On Sun, Apr 24, 2022 at 12:46:23PM +0100, Maciej W. Rozycki wrote: > Fix the discrepancy between the two places we check for the CP0 counter > erratum in along with the incorrect comparison of the R4400 revision > number against 0x30 which matches none and consistently consider all > R4000 and R4400 processors affected, as documented in processor errata > publications[1][2][3], following the mapping between CP0 PRId register > values and processor models: > > PRId | Processor Model > ---------+-------------------- > 00000422 | R4000 Revision 2.2 > 00000430 | R4000 Revision 3.0 > 00000440 | R4400 Revision 1.0 > 00000450 | R4400 Revision 2.0 > 00000460 | R4400 Revision 3.0 interesting, where is this documented ? And it's quite funny that so far everybody messed up revision printing for R4400 CPUs. > Please review the requirements for SNI platforms. In the case of an > erratic CP0 timer we give precedence to the use as a clock event rather > than clock source device; see `time_init' in arch/mips/kernel/time.c. > Therefore if SNI systems have no alternative timer interrupt source, then > the CP0 timer is supposed to still do regardless of the erratum. > > Conversely a system can do without a high-precision clock source, in > which case jiffies will be used. Of course such a system will suffer if > used for precision timekeeping, but such is the price for broken hardware. > Don't SNI systems have any alternative timer available, not even the > venerable 8254? all SNI systems have a i8254 in their EISA/PCI chipsets. But they aren't that nice for clock events as their interupts are connected via an i8259 addresses via ISA PIO. > With the considerations above in mind, please apply. will do later. Thomas. -- Crap can work. Given enough thrust pigs will fly, but it's not necessarily a good idea. [ RFC1925, 2.3 ]