cvs commit: src/sys/netinet in_var.h ip_fastfwd.c ip_flow.c ip_flow.h ip_input.c ip_output.c src/sys/sys mbuf.h src/sys/conf files src/sys/net if_arcsubr.c if_ef.c if_ethersubr.c if_fddisubr.c if_iso88025subr.c if_ppp.c

Luigi Rizzo rizzo at icir.org
Sun Nov 16 00:39:46 PST 2003


On Sun, Nov 16, 2003 at 12:48:14PM +1100, Peter Jeremy wrote:
...
> >I will try to measure that with more precision. You did have
> >code which was able to record and timestamp events several
> >thousand times per second. Do still have that code somewhere?

there is some MD code in the RELENG_4 tree, the kernel option
you need is "options KERN_TIMESTAMP" and a description on how
to use it is in sys/i386/include/param.h

Note that you have to be careful when timing very short sections
of code, because the CPU can execute instruction out of order
so something like

	rdtsc();
	<short section of code>
	rdtsc()

might result in the second timing call being executed before
the section of code in the middle is complete. There is
some nonintuitive instruction (which i now forget) to flush the
execution pipeline which can be used around the section of
code you want to time.
In an SMP environment this code probably will not work well
because it does not consider parallel access to the counters,
nor the CPU where events occur (probably you could use a
per-cpu index, and then in many cases you only care about
relative measurements of events on the same CPU).

	cheers
	luigi

> I've done similar things a couple of times using circular buffers
> along the following lines:
> 
> #define	RING_SIZE	(1 << some_suitable_value)
> int	next_entry;
> struct entry {
> 	some_time_t	now;
> 	foo_t		event;
> }	ring[RING_SIZE];
> 
> void __inline insert_event(foo_t event)
> {
> 	int	ix;
> 	/* following two lines need to be atomic to make this re-entrant */
> 	ix = next_entry;
> 	next_entry = (ix + 1) & (RING_SIZE - 1);
> 	ring[ix].now = read_time();
> 	ring[ix].event = event;
> }
> 
> In userland, mmap(2) next_entry and ring to unload the events.  Pick
> RING_SIZE and the time types to suit requirements.  The TSC has the
> lowest overhead but worst jitter.
> 
> Peter


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