1 /* 2 * CDDL HEADER START 3 * 4 * The contents of this file are subject to the terms of the 5 * Common Development and Distribution License (the "License"). 6 * You may not use this file except in compliance with the License. 7 * 8 * You can obtain a copy of the license at usr/src/OPENSOLARIS.LICENSE 9 * or http://www.opensolaris.org/os/licensing. 10 * See the License for the specific language governing permissions 11 * and limitations under the License. 12 * 13 * When distributing Covered Code, include this CDDL HEADER in each 14 * file and include the License file at usr/src/OPENSOLARIS.LICENSE. 15 * If applicable, add the following below this CDDL HEADER, with the 16 * fields enclosed by brackets "[]" replaced with your own identifying 17 * information: Portions Copyright [yyyy] [name of copyright owner] 18 * 19 * CDDL HEADER END 20 */ 21 /* Copyright (c) 1984, 1986, 1987, 1988, 1989 AT&T */ 22 /* All Rights Reserved */ 23 24 /* 25 * Copyright (c) 1988, 2010, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. 26 * Copyright (c) 2013, Joyent, Inc. All rights reserved. 27 */ 28 29 #include <sys/param.h> 30 #include <sys/t_lock.h> 31 #include <sys/types.h> 32 #include <sys/tuneable.h> 33 #include <sys/sysmacros.h> 34 #include <sys/systm.h> 35 #include <sys/cpuvar.h> 36 #include <sys/lgrp.h> 37 #include <sys/user.h> 38 #include <sys/proc.h> 39 #include <sys/callo.h> 40 #include <sys/kmem.h> 41 #include <sys/var.h> 42 #include <sys/cmn_err.h> 43 #include <sys/swap.h> 44 #include <sys/vmsystm.h> 45 #include <sys/class.h> 46 #include <sys/time.h> 47 #include <sys/debug.h> 48 #include <sys/vtrace.h> 49 #include <sys/spl.h> 50 #include <sys/atomic.h> 51 #include <sys/dumphdr.h> 52 #include <sys/archsystm.h> 53 #include <sys/fs/swapnode.h> 54 #include <sys/panic.h> 55 #include <sys/disp.h> 56 #include <sys/msacct.h> 57 #include <sys/mem_cage.h> 58 59 #include <vm/page.h> 60 #include <vm/anon.h> 61 #include <vm/rm.h> 62 #include <sys/cyclic.h> 63 #include <sys/cpupart.h> 64 #include <sys/rctl.h> 65 #include <sys/task.h> 66 #include <sys/sdt.h> 67 #include <sys/ddi_periodic.h> 68 #include <sys/random.h> 69 #include <sys/modctl.h> 70 71 /* 72 * for NTP support 73 */ 74 #include <sys/timex.h> 75 #include <sys/inttypes.h> 76 77 #include <sys/sunddi.h> 78 #include <sys/clock_impl.h> 79 80 /* 81 * clock() is called straight from the clock cyclic; see clock_init(). 82 * 83 * Functions: 84 * reprime clock 85 * maintain date 86 * jab the scheduler 87 */ 88 89 extern kcondvar_t fsflush_cv; 90 extern sysinfo_t sysinfo; 91 extern vminfo_t vminfo; 92 extern int idleswtch; /* flag set while idle in pswtch() */ 93 extern hrtime_t volatile devinfo_freeze; 94 95 /* 96 * high-precision avenrun values. These are needed to make the 97 * regular avenrun values accurate. 98 */ 99 static uint64_t hp_avenrun[3]; 100 int avenrun[3]; /* FSCALED average run queue lengths */ 101 time_t time; /* time in seconds since 1970 - for compatibility only */ 102 103 static struct loadavg_s loadavg; 104 /* 105 * Phase/frequency-lock loop (PLL/FLL) definitions 106 * 107 * The following variables are read and set by the ntp_adjtime() system 108 * call. 109 * 110 * time_state shows the state of the system clock, with values defined 111 * in the timex.h header file. 112 * 113 * time_status shows the status of the system clock, with bits defined 114 * in the timex.h header file. 115 * 116 * time_offset is used by the PLL/FLL to adjust the system time in small 117 * increments. 118 * 119 * time_constant determines the bandwidth or "stiffness" of the PLL. 120 * 121 * time_tolerance determines maximum frequency error or tolerance of the 122 * CPU clock oscillator and is a property of the architecture; however, 123 * in principle it could change as result of the presence of external 124 * discipline signals, for instance. 125 * 126 * time_precision is usually equal to the kernel tick variable; however, 127 * in cases where a precision clock counter or external clock is 128 * available, the resolution can be much less than this and depend on 129 * whether the external clock is working or not. 130 * 131 * time_maxerror is initialized by a ntp_adjtime() call and increased by 132 * the kernel once each second to reflect the maximum error bound 133 * growth. 134 * 135 * time_esterror is set and read by the ntp_adjtime() call, but 136 * otherwise not used by the kernel. 