2017-01-16 15:08-0200, Marcelo Tosatti: > On Mon, Jan 16, 2017 at 05:54:11PM +0100, Radim Krcmar wrote: >> 2017-01-16 17:26+0100, Radim Krcmar: >> > 2017-01-13 15:40-0200, Marcelo Tosatti: >> >> On Fri, Jan 13, 2017 at 04:56:58PM +0100, Radim Krcmar wrote: >> >> > 2017-01-13 10:01-0200, Marcelo Tosatti: >> >>> > + version = pvclock_read_begin(src); >> >>> > + >> >>> > + ret = kvm_hypercall2(KVM_HC_CLOCK_OFFSET, >> >>> > + clock_off_gpa, >> >>> > + KVM_CLOCK_OFFSET_WALLCLOCK); >> >>> > + if (ret != 0) { >> >>> > + pr_err("clock offset hypercall ret %lu\n", ret); >> >>> > + spin_unlock(&kvm_ptp_lock); >> >>> > + preempt_enable_notrace(); >> >>> > + return -EOPNOTSUPP; >> >>> > + } >> >>> > + >> >>> > + tspec.tv_sec = clock_off.sec; >> >>> > + tspec.tv_nsec = clock_off.nsec; >> >>> > + >> >>> > + delta = rdtsc_ordered() - clock_off.tsc; >> >>> > + >> >>> > + offset = pvclock_scale_delta(delta, src->tsc_to_system_mul, >> >>> > + src->tsc_shift); >> >>> > + >> >>> > + } while (pvclock_read_retry(src, version)); >> >>> > + >> >>> > + preempt_enable_notrace(); >> >>> > + >> >>> > + tspec.tv_nsec = tspec.tv_nsec + offset; >> >>> > + >> >>> > + spin_unlock(&kvm_ptp_lock); >> >>> > + >> >>> > + if (tspec.tv_nsec >= NSEC_PER_SEC) { >> >>> > + u64 secs = tspec.tv_nsec; >> >>> > + >> >>> > + tspec.tv_nsec = do_div(secs, NSEC_PER_SEC); >> >>> > + tspec.tv_sec += secs; >> >>> > + } >> >>> > + >> >>> > + memcpy(ts, &tspec, sizeof(struct timespec64)); >> >>> >> >>> But the whole idea is of improving the time by reading tsc a bit later >> >>> is just weird ... why is it better to provide >> >>> >> >>> tsc + x, time + tsc_delta_to_time(x) >> >>> >> >>> than just >> >>> >> >>> tsc, time >> >>> >> >>> ? >> >> >> >> Because you want to calculate the value of the host realtime clock >> >> at the moment of ptp_kvm_gettime. >> >> >> >> We do: >> >> >> >> 1. kvm_hypercall. >> >> 2. get {sec, nsec, guest_tsc}. >> >> 3. kvm_hypercall returns. >> >> 4. delay = rdtsc() - guest_tsc. >> >> >> >> Where delay is the delta (measured with the TSC) between points 2 and 4. >> > >> > I see now ... the PTP interface is just not good for our purposes. >> >> There is getcrosststamp() callback in PTP, which seems to be exactly >> what we want when pairing with TSC, so the pvclock delay fixup can be >> dropped when using it. > > What pvclock delay fixup you refer to? The "rdtsc() - clock_offset.tsc" > part? Yes. > You can't drop it, because if you do then your "host realtime > clock read" will be behind by "rdtsc() - clock_offset.tsc" TSC cycles. The TSC read will be some cycles old when the hypercall ends, but that doesn't matter, because we will pass {sec, nsec, guest_tsc} to PTP and PTP should plug them into kernel's realtime clock roughly like this: sec/nsec + (rdtsc() - guest_tsc) * tsc_freq Adding delay to guest_tsc and sec/nsec cannot improve precision. (And will likely degrade it as kvmclock's frequency is incorrect.) > We want the highest precision as possible. I agree, which is why we don't want to lose precision in the delay guesswork because of gettime64(). -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe kvm" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html