On 01/11/2017 10:26, Russell King - ARM Linux wrote:
> On Tue, Oct 31, 2017 at 05:23:19PM -0700, Doug Anderson wrote:
>
>> On Tue, Oct 31, 2017 at 10:45 AM, Linus Torvalds wrote:
>>
>>> So I'm very much open to udelay improvements, and if somebody sends
>>> patches for particular platforms to do particularly well on that
>>> platform, I think we should merge them. But ...
>>
>> If I'm reading this all correctly, this sounds like you'd be willing
>> to merge <https://patchwork.kernel.org/patch/9429841/>. This makes
>> udelay() guaranteed not to underrun on arm32 platforms.
>
> That's a mis-representation again. It stops a timer-based udelay()
> possibly underrunning by one tick if we are close to the start of
> a count increment. However, it does nothing for the loops_per_jiffy
> udelay(), which can still underrun.
It is correct that improving the clock-based implementation does strictly
nothing for the loop-based implementation.
Is it possible to derive a higher bound on the amount of under-run when
using the loop-based delay on arm32?
> My argument against merging that patch is that with it merged, we get
> (as you say) a udelay() that doesn't underrun _when using a timer_
> but when we end up using the loops_per_jiffy udelay(), we're back to
> the old problem.
>
> My opinion is that's bad, because it encourages people to write drivers
> that rely on udelay() having "good" behaviour, which it is not guaranteed
> to have. So, they'll specify a delay period of exactly what they want,
> and their drivers will then fail when running on systems that aren't
> using a timer-based udelay().
>
> If we want udelay() to have this behaviour, it needs to _always_ have
> this behaviour irrespective of the implementation. So that means
> the loops_per_jiffy version also needs to be fixed in the same way,
> which IMHO is impossible.
Let's say some piece of HW absolutely, positively, unequivocally,
uncompromisingly, requires a strict minimum of 10 microseconds
elapsing between operations A and B.
You say a driver writer must not write udelay(10);
They have to take into account the possibility of under-delay.
How much additional delay should they add?
10%? 20%? 50%? A percentage + a fixed quantity?
If there is an actual rule, then it could be incorporated in the
loop-based implementation?
If it is impossible to say (as Linus hinted for some platforms)
then this means there is no way to guarantee a minimal delay?
Regards.
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