137 */ 138 int32_t time_state = TIME_OK; /* clock state */ 139 int32_t time_status = STA_UNSYNC; /* clock status bits */ 140 int32_t time_offset = 0; /* time offset (us) */ 141 int32_t time_constant = 0; /* pll time constant */ 142 int32_t time_tolerance = MAXFREQ; /* frequency tolerance (scaled ppm) */ 143 int32_t time_precision = 1; /* clock precision (us) */ 144 int32_t time_maxerror = MAXPHASE; /* maximum error (us) */ 145 int32_t time_esterror = MAXPHASE; /* estimated error (us) */ 146 147 /* 148 * The following variables establish the state of the PLL/FLL and the 149 * residual time and frequency offset of the local clock. The scale 150 * factors are defined in the timex.h header file. 151 * 152 * time_phase and time_freq are the phase increment and the frequency 153 * increment, respectively, of the kernel time variable. 154 * 155 * time_freq is set via ntp_adjtime() from a value stored in a file when 156 * the synchronization daemon is first started. Its value is retrieved 157 * via ntp_adjtime() and written to the file about once per hour by the 158 * daemon. 159 * 160 * time_adj is the adjustment added to the value of tick at each timer 161 * interrupt and is recomputed from time_phase and time_freq at each 162 * seconds rollover. 163 * 164 * time_reftime is the second's portion of the system time at the last 165 * call to ntp_adjtime(). It is used to adjust the time_freq variable 166 * and to increase the time_maxerror as the time since last update 167 * increases. 168 */ 169 int32_t time_phase = 0; /* phase offset (scaled us) */ 170 int32_t time_freq = 0; /* frequency offset (scaled ppm) */ 171 int32_t time_adj = 0; /* tick adjust (scaled 1 / hz) */ 172 int32_t time_reftime = 0; /* time at last adjustment (s) */ 173 174 /* 175 * The scale factors of the following variables are defined in the 176 * timex.h header file. 177 * 178 * pps_time contains the time at each calibration interval, as read by 179 * microtime(). pps_count counts the seconds of the calibration 180 * interval, the duration of which is nominally pps_shift in powers of 181 * two. 182 * 183 * pps_offset is the time offset produced by the time median filter 184 * pps_tf[], while pps_jitter is the dispersion (jitter) measured by 185 * this filter. 186 * 187 * pps_freq is the frequency offset produced by the frequency median 188 * filter pps_ff[], while pps_stabil is the dispersion (wander) measured 189 * by this filter. 190 * 191 * pps_usec is latched from a high resolution counter or external clock 192 * at pps_time. Here we want the hardware counter contents only, not the 193 * contents plus the time_tv.usec as usual. 194 * 195 * pps_valid counts the number of seconds since the last PPS update. It 196 * is used as a watchdog timer to disable the PPS discipline should the 197 * PPS signal be lost. 198 * 199 * pps_glitch counts the number of seconds since the beginning of an 200 * offset burst more than tick/2 from current nominal offset. It is used 201 * mainly to suppress error bursts due to priority conflicts between the 202 * PPS interrupt and timer interrupt. 203 * 204 * pps_intcnt counts the calibration intervals for use in the interval- 205 * adaptation algorithm. It's just too complicated for words. 206 */ 207 struct timeval pps_time; /* kernel time at last interval */ 208 int32_t pps_tf[] = {0, 0, 0}; /* pps time offset median filter (us) */ 209 int32_t pps_offset = 0; /* pps time offset (us) */ 210 int32_t pps_jitter = MAXTIME; /* time dispersion (jitter) (us) */ 211 int32_t pps_ff[] = {0, 0, 0}; /* pps frequency offset median filter */ 212 int32_t pps_freq = 0; /* frequency offset (scaled ppm) */ 213 int32_t pps_stabil = MAXFREQ; /* frequency dispersion (scaled ppm) */ 214 int32_t pps_usec = 0; /* microsec counter at last interval */ 215 int32_t pps_valid = PPS_VALID; /* pps signal watchdog counter */ 216 int32_t pps_glitch = 0; /* pps signal glitch counter */ 217 int32_t pps_count = 0; /* calibration interval counter (s) */ 218 int32_t pps_shift = PPS_SHIFT; /* interval duration (s) (shift) */ 219 int32_t pps_intcnt = 0; /* intervals at current duration */ 220 221 /* 222 * PPS signal quality monitors 223 * 224 * pps_jitcnt counts the seconds that have been discarded because the 225 * jitter measured by the time median filter exceeds the limit MAXTIME 226 * (100 us). 