base to zero */
862 mtspr(SPRN_TBWL, 0);
863 mtspr(SPRN_TBWU, 0);
864
865 /* Clear any pending timer interrupts */
866 mtspr(SPRN_TSR, TSR_ENW | TSR_WIS | TSR_DIS | TSR_FIS);
867
868 /* Enable decrementer interrupt */
869 mtspr(SPRN_TCR, TCR_DIE);
870#endif
10f7e7c1 871}
10f7e7c1 872
f2783c15
PM
873unsigned long get_boot_time(void)
874{
875 struct rtc_time tm;
876
877 if (ppc_md.get_boot_time)
878 return ppc_md.get_boot_time();
879 if (!ppc_md.get_rtc_time)
880 return 0;
881 ppc_md.get_rtc_time(&tm);
882 return mktime(tm.tm_year+1900, tm.tm_mon+1, tm.tm_mday,
883 tm.tm_hour, tm.tm_min, tm.tm_sec);
884}
885
886/* This function is only called on the boot processor */
1da177e4
LT
887void __init time_init(void)
888{
1da177e4 889 unsigned long flags;
f2783c15 890 unsigned long tm = 0;
1da177e4 891 struct div_result res;
092b8f34 892 u64 scale, x;
f2783c15
PM
893 unsigned shift;
894
895 if (ppc_md.time_init != NULL)
896 timezone_offset = ppc_md.time_init();
1da177e4 897
96c44507
PM
898 if (__USE_RTC()) {
899 /* 601 processor: dec counts down by 128 every 128ns */
900 ppc_tb_freq = 1000000000;
eb36c288 901 tb_last_jiffy = get_rtcl();
96c44507
PM
902 } else {
903 /* Normal PowerPC with timebase register */
904 ppc_md.calibrate_decr();
224ad80a 905 printk(KERN_DEBUG "time_init: decrementer frequency = %lu.%.6lu MHz\n",
96c44507 906 ppc_tb_freq / 1000000, ppc_tb_freq % 1000000);
224ad80a 907 printk(KERN_DEBUG "time_init: processor frequency = %lu.%.6lu MHz\n",
96c44507 908 ppc_proc_freq / 1000000, ppc_proc_freq % 1000000);
eb36c288 909 tb_last_jiffy = get_tb();
96c44507 910 }
374e99d4
PM
911
912 tb_ticks_per_jiffy = ppc_tb_freq / HZ;
092b8f34 913 tb_ticks_per_sec = ppc_tb_freq;
374e99d4
PM
914 tb_ticks_per_usec = ppc_tb_freq / 1000000;
915 tb_to_us = mulhwu_scale_factor(ppc_tb_freq, 1000000);
c6622f63 916 calc_cputime_factors();
092b8f34
PM
917
918 /*
919 * Calculate the length of each tick in ns. It will not be
920 * exactly 1e9/HZ unless ppc_tb_freq is divisible by HZ.
921 * We compute 1e9 * tb_ticks_per_jiffy / ppc_tb_freq,
922 * rounded up.
923 */
924 x = (u64) NSEC_PER_SEC * tb_ticks_per_jiffy + ppc_tb_freq - 1;
925 do_div(x, ppc_tb_freq);
926 tick_nsec = x;
927 last_tick_len = x << TICKLEN_SCALE;
928
929 /*
930 * Compute ticklen_to_xs, which is a factor which gets multiplied
931 * by (last_tick_len << TICKLEN_SHIFT) to get a tb_to_xs value.
932 * It is computed as:
933 * ticklen_to_xs = 2^N / (tb_ticks_per_jiffy * 1e9)
934 * where N = 64 + 20 - TICKLEN_SCALE - TICKLEN_SHIFT
0a45d449
PM
935 * which turns out to be N = 51 - SHIFT_HZ.
936 * This gives the result as a 0.64 fixed-point fraction.
937 * That value is reduced by an offset amounting to 1 xsec per
938 * 2^31 timebase ticks to avoid problems with time going backwards
939 * by 1 xsec when we do timer_recalc_offset due to losing the
940 * fractional xsec. That offset is equal to ppc_tb_freq/2^51
941 * since there are 2^20 xsec in a second.
092b8f34 942 */
0a45d449
PM
943 div128_by_32((1ULL << 51) - ppc_tb_freq, 0,
944 tb_ticks_per_jiffy << SHIFT_HZ, &res);
092b8f34
PM
945 div128_by_32(res.result_high, res.result_low, NSEC_PER_SEC, &res);
946 ticklen_to_xs = res.result_low;
947
948 /* Compute tb_to_xs from tick_nsec */
949 tb_to_xs = mulhdu(last_tick_len << TICKLEN_SHIFT, ticklen_to_xs);
374e99d4 950
1da177e4
LT
951 /*
952 * Compute scale factor for sched_clock.
