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author | Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au> | 2008-03-11 09:35:56 -0500 |
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committer | Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au> | 2008-03-11 09:35:57 +1100 |
commit | 3fabc55f34b72720e8a10aa442bd3415a211edb3 (patch) | |
tree | 2ccc469ce6daff4430c04d89b139f3d7ac02aaac /arch/x86/lguest | |
parent | f14ae652baa3d72ae378f0c06b89cc2c4ef15ff8 (diff) | |
download | linux-3.10-3fabc55f34b72720e8a10aa442bd3415a211edb3.tar.gz linux-3.10-3fabc55f34b72720e8a10aa442bd3415a211edb3.tar.bz2 linux-3.10-3fabc55f34b72720e8a10aa442bd3415a211edb3.zip |
lguest: Sanitize the lguest clock.
Now the TSC code handles a zero return from calculate_cpu_khz(),
lguest can simply pass through the value it gets from the Host: if
non-zero, all the normal TSC code applies.
Otherwise (or if the Host really doesn't support TSC), the clocksource
code will fall back to the slower but reasonable lguest clock.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
Diffstat (limited to 'arch/x86/lguest')
-rw-r--r-- | arch/x86/lguest/boot.c | 53 |
1 files changed, 21 insertions, 32 deletions
diff --git a/arch/x86/lguest/boot.c b/arch/x86/lguest/boot.c index cccb38a5965..9c27c104d83 100644 --- a/arch/x86/lguest/boot.c +++ b/arch/x86/lguest/boot.c @@ -84,7 +84,6 @@ struct lguest_data lguest_data = { .blocked_interrupts = { 1 }, /* Block timer interrupts */ .syscall_vec = SYSCALL_VECTOR, }; -static cycle_t clock_base; /*G:037 async_hcall() is pretty simple: I'm quite proud of it really. We have a * ring buffer of stored hypercalls which the Host will run though next time we @@ -327,8 +326,8 @@ static void lguest_cpuid(unsigned int *ax, unsigned int *bx, case 1: /* Basic feature request. */ /* We only allow kernel to see SSE3, CMPXCHG16B and SSSE3 */ *cx &= 0x00002201; - /* SSE, SSE2, FXSR, MMX, CMOV, CMPXCHG8B, FPU. */ - *dx &= 0x07808101; + /* SSE, SSE2, FXSR, MMX, CMOV, CMPXCHG8B, TSC, FPU. */ + *dx &= 0x07808111; /* The Host can do a nice optimization if it knows that the * kernel mappings (addresses above 0xC0000000 or whatever * PAGE_OFFSET is set to) haven't changed. But Linux calls @@ -595,19 +594,25 @@ static unsigned long lguest_get_wallclock(void) return lguest_data.time.tv_sec; } +/* The TSC is a Time Stamp Counter. The Host tells us what speed it runs at, + * or 0 if it's unusable as a reliable clock source. This matches what we want + * here: if we return 0 from this function, the x86 TSC clock will not register + * itself. */ +static unsigned long lguest_cpu_khz(void) +{ + return lguest_data.tsc_khz; +} + +/* If we can't use the TSC, the kernel falls back to our "lguest_clock", where + * we read the time value given to us by the Host. */ static cycle_t lguest_clock_read(void) { unsigned long sec, nsec; - /* If the Host tells the TSC speed, we can trust that. */ - if (lguest_data.tsc_khz) - return native_read_tsc(); - - /* If we can't use the TSC, we read the time value written by the Host. - * Since it's in two parts (seconds and nanoseconds), we risk reading - * it just as it's changing from 99 & 0.999999999 to 100 and 0, and - * getting 99 and 0. As Linux tends to come apart under the stress of - * time travel, we must be careful: */ + /* Since the time is in two parts (seconds and nanoseconds), we risk + * reading it just as it's changing from 99 & 0.999999999 to 100 and 0, + * and getting 99 and 0. As Linux tends to come apart under the stress + * of time travel, we must be careful: */ do { /* First we read the seconds part. */ sec = lguest_data.time.tv_sec; @@ -622,14 +627,14 @@ static cycle_t lguest_clock_read(void) /* Now if the seconds part has changed, try again. */ } while (unlikely(lguest_data.time.tv_sec != sec)); - /* Our non-TSC clock is in real nanoseconds. */ + /* Our lguest clock is in real nanoseconds. */ return sec*1000000000ULL + nsec; } -/* This is what we tell the kernel is our clocksource. */ +/* This is the fallback clocksource: lower priority than the TSC clocksource. */ static struct clocksource lguest_clock = { .name = "lguest", - .rating = 400, + .rating = 200, .read = lguest_clock_read, .mask = CLOCKSOURCE_MASK(64), .mult = 1 << 22, @@ -637,12 +642,6 @@ static struct clocksource lguest_clock = { .flags = CLOCK_SOURCE_IS_CONTINUOUS, }; -/* The "scheduler clock" is just our real clock, adjusted to start at zero */ -static unsigned long long lguest_sched_clock(void) -{ - return cyc2ns(&lguest_clock, lguest_clock_read() - clock_base); -} - /* We also need a "struct clock_event_device": Linux asks us to set it to go * off some time in the future. Actually, James Morris figured all this out, I * just applied the patch. */ @@ -712,19 +711,8 @@ static void lguest_time_init(void) /* Set up the timer interrupt (0) to go to our simple timer routine */ set_irq_handler(0, lguest_time_irq); - /* Our clock structure looks like arch/x86/kernel/tsc_32.c if we can - * use the TSC, otherwise it's a dumb nanosecond-resolution clock. - * Either way, the "rating" is set so high that it's always chosen over - * any other clocksource. */ - if (lguest_data.tsc_khz) - lguest_clock.mult = clocksource_khz2mult(lguest_data.tsc_khz, - lguest_clock.shift); - clock_base = lguest_clock_read(); clocksource_register(&lguest_clock); - /* Now we've set up our clock, we can use it as the scheduler clock */ - pv_time_ops.sched_clock = lguest_sched_clock; - /* We can't set cpumask in the initializer: damn C limitations! Set it * here and register our timer device. */ lguest_clockevent.cpumask = cpumask_of_cpu(0); @@ -995,6 +983,7 @@ __init void lguest_init(void) /* time operations */ pv_time_ops.get_wallclock = lguest_get_wallclock; pv_time_ops.time_init = lguest_time_init; + pv_time_ops.get_cpu_khz = lguest_cpu_khz; /* Now is a good time to look at the implementations of these functions * before returning to the rest of lguest_init(). */ |