227 * 228 * pps_calcnt counts the frequency calibration intervals, which are 229 * variable from 4 s to 256 s. 230 * 231 * pps_errcnt counts the calibration intervals which have been discarded 232 * because the wander exceeds the limit MAXFREQ (100 ppm) or where the 233 * calibration interval jitter exceeds two ticks. 234 * 235 * pps_stbcnt counts the calibration intervals that have been discarded 236 * because the frequency wander exceeds the limit MAXFREQ / 4 (25 us). 237 */ 238 int32_t pps_jitcnt = 0; /* jitter limit exceeded */ 239 int32_t pps_calcnt = 0; /* calibration intervals */ 240 int32_t pps_errcnt = 0; /* calibration errors */ 241 int32_t pps_stbcnt = 0; /* stability limit exceeded */ 242 243 kcondvar_t lbolt_cv; 244 245 /* 246 * Hybrid lbolt implementation: 247 * 248 * The service historically provided by the lbolt and lbolt64 variables has 249 * been replaced by the ddi_get_lbolt() and ddi_get_lbolt64() routines, and the 250 * original symbols removed from the system. The once clock driven variables are 251 * now implemented in an event driven fashion, backed by gethrtime() coarsed to 252 * the appropriate clock resolution. The default event driven implementation is 253 * complemented by a cyclic driven one, active only during periods of intense 254 * activity around the DDI lbolt routines, when a lbolt specific cyclic is 255 * reprogramed to fire at a clock tick interval to serve consumers of lbolt who 256 * rely on the original low cost of consulting a memory position. 257 * 258 * The implementation uses the number of calls to these routines and the 259 * frequency of these to determine when to transition from event to cyclic 260 * driven and vice-versa. These values are kept on a per CPU basis for 261 * scalability reasons and to prevent CPUs from constantly invalidating a single 262 * cache line when modifying a global variable. The transition from event to 263 * cyclic mode happens once the thresholds are crossed, and activity on any CPU 264 * can cause such transition. 265 * 266 * The lbolt_hybrid function pointer is called by ddi_get_lbolt() and 267 * ddi_get_lbolt64(), and will point to lbolt_event_driven() or 268 * lbolt_cyclic_driven() according to the current mode. When the thresholds 269 * are exceeded, lbolt_event_driven() will reprogram the lbolt cyclic to 270 * fire at a nsec_per_tick interval and increment an internal variable at 271 * each firing. lbolt_hybrid will then point to lbolt_cyclic_driven(), which 272 * will simply return the value of such variable. lbolt_cyclic() will attempt 273 * to shut itself off at each threshold interval (sampling period for calls 274 * to the DDI lbolt routines), and return to the event driven mode, but will 275 * be prevented from doing so if lbolt_cyclic_driven() is being heavily used. 276 * 277 * lbolt_bootstrap is used during boot to serve lbolt consumers who don't wait 278 * for the cyclic subsystem to be intialized. 279 * 280 */ 281 int64_t lbolt_bootstrap(void); 282 int64_t lbolt_event_driven(void); 283 int64_t lbolt_cyclic_driven(void); 284 int64_t (*lbolt_hybrid)(void) = lbolt_bootstrap; 285 uint_t lbolt_ev_to_cyclic(caddr_t, caddr_t); 286 287 /* 288 * lbolt's cyclic, installed by clock_init(). 289 */ 290 static void lbolt_cyclic(void); 291 292 /* 293 * Tunable to keep lbolt in cyclic driven mode. This will prevent the system 294 * from switching back to event driven, once it reaches cyclic mode. 295 */ 296 static boolean_t lbolt_cyc_only = B_FALSE; 297 298 /* 299 * Cache aligned, per CPU structure with lbolt usage statistics. 300 */ 301 static lbolt_cpu_t *lb_cpu; 302 303 /* 304 * Single, cache aligned, structure with all the information required by 305 * the lbolt implementation. 