[PATCH v2] clocksource: atmel-pit: register as a sched_clock
Nicolas Ferre
nicolas.ferre at atmel.com
Wed Feb 24 09:13:08 PST 2016
Le 24/02/2016 17:44, Romain Izard a écrit :
> 2016-02-24 17:20 GMT+01:00 Sylvain Rochet <sylvain.rochet at finsecur.com>:
>> Hi,
>>
>> On Wed, Feb 24, 2016 at 05:04:42PM +0100, Romain Izard wrote:
>>> Register the counter of the Periodic Interval Timer as a possible
>>> source for sched_clock. Keep the timer running even if the related
>>> clockevent is disabled.
>>>
>>> This provides a better precision than the jiffies-based default. The
>>> TCB clocksource does not work, as it is registered too late in the
>>> initialization sequence.
>>
>> I have mixed feelings about that, but this is probably just a
>> misunderstanding from my part.
>>
> My goal is to get a better precision on my printk and trace logs,
> because the precision of jiffies is really very bad compared to
> everything else I have encountered until now. But it looks like reading
> a timer is quite complicated on AT91...
>
>> The PIT timer should not be used for systems with PM_SUSPEND enabled
>> and used because it takes ages to synchronize on resume, how does this
>> patch affect that ?
>>
>> Ref: commit ac34ad27fc ("clockevents: Do not suspend/resume if
>> unused")
>
> So your advice would be to stay clear of the PIT, because it is
> (globally) useless.
>
> I'll keep it in mind.
I tend to think like this as well.
I would like to simplify our timer handling on AT91 and stick with TC
for this purpose.
It has de disadvantage of being obliged to use a TC(block) for
clockevent/clocksource and loose it if we want to do something else with
it but I do think that it's worth it.
If you want a modified TC driver that registers sched_clock, we can
provide you one as a workaround before that we rework the TC driver
completely. It has it's own flaws (like re-using a compatible string or
preventing the use of the "tclib") but is certainly handy.
Bye,
--
Nicolas Ferre
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