On Thu, 5 May 2011, Eric Dumazet wrote: > Le jeudi 05 mai 2011 à 16:39 +0200, Thomas Gleixner a écrit : > > On Thu, 5 May 2011, Eric Dumazet wrote: > > > > > I feel xtime_lock seqlock is abused these days. > > > > > > seqlock abstraction is somewhat lazy/dangerous because write_sequnlock() > > > does both the seqcount increment and spinlock release. > > > > > > I am concerned by fact that readers might wait for long times, because > > > writers hold the whole seqlock, while sometime they only want to guard > > > other writers to come in. > > > > > > Maybe it's time to separate the things (the seqcount and the spinlock) > > > so that writer can manipulate data in different sections : > > > - Sections while holding spinlock, allowing "readers" to run > > > - Very small sections enclosed in a pair of seqcount increments, to > > > synchronize with readers. > > > > Well, in the case of timekeeping that might be problematic. I'm not > > sure whether we can calculate the new values under the spinlock and > > then update the timekeeper under the seqlock because we might adjust > > the mult/shift pair which then can result in observabcle time going > > backwards problems. It might be worth a try, though. John ??? > > > > The only thing which really can move right away outside the xtime > > seqlock region is calc_global_load(). > > > > That would be a start, but we also could have finer granularity in > locks : > > update_vsyscall() has its own protection and could be done outside of > the seqcount inc pair used for ktime_get(). Yeah, we could move that out, but it might be interesting to add a few tracepoints into update_wall_time() first to see which part takes the most time. > [ but my patch numbers were for a 32bit kernel, so vsyscall is not > accounted for. ] :) > Another idea would be to prime cache lines to be dirtied in cpu cache > before taking locks, and better pack variables to reduce number of cache > lines. Most variables are packed already in struct timekeeper, which should be pretty cache hot anyway, so I don't know whether we gain much. Thanks, tglx