306 */ 307 lbolt_info_t *lb_info; 308 309 310 int one_sec = 1; /* turned on once every second */ 311 static int fsflushcnt; /* counter for t_fsflushr */ 312 int dosynctodr = 1; /* patchable; enable/disable sync to TOD chip */ 313 int tod_needsync = 0; /* need to sync tod chip with software time */ 314 static int tod_broken = 0; /* clock chip doesn't work */ 315 time_t boot_time = 0; /* Boot time in seconds since 1970 */ 316 cyclic_id_t clock_cyclic; /* clock()'s cyclic_id */ 317 cyclic_id_t deadman_cyclic; /* deadman()'s cyclic_id */ 318 319 extern void clock_tick_schedule(int); 320 321 static int lgrp_ticks; /* counter to schedule lgrp load calcs */ 322 323 /* 324 * for tod fault detection 325 */ 326 #define TOD_REF_FREQ ((longlong_t)(NANOSEC)) 327 #define TOD_STALL_THRESHOLD (TOD_REF_FREQ * 3 / 2) 328 #define TOD_JUMP_THRESHOLD (TOD_REF_FREQ / 2) 329 #define TOD_FILTER_N 4 330 #define TOD_FILTER_SETTLE (4 * TOD_FILTER_N) 331 static int tod_faulted = TOD_NOFAULT; 332 333 static int tod_status_flag = 0; /* used by tod_validate() */ 334 335 static hrtime_t prev_set_tick = 0; /* gethrtime() prior to tod_set() */ 336 static time_t prev_set_tod = 0; /* tv_sec value passed to tod_set() */ 337 338 /* patchable via /etc/system */ 339 int tod_validate_enable = 1; 340 341 /* Diagnose/Limit messages about delay(9F) called from interrupt context */ 342 int delay_from_interrupt_diagnose = 0; 343 volatile uint32_t delay_from_interrupt_msg = 20; 344 345 /* 346 * On non-SPARC systems, TOD validation must be deferred until gethrtime 347 * returns non-zero values (after mach_clkinit's execution). 348 * On SPARC systems, it must be deferred until after hrtime_base 349 * and hres_last_tick are set (in the first invocation of hres_tick). 350 * Since in both cases the prerequisites occur before the invocation of 351 * tod_get() in clock(), the deferment is lifted there. 352 */ 353 static boolean_t tod_validate_deferred = B_TRUE; 354 355 /* 356 * tod_fault_table[] must be aligned with 357 * enum tod_fault_type in systm.h 358 */ 359 static char *tod_fault_table[] = { 360 "Reversed", /* TOD_REVERSED */ 361 "Stalled", /* TOD_STALLED */ 362 "Jumped", /* TOD_JUMPED */ 363 "Changed in Clock Rate", /* TOD_RATECHANGED */ 364 "Is Read-Only" /* TOD_RDONLY */ 365 /* 366 * no strings needed for TOD_NOFAULT 367 */ 368 }; 369 370 /* 371 * test hook for tod broken detection in tod_validate 372 */ 373 int tod_unit_test = 0; 374 time_t tod_test_injector; 375 376 #define CLOCK_ADJ_HIST_SIZE 4 377 378 static int adj_hist_entry; 379 380 int64_t clock_adj_hist[CLOCK_ADJ_HIST_SIZE]; 381 382 static void calcloadavg(int, uint64_t *); 383 static int genloadavg(struct loadavg_s *); 384 static void loadavg_update(); 385 386 void (*cmm_clock_callout)() = NULL; 387 void (*cpucaps_clock_callout)() = NULL; 388 389 extern clock_t clock_tick_proc_max; 390 391 static int64_t deadman_counter = 0; 392 393 static void 394 clock(void) 395 { 396 kthread_t *t; 397 uint_t nrunnable; 398 uint_t w_io; 399 cpu_t *cp; 400 cpupart_t *cpupart; 401 extern void set_freemem(); 402 void (*funcp)(); 403 int32_t ltemp; 404 int64_t lltemp; 405 int s; 406 int do_lgrp_load; 407 int i; 408 clock_t now = LBOLT_NO_ACCOUNT; /* current tick */ 409 410 if (panicstr) 411 return; 412 413 /* 414 * Make sure that 'freemem' do not drift too far from the truth 415 */ 416 set_freemem(); 417 418 419 /* 420 * Before the section which is repeated is executed, we do 421 * the time delta processing which occurs every clock tick 422 * 423 * There is additional processing which happens every time 424 * the nanosecond counter rolls over which is described 425 * below - see the section which begins with : if (one_sec) 426 * 427 * This section marks the beginning of the precision-kernel 428 * code fragment. 429 * 430 * First, compute the phase adjustment. If the low-order bits 431 * (time_phase) of the update overflow, bump the higher order 432 * bits (time_update). 433 */ 434 time_phase += time_adj; 435 if (time_phase <= -FINEUSEC) { 436 ltemp = -time_phase / SCALE_PHASE; 437 time_phase += ltemp * SCALE_PHASE; 438 s = hr_clock_lock(); 439 timedelta -= ltemp * (NANOSEC/MICROSEC); 440 hr_clock_unlock(s); 441 } else if (time_phase >= FINEUSEC) { 442 ltemp = time_phase / SCALE_PHASE; 443 time_phase -= ltemp * SCALE_PHASE; 444 s = hr_clock_lock(); 445 timedelta += ltemp * (NANOSEC/MICROSEC); 446 hr_clock_unlock(s); 447 } 448 449 /* 450 * End of precision-kernel code fragment which is processed 451 * every timer interrupt. 452 * 453 * Continue with the interrupt processing as scheduled. 454 */ 455 /* 456 * Count the number of runnable threads and the number waiting 457 * for some form of I/O to complete -- gets added to 458 * sysinfo.waiting. To know the state of the system, must add 459 * wait counts from all CPUs. Also add up the per-partition 460 * statistics. 