953 * The calibrate_decr() function has set tb_ticks_per_sec,
954 * which is the timebase frequency.
955 * We compute 1e9 * 2^64 / tb_ticks_per_sec and interpret
956 * the 128-bit result as a 64.64 fixed-point number.
957 * We then shift that number right until it is less than 1.0,
958 * giving us the scale factor and shift count to use in
959 * sched_clock().
960 */
961 div128_by_32(1000000000, 0, tb_ticks_per_sec, &res);
962 scale = res.result_low;
963 for (shift = 0; res.result_high != 0; ++shift) {
964 scale = (scale >> 1) | (res.result_high << 63);
965 res.result_high >>= 1;
966 }
967 tb_to_ns_scale = scale;
968 tb_to_ns_shift = shift;
969
4bd174fe 970 tm = get_boot_time();
1da177e4
LT
971
972 write_seqlock_irqsave(&xtime_lock, flags);
092b8f34
PM
973
974 /* If platform provided a timezone (pmac), we correct the time */
975 if (timezone_offset) {
976 sys_tz.tz_minuteswest = -timezone_offset / 60;
977 sys_tz.tz_dsttime = 0;
978 tm -= timezone_offset;
979 }
980
f2783c15
PM
981 xtime.tv_sec = tm;
982 xtime.tv_nsec = 0;
1da177e4
LT
983 do_gtod.varp = &do_gtod.vars[0];
984 do_gtod.var_idx = 0;
96c44507 985 do_gtod.varp->tb_orig_stamp = tb_last_jiffy;
eb36c288 986 __get_cpu_var(last_jiffy) = tb_last_jiffy;
f2783c15 987 do_gtod.varp->stamp_xsec = (u64) xtime.tv_sec * XSEC_PER_SEC;
1da177e4
LT
988 do_gtod.tb_ticks_per_sec = tb_ticks_per_sec;
989 do_gtod.varp->tb_to_xs = tb_to_xs;
990 do_gtod.tb_to_us = tb_to_us;
a7f290da
BH
991
992 vdso_data->tb_orig_stamp = tb_last_jiffy;
993 vdso_data->tb_update_count = 0;
994 vdso_data->tb_ticks_per_sec = tb_ticks_per_sec;
092b8f34 995 vdso_data->stamp_xsec = (u64) xtime.tv_sec * XSEC_PER_SEC;
a7f290da 996 vdso_data->tb_to_xs = tb_to_xs;
1da177e4
LT
997
998 time_freq = 0;
999
1da177e4
LT
1000 last_rtc_update = xtime.tv_sec;
1001 set_normalized_timespec(&wall_to_monotonic,
1002 -xtime.tv_sec, -xtime.tv_nsec);
1003 write_sequnlock_irqrestore(&xtime_lock, flags);
1004
1005 /* Not exact, but the timer interrupt takes care of this */
1006 set_dec(tb_ticks_per_jiffy);
1007}
1008
1da177e4 1009
1da177e4
LT
1010#define FEBRUARY 2
1011#define STARTOFTIME 1970
1012#define SECDAY 86400L
1013#define SECYR (SECDAY * 365)
f2783c15
PM
1014#define leapyear(year) ((year) % 4 == 0 && \
1015 ((year) % 100 != 0 || (year) % 400 == 0))
1da177e4
LT
1016#define days_in_year(a) (leapyear(a) ? 366 : 365)
1017#define days_in_month(a) (month_days[(a) - 1])
1018
1019static int month_days[12] = {
1020 31, 28, 31, 30, 31, 30, 31, 31, 30, 31, 30, 31
1021};
1022
1023/*
1024 * This only works for the Gregorian calendar - i.e. after 1752 (in the UK)
1025 */
1026void GregorianDay(struct rtc_time * tm)
1027{
1028 int leapsToDate;
1029 int lastYear;
1030 int day;
1031 int MonthOffset[] = { 0, 31, 59, 90, 120, 151, 181, 212, 243, 273, 304, 334 };
1032
f2783c15 1033 lastYear = tm->tm_year - 1;
1da177e4
LT
1034
1035 /*
1036 * Number of leap corrections to apply up to end of last year
1037 */
f2783c15 1038 leapsToDate = lastYear / 4 - lastYear / 100 + lastYear / 400;
1da177e4
LT
1039
1040 /*
1041 * This year is a leap year if it is divisible by 4 except when it is
1042 * divisible by 100 unless it is divisible by 400
1043 *
f2783c15 1044 * e.g. 1904 was a leap year, 1900 was not, 1996 is, and 2000 was
1da177e4 1045 */
f2783c15 1046 day = tm->tm_mon > 2 && leapyear(tm->tm_year);
1da177e4
LT
1047
1048 day += lastYear*365 + leapsToDate + MonthOffset[tm->tm_mon-1] +
