Date: Tue, 17 Jan 2017 22:28:47 +0100 From: Hans Petter Selasky <hps@selasky.org> To: Ian Lepore <ian@freebsd.org>, John Baldwin <jhb@freebsd.org> Cc: FreeBSD Current <freebsd-current@freebsd.org>, Konstantin Belousov <kib@freebsd.org> Subject: Re: Strange issue after early AP startup Message-ID: <11f27a15-f9bc-8988-a17e-78aeff1745fb@selasky.org> In-Reply-To: <1484682389.86335.166.camel@freebsd.org> References: <b9c53237-4b1a-a140-f692-bf5837060b18@selasky.org> <2215603.KuBd8pM5Pm@ralph.baldwin.cx> <3cbe6454-82cc-0592-4ee6-3c1552b19f9a@selasky.org> <4212167.Wq8tLU1ohU@ralph.baldwin.cx> <1484682389.86335.166.camel@freebsd.org>
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On 01/17/17 20:46, Ian Lepore wrote: >>> Does this matter for the first tick? How often is configtimer() called? >> > >> > As I said, it is called at runtime when profclock is started / stopped, not >> > just at boot. Those changes at runtime probably have existing callouts >> > active and your change will not process any callouts until the next hardclock >> > tick fires (but only because you are setting nextcallopt to the bogus >> > 'next' value). > On some platforms, configtimer() can be called quite often. Power > saving modes can change the frequency of the timer, and systems that > suppport such dynamic frequency scaling call configtimer() > (via cpu_et_frequency()) to handle the changes. Hi, I propose the following patch then: diff --git a/sys/kern/kern_clocksource.c b/sys/kern/kern_clocksource.c index 7f7769d..5ae925b 100644 --- a/sys/kern/kern_clocksource.c +++ b/sys/kern/kern_clocksource.c @@ -511,8 +511,13 @@ configtimer(int start) state->nexthard = next; state->nextstat = next; state->nextprof = next; - state->nextcall = next; - state->nextcallopt = next; + /* + * Force callout_process() to be called + * instantly, so that the correct value of + * "nextcall" can be computed: + */ + state->nextcall = SBT_MAX; + state->nextcallopt = now + 1; hardclock_sync(cpu); } busy = 0; Then there is no problem having to wait for the next tick or anything, like John Baldwin pointed out. --HPS
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