461 */ 462 w_io = 0; 463 nrunnable = 0; 464 465 /* 466 * keep track of when to update lgrp/part loads 467 */ 468 469 do_lgrp_load = 0; 470 if (lgrp_ticks++ >= hz / 10) { 471 lgrp_ticks = 0; 472 do_lgrp_load = 1; 473 } 474 475 if (one_sec) { 476 loadavg_update(); 477 deadman_counter++; 478 } 479 480 /* 481 * First count the threads waiting on kpreempt queues in each 482 * CPU partition. 483 */ 484 485 cpupart = cp_list_head; 486 do { 487 uint_t cpupart_nrunnable = cpupart->cp_kp_queue.disp_nrunnable; 488 489 cpupart->cp_updates++; 490 nrunnable += cpupart_nrunnable; 491 cpupart->cp_nrunnable_cum += cpupart_nrunnable; 492 if (one_sec) { 493 cpupart->cp_nrunning = 0; 494 cpupart->cp_nrunnable = cpupart_nrunnable; 495 } 496 } while ((cpupart = cpupart->cp_next) != cp_list_head); 497 498 499 /* Now count the per-CPU statistics. */ 500 cp = cpu_list; 501 do { 502 uint_t cpu_nrunnable = cp->cpu_disp->disp_nrunnable; 503 504 nrunnable += cpu_nrunnable; 505 cpupart = cp->cpu_part; 506 cpupart->cp_nrunnable_cum += cpu_nrunnable; 507 if (one_sec) { 508 cpupart->cp_nrunnable += cpu_nrunnable; 509 /* 510 * Update user, system, and idle cpu times. 511 */ 512 cpupart->cp_nrunning++; 513 /* 514 * w_io is used to update sysinfo.waiting during 515 * one_second processing below. Only gather w_io 516 * information when we walk the list of cpus if we're 517 * going to perform one_second processing. 518 */ 519 w_io += CPU_STATS(cp, sys.iowait); 520 } 521 522 if (one_sec && (cp->cpu_flags & CPU_EXISTS)) { 523 int i, load, change; 524 hrtime_t intracct, intrused; 525 const hrtime_t maxnsec = 1000000000; 526 const int precision = 100; 527 528 /* 529 * Estimate interrupt load on this cpu each second. 530 * Computes cpu_intrload as %utilization (0-99). 531 */ 532 533 /* add up interrupt time from all micro states */ 534 for (intracct = 0, i = 0; i < NCMSTATES; i++) 535 intracct += cp->cpu_intracct[i]; 536 scalehrtime(&intracct); 537 538 /* compute nsec used in the past second */ 539 intrused = intracct - cp->cpu_intrlast; 540 cp->cpu_intrlast = intracct; 541 542 /* limit the value for safety (and the first pass) */ 543 if (intrused >= maxnsec) 544 intrused = maxnsec - 1; 545 546 /* calculate %time in interrupt */ 547 load = (precision * intrused) / maxnsec; 548 ASSERT(load >= 0 && load < precision); 549 change = cp->cpu_intrload - load; 550 551 /* jump to new max, or decay the old max */ 552 if (change < 0) 553 cp->cpu_intrload = load; 554 else if (change > 0) 555 cp->cpu_intrload -= (change + 3) / 4; 556 557 DTRACE_PROBE3(cpu_intrload, 558 cpu_t *, cp, 559 hrtime_t, intracct, 560 hrtime_t, intrused); 561 } 562 563 if (do_lgrp_load && 564 (cp->cpu_flags & CPU_EXISTS)) { 565 /* 566 * When updating the lgroup's load average, 567 * account for the thread running on the CPU. 568 * If the CPU is the current one, then we need 569 * to account for the underlying thread which 570 * got the clock interrupt not the thread that is 571 * handling the interrupt and caculating the load 572 * average 573 */ 574 t = cp->cpu_thread; 575 if (CPU == cp) 576 t = t->t_intr; 577 578 /* 579 * Account for the load average for this thread if 580 * it isn't the idle thread or it is on the interrupt 581 * stack and not the current CPU handling the clock 582 * interrupt 583 */ 584 if ((t && t != cp->cpu_idle_thread) || (CPU != cp && 585 CPU_ON_INTR(cp))) { 586 if (t->t_lpl == cp->cpu_lpl) { 587 /* local thread */ 588 cpu_nrunnable++; 589 } else { 590 /* 591 * This is a remote thread, charge it 592 * against its home lgroup. Note that 593 * we notice that a thread is remote 594 * only if it's currently executing. 595 * This is a reasonable approximation, 596 * since queued remote threads are rare. 597 * Note also that if we didn't charge 598 * it to its home lgroup, remote 599 * execution would often make a system 600 * appear balanced even though it was 601 * not, and thread placement/migration 602 * would often not be done correctly. 603 */ 604 lgrp_loadavg(t->t_lpl, 605 LGRP_LOADAVG_IN_THREAD_MAX, 0); 606 } 607 } 608 lgrp_loadavg(cp->cpu_lpl, 609 cpu_nrunnable * LGRP_LOADAVG_IN_THREAD_MAX, 1); 610 } 611 } while ((cp = cp->cpu_next) != cpu_list); 612 613 clock_tick_schedule(one_sec); 614 615 /* 616 * Check for a callout that needs be called from the clock 617 * thread to support the membership protocol in a clustered 618 * system. Copy the function pointer so that we can reset 619 * this to NULL if needed. 