1049 tm->tm_mday;
1050
f2783c15 1051 tm->tm_wday = day % 7;
1da177e4
LT
1052}
1053
1054void to_tm(int tim, struct rtc_time * tm)
1055{
1056 register int i;
1057 register long hms, day;
1058
1059 day = tim / SECDAY;
1060 hms = tim % SECDAY;
1061
1062 /* Hours, minutes, seconds are easy */
1063 tm->tm_hour = hms / 3600;
1064 tm->tm_min = (hms % 3600) / 60;
1065 tm->tm_sec = (hms % 3600) % 60;
1066
1067 /* Number of years in days */
1068 for (i = STARTOFTIME; day >= days_in_year(i); i++)
1069 day -= days_in_year(i);
1070 tm->tm_year = i;
1071
1072 /* Number of months in days left */
1073 if (leapyear(tm->tm_year))
1074 days_in_month(FEBRUARY) = 29;
1075 for (i = 1; day >= days_in_month(i); i++)
1076 day -= days_in_month(i);
1077 days_in_month(FEBRUARY) = 28;
1078 tm->tm_mon = i;
1079
1080 /* Days are what is left over (+1) from all that. */
1081 tm->tm_mday = day + 1;
1082
1083 /*
1084 * Determine the day of week
1085 */
1086 GregorianDay(tm);
1087}
1088
1089/* Auxiliary function to compute scaling factors */
1090/* Actually the choice of a timebase running at 1/4 the of the bus
1091 * frequency giving resolution of a few tens of nanoseconds is quite nice.
1092 * It makes this computation very precise (27-28 bits typically) which
1093 * is optimistic considering the stability of most processor clock
1094 * oscillators and the precision with which the timebase frequency
1095 * is measured but does not harm.
1096 */
f2783c15
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1097unsigned mulhwu_scale_factor(unsigned inscale, unsigned outscale)
1098{
1da177e4
LT
1099 unsigned mlt=0, tmp, err;
1100 /* No concern for performance, it's done once: use a stupid
1101 * but safe and compact method to find the multiplier.
1102 */
1103
1104 for (tmp = 1U<<31; tmp != 0; tmp >>= 1) {
f2783c15
PM
1105 if (mulhwu(inscale, mlt|tmp) < outscale)
1106 mlt |= tmp;
1da177e4
LT
1107 }
1108
1109 /* We might still be off by 1 for the best approximation.
1110 * A side effect of this is that if outscale is too large
1111 * the returned value will be zero.
1112 * Many corner cases have been checked and seem to work,
1113 * some might have been forgotten in the test however.
1114 */
1115
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PM
1116 err = inscale * (mlt+1);
1117 if (err <= inscale/2)
1118 mlt++;
1da177e4 1119 return mlt;
f2783c15 1120}
1da177e4
LT
1121
1122/*
1123 * Divide a 128-bit dividend by a 32-bit divisor, leaving a 128 bit
1124 * result.
1125 */
f2783c15
PM
1126void div128_by_32(u64 dividend_high, u64 dividend_low,
1127 unsigned divisor, struct div_result *dr)
1da177e4 1128{
f2783c15
PM
1129 unsigned long a, b, c, d;
1130 unsigned long w, x, y, z;
1131 u64 ra, rb, rc;
1da177e4
LT
1132
1133 a = dividend_high >> 32;
1134 b = dividend_high & 0xffffffff;
1135 c = dividend_low >> 32;
1136 d = dividend_low & 0xffffffff;
1137
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PM
1138 w = a / divisor;
1139 ra = ((u64)(a - (w * divisor)) << 32) + b;
1140
f2783c15
PM
1141 rb = ((u64) do_div(ra, divisor) << 32) + c;
1142 x = ra;
1da177e4 1143
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PM
1144 rc = ((u64) do_div(rb, divisor) << 32) + d;
1145 y = rb;
1146
1147 do_div(rc, divisor);
1148 z = rc;
1da177e4 1149
f2783c15
PM
1150 dr->result_high = ((u64)w << 32) + x;
1151 dr->result_low = ((u64)y << 32) + z;
1da177e4
LT
1152
1153}