On 19 April 2024 18:13:16 BST, "Chen, Zide" <zide.chen@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: >I'm wondering what's the underling theory that we definitely can achieve >±1ns accuracy? I tested it on a Sapphire Rapids @2100MHz TSC frequency, >and I can see delta_corrected=2 in ~2% cases. Hm. Thanks for testing! So the KVM clock is based on the guest TSC. Given a delta between the guest TSC T and some reference point in time R, the KVM clock is expressed as a(T-R)+r, where little r is the value of the KVM clock when the guest TSC was R, and (a) is the rate of the guest TSC. When set the clock with KVM_SET_CLOCK_GUEST, we are changing the values of R and r to a new point in time. Call the new ones Q and q respectively. But we calculate precisely (within 1ns at least) what the KVM clock would have been with the *old* formula, and adjust our new offset (q) so that at our new reference TSC value Q, the formulae give exactly the same result. And because the *rates* are the same, they should continue to give the same results, ±1ns. Or such *was* my theory, at least. Would be interesting to see it disproven with actual numbers for the old+new pvclock structs, so I can understand where the logic goes wrong. Were you using frequency scaling?