620 */ 621 if ((funcp = cmm_clock_callout) != NULL) 622 (*funcp)(); 623 624 if ((funcp = cpucaps_clock_callout) != NULL) 625 (*funcp)(); 626 627 /* 628 * Wakeup the cageout thread waiters once per second. 629 */ 630 if (one_sec) 631 kcage_tick(); 632 633 if (one_sec) { 634 635 int drift, absdrift; 636 timestruc_t tod; 637 int s; 638 639 /* 640 * Beginning of precision-kernel code fragment executed 641 * every second. 642 * 643 * On rollover of the second the phase adjustment to be 644 * used for the next second is calculated. Also, the 645 * maximum error is increased by the tolerance. If the 646 * PPS frequency discipline code is present, the phase is 647 * increased to compensate for the CPU clock oscillator 648 * frequency error. 649 * 650 * On a 32-bit machine and given parameters in the timex.h 651 * header file, the maximum phase adjustment is +-512 ms 652 * and maximum frequency offset is (a tad less than) 653 * +-512 ppm. On a 64-bit machine, you shouldn't need to ask. 654 */ 655 time_maxerror += time_tolerance / SCALE_USEC; 656 657 /* 658 * Leap second processing. If in leap-insert state at 659 * the end of the day, the system clock is set back one 660 * second; if in leap-delete state, the system clock is 661 * set ahead one second. The microtime() routine or 662 * external clock driver will insure that reported time 663 * is always monotonic. The ugly divides should be 664 * replaced. 665 */ 666 switch (time_state) { 667 668 case TIME_OK: 669 if (time_status & STA_INS) 670 time_state = TIME_INS; 671 else if (time_status & STA_DEL) 672 time_state = TIME_DEL; 673 break; 674 675 case TIME_INS: 676 if (hrestime.tv_sec % 86400 == 0) { 677 s = hr_clock_lock(); 678 hrestime.tv_sec--; 679 hr_clock_unlock(s); 680 time_state = TIME_OOP; 681 } 682 break; 683 684 case TIME_DEL: 685 if ((hrestime.tv_sec + 1) % 86400 == 0) { 686 s = hr_clock_lock(); 687 hrestime.tv_sec++; 688 hr_clock_unlock(s); 689 time_state = TIME_WAIT; 690 } 691 break; 692 693 case TIME_OOP: 694 time_state = TIME_WAIT; 695 break; 696 697 case TIME_WAIT: 698 if (!(time_status & (STA_INS | STA_DEL))) 699 time_state = TIME_OK; 700 default: 701 break; 702 } 703 704 /* 705 * Compute the phase adjustment for the next second. In 706 * PLL mode, the offset is reduced by a fixed factor 707 * times the time constant. In FLL mode the offset is 708 * used directly. In either mode, the maximum phase 709 * adjustment for each second is clamped so as to spread 710 * the adjustment over not more than the number of 711 * seconds between updates. 712 */ 713 if (time_offset == 0) 714 time_adj = 0; 715 else if (time_offset < 0) { 716 lltemp = -time_offset; 717 if (!(time_status & STA_FLL)) { 718 if ((1 << time_constant) >= SCALE_KG) 719 lltemp *= (1 << time_constant) / 720 SCALE_KG; 721 else 722 lltemp = (lltemp / SCALE_KG) >> 723 time_constant; 724 } 725 if (lltemp > (MAXPHASE / MINSEC) * SCALE_UPDATE) 726 lltemp = (MAXPHASE / MINSEC) * SCALE_UPDATE; 727 time_offset += lltemp; 728 time_adj = -(lltemp * SCALE_PHASE) / hz / SCALE_UPDATE; 729 } else { 730 lltemp = time_offset; 731 if (!(time_status & STA_FLL)) { 732 if ((1 << time_constant) >= SCALE_KG) 733 lltemp *= (1 << time_constant) / 734 SCALE_KG; 735 else 736 lltemp = (lltemp / SCALE_KG) >> 737 time_constant; 738 } 739 if (lltemp > (MAXPHASE / MINSEC) * SCALE_UPDATE) 740 lltemp = (MAXPHASE / MINSEC) * SCALE_UPDATE; 741 time_offset -= lltemp; 742 time_adj = (lltemp * SCALE_PHASE) / hz / SCALE_UPDATE; 743 } 744 745 /* 746 * Compute the frequency estimate and additional phase 747 * adjustment due to frequency error for the next 748 * second. When the PPS signal is engaged, gnaw on the 749 * watchdog counter and update the frequency computed by 750 * the pll and the PPS signal. 751 */ 752 pps_valid++; 753 if (pps_valid == PPS_VALID) { 754 pps_jitter = MAXTIME; 755 pps_stabil = MAXFREQ; 756 time_status &= ~(STA_PPSSIGNAL | STA_PPSJITTER | 757 STA_PPSWANDER | STA_PPSERROR); 758 } 759 lltemp = time_freq + pps_freq; 760 761 if (lltemp) 762 time_adj += (lltemp * SCALE_PHASE) / (SCALE_USEC * hz); 763 764 /* 765 * End of precision kernel-code fragment 766 * 767 * The section below should be modified if we are planning 768 * to use NTP for synchronization. 