On Thu, 2024-08-01 at 21:06 +0200, Thomas Gleixner wrote: > On Thu, Aug 01 2024 at 18:49, David Woodhouse wrote: > > On Thu, 2024-08-01 at 16:21 +0200, Thomas Gleixner wrote: > > > The stop sequence is wrong: > > > > > > When there is a count in progress, writing a new LSB before the > > > counter has counted down to 0 and rolled over to FFFFh, WILL stop > > > the counter. However, if the LSB is loaded AFTER the counter has > > > rolled over to FFFFh, so that an MSB now exists in the counter, then > > > the counter WILL NOT stop. > > > > > > The original i8253 datasheet says: > > > > > > 1) Write 1st byte stops the current counting > > > 2) Write 2nd byte starts the new count > > > > It says that for mode zero ("Interrupt on Terminal Count"), yes. But in > > that mode, shouldn't the IRQ only fire *one* more time anyway, rather > > than repeatedly? That should be OK, shouldn't it? > > > > "When terminal count is reached, the output will go high and remain > > high until the selected count register is reloaded wityh the mode or a > > new count is loaded". > > I just confirmed that this is the case on KVM. > > > It's OK for it to keep *counting* as long as it stops firing > > interrupts, isn't it? > > Yes. So the sequence should stop KVM from trying to inject > interrupts. Maybe someone fixes it to actually stop fiddling with the > counter too :) I don't think we care about the counter value, as that's *calculated* on demand when the guest tries to read from it. Or, more to the point, *if* the guest tries to read from it. As opposed to the interrupt, which is a timer in the VMM which takes a CPU out of guest mode and incurs steal time, just to waggle a pin on the emulated PICs for no good reason. > > Either way, this is somewhat orthogonal to the patch I posted in > > https://lore.kernel.org/kvm/6cd62b5058e11a6262cb2e798cc85cc5daead3b1.camel@xxxxxxxxxxxxx/T/#u > > for the fact that we don't shut down the PIT at *all* if we aren't ever > > going to use it. > > > > I'm glad I decided to export a function from the clocksource driver and > > just *call* it from pit_timer_init() though. Means we can bikeshed the > > shutdown sequence in *one* place and it isn't duplicated. > > Right. Though we don't have to make this conditional on hypervisor I > think. Right, we don't *have* to. I vacillated about that and almost ripped it out before sending the patch, but came down on the side of "hardware is a steaming pile of crap and if I don't *have* to change its behaviour, let's not touch it". I justify my cowardice on the basis that it doesn't *matter* if a hardware implementation is still toggling the IRQ pin; in that case it's only a few irrelevant transistors which are busy, and it doesn't translate to steal time.
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