769 * 770 * Note: the clock synchronization code now assumes 771 * the following: 772 * - if dosynctodr is 1, then compute the drift between 773 * the tod chip and software time and adjust one or 774 * the other depending on the circumstances 775 * 776 * - if dosynctodr is 0, then the tod chip is independent 777 * of the software clock and should not be adjusted, 778 * but allowed to free run. this allows NTP to sync. 779 * hrestime without any interference from the tod chip. 780 */ 781 782 tod_validate_deferred = B_FALSE; 783 mutex_enter(&tod_lock); 784 tod = tod_get(); 785 drift = tod.tv_sec - hrestime.tv_sec; 786 absdrift = (drift >= 0) ? drift : -drift; 787 if (tod_needsync || absdrift > 1) { 788 int s; 789 if (absdrift > 2) { 790 if (!tod_broken && tod_faulted == TOD_NOFAULT) { 791 s = hr_clock_lock(); 792 hrestime = tod; 793 membar_enter(); /* hrestime visible */ 794 timedelta = 0; 795 timechanged++; 796 tod_needsync = 0; 797 hr_clock_unlock(s); 798 callout_hrestime(); 799 800 } 801 } else { 802 if (tod_needsync || !dosynctodr) { 803 gethrestime(&tod); 804 tod_set(tod); 805 s = hr_clock_lock(); 806 if (timedelta == 0) 807 tod_needsync = 0; 808 hr_clock_unlock(s); 809 } else { 810 /* 811 * If the drift is 2 seconds on the 812 * money, then the TOD is adjusting 813 * the clock; record that. 814 */ 815 clock_adj_hist[adj_hist_entry++ % 816 CLOCK_ADJ_HIST_SIZE] = now; 817 s = hr_clock_lock(); 818 timedelta = (int64_t)drift*NANOSEC; 819 hr_clock_unlock(s); 820 } 821 } 822 } 823 one_sec = 0; 824 time = gethrestime_sec(); /* for crusty old kmem readers */ 825 mutex_exit(&tod_lock); 826 827 /* 828 * Some drivers still depend on this... XXX 829 */ 830 cv_broadcast(&lbolt_cv); 831 832 vminfo.freemem += freemem; 833 { 834 pgcnt_t maxswap, resv, free; 835 pgcnt_t avail = 836 MAX((spgcnt_t)(availrmem - swapfs_minfree), 0); 837 838 maxswap = k_anoninfo.ani_mem_resv + 839 k_anoninfo.ani_max +avail; 840 /* Update ani_free */ 841 set_anoninfo(); 842 free = k_anoninfo.ani_free + avail; 843 resv = k_anoninfo.ani_phys_resv + 844 k_anoninfo.ani_mem_resv; 845 846 vminfo.swap_resv += resv; 847 /* number of reserved and allocated pages */ 848 #ifdef DEBUG 849 if (maxswap < free) 850 cmn_err(CE_WARN, "clock: maxswap < free"); 851 if (maxswap < resv) 852 cmn_err(CE_WARN, "clock: maxswap < resv"); 853 #endif 854 vminfo.swap_alloc += maxswap - free; 855 vminfo.swap_avail += maxswap - resv; 856 vminfo.swap_free += free; 857 } 858 vminfo.updates++; 859 if (nrunnable) { 860 sysinfo.runque += nrunnable; 861 sysinfo.runocc++; 862 } 863 if (nswapped) { 864 sysinfo.swpque += nswapped; 865 sysinfo.swpocc++; 866 } 867 sysinfo.waiting += w_io; 868 sysinfo.updates++; 869 870 /* 871 * Wake up fsflush to write out DELWRI 872 * buffers, dirty pages and other cached 873 * administrative data, e.g. inodes. 874 */ 875 if (--fsflushcnt <= 0) { 876 fsflushcnt = tune.t_fsflushr; 877 cv_signal(&fsflush_cv); 878 } 879 880 vmmeter(); 881 calcloadavg(genloadavg(&loadavg), hp_avenrun); 882 for (i = 0; i < 3; i++) 883 /* 884 * At the moment avenrun[] can only hold 31 885 * bits of load average as it is a signed 886 * int in the API. We need to ensure that 887 * hp_avenrun[i] >> (16 - FSHIFT) will not be 888 * too large. If it is, we put the largest value 889 * that we can use into avenrun[i]. This is 890 * kludgey, but about all we can do until we 891 * avenrun[] is declared as an array of uint64[] 892 */ 893 if (hp_avenrun[i] < ((uint64_t)1<<(31+16-FSHIFT))) 894 avenrun[i] = (int32_t)(hp_avenrun[i] >> 895 (16 - FSHIFT)); 896 else 897 avenrun[i] = 0x7fffffff; 898 899 cpupart = cp_list_head; 900 do { 901 calcloadavg(genloadavg(&cpupart->cp_loadavg), 902 cpupart->cp_hp_avenrun); 903 } while ((cpupart = cpupart->cp_next) != cp_list_head); 904 905 /* 906 * Wake up the swapper thread if necessary. 907 */ 908 if (runin || 909 (runout && (avefree < desfree || wake_sched_sec))) { 910 t = &t0; 911 thread_lock(t); 912 if (t->t_state == TS_STOPPED) { 913 runin = runout = 0; 914 wake_sched_sec = 0; 915 t->t_whystop = 0; 916 t->t_whatstop = 0; 917 t->t_schedflag &= ~TS_ALLSTART; 918 THREAD_TRANSITION(t); 919 setfrontdq(t); 920 } 921 thread_unlock(t); 922 } 923 } 924 925 /* 926 * Wake up the swapper if any high priority swapped-out threads 927 * became runable during the last tick. 928 */ 929 if (wake_sched) { 930 t = &t0; 931 thread_lock(t); 932 if (t->t_state == TS_STOPPED) { 933 runin = runout = 0; 934 wake_sched = 0; 935 t->t_whystop = 0; 936 t->t_whatstop = 0; 937 t->t_schedflag &= ~TS_ALLSTART; 938 THREAD_TRANSITION(t); 939 setfrontdq(t); 940 } 941 thread_unlock(t); 942 } 943 } 944 945 void 946 clock_init(void) 947 { 948 cyc_handler_t clk_hdlr, lbolt_hdlr; 949 cyc_time_t clk_when, lbolt_when; 950 int i, sz; 951 intptr_t buf; 952 953 /* 954 * Setup handler and timer for the clock cyclic. 955 */ 956 clk_hdlr.cyh_func = (cyc_func_t)clock; 957 clk_hdlr.cyh_level = CY_LOCK_LEVEL; 958 clk_hdlr.cyh_arg = NULL; 959 960 clk_when.cyt_when = 0; 961 clk_when.cyt_interval = nsec_per_tick; 962 963 /* 964 * The lbolt cyclic will be reprogramed to fire at a nsec_per_tick 965 * interval to satisfy performance needs of the DDI lbolt consumers. 966 * It is off by default. 967 */ 968 lbolt_hdlr.cyh_func = (cyc_func_t)lbolt_cyclic; 969 lbolt_hdlr.cyh_level = CY_LOCK_LEVEL; 970 lbolt_hdlr.cyh_arg = NULL; 971 972 lbolt_when.cyt_interval = nsec_per_tick; 973 974 /* 975 * Allocate cache line aligned space for the per CPU lbolt data and 976 * lbolt info structures, and initialize them with their default 977 * values. Note that these structures are also cache line sized. 978 */ 979 sz = sizeof (lbolt_info_t) + CPU_CACHE_COHERENCE_SIZE; 980 buf = (intptr_t)kmem_zalloc(sz, KM_SLEEP); 981 lb_info = (lbolt_info_t *)P2ROUNDUP(buf, CPU_CACHE_COHERENCE_SIZE); 982 983 if (hz != HZ_DEFAULT) 984 lb_info->lbi_thresh_interval = LBOLT_THRESH_INTERVAL * 985 hz/HZ_DEFAULT; 986 else 987 lb_info->lbi_thresh_interval = LBOLT_THRESH_INTERVAL; 988 989 lb_info->lbi_thresh_calls = LBOLT_THRESH_CALLS; 990 991 sz = (sizeof (lbolt_cpu_t) * max_ncpus) + CPU_CACHE_COHERENCE_SIZE; 992 buf = (intptr_t)kmem_zalloc(sz, KM_SLEEP); 993 lb_cpu = (lbolt_cpu_t *)P2ROUNDUP(buf, CPU_CACHE_COHERENCE_SIZE); 994 995 for (i = 0; i < max_ncpus; i++) 996 lb_cpu[i].lbc_counter = lb_info->lbi_thresh_calls; 997 998 /* 999 * Install the softint used to switch between event and cyclic driven 1000 * lbolt. We use a soft interrupt to make sure the context of the 1001 * cyclic reprogram call is safe. 1002 */ 1003 lbolt_softint_add(); 1004 1005 /* 1006 * Since the hybrid lbolt implementation is based on a hardware counter 1007 * that is reset at every hardware reboot and that we'd like to have 1008 * the lbolt value starting at zero after both a hardware and a fast 1009 * reboot, we calculate the number of clock ticks the system's been up 1010 * and store it in the lbi_debug_time field of the lbolt info structure. 1011 * The value of this field will be subtracted from lbolt before 1012 * returning it. 1013 */ 1014 lb_info->lbi_internal = lb_info->lbi_debug_time = 1015 (gethrtime()/nsec_per_tick); 1016 1017 /* 1018 * lbolt_hybrid points at lbolt_bootstrap until now. The LBOLT_* macros 1019 * and lbolt_debug_{enter,return} use this value as an indication that 1020 * the initializaion above hasn't been completed. Setting lbolt_hybrid 1021 * to either lbolt_{cyclic,event}_driven here signals those code paths 1022 * that the lbolt related structures can be used. 1023 */ 1024 if (lbolt_cyc_only) { 1025 lbolt_when.cyt_when = 0; 1026 lbolt_hybrid = lbolt_cyclic_driven; 1027 } else { 1028 lbolt_when.cyt_when = CY_INFINITY; 1029 lbolt_hybrid = lbolt_event_driven; 1030 } 1031 1032 /* 1033 * Grab cpu_lock and install all three cyclics. 1034 */ 1035 mutex_enter(&cpu_lock); 1036 1037 clock_cyclic = cyclic_add(&clk_hdlr, &clk_when); 1038 lb_info->id.lbi_cyclic_id = cyclic_add(&lbolt_hdlr, &lbolt_when); 1039 1040 mutex_exit(&cpu_lock); 1041 } 1042 1043 /* 1044 * Called before calcloadavg to get 10-sec moving loadavg together 1045 */ 1046 1047 static int 1048 genloadavg(struct loadavg_s *avgs) 1049 { 1050 int avg; 1051 int spos; /* starting position */ 1052 int cpos; /* moving current position */ 1053 int i; 1054 int slen; 1055 hrtime_t hr_avg; 1056 1057 /* 10-second snapshot, calculate first positon */ 1058 if (avgs->lg_len == 0) { 1059 return (0); 1060 } 1061 slen = avgs->lg_len < S_MOVAVG_SZ ? avgs->lg_len : S_MOVAVG_SZ; 1062 1063 spos = (avgs->lg_cur - 1) >= 0 ? avgs->lg_cur - 1 : 1064 S_LOADAVG_SZ + (avgs->lg_cur - 1); 1065 for (i = hr_avg = 0; i < slen; i++) { 1066 cpos = (spos - i) >= 0 ? spos - i : S_LOADAVG_SZ + (spos - i); 1067 hr_avg += avgs->lg_loads[cpos]; 1068 } 1069 1070 hr_avg = hr_avg / slen; 1071 avg = hr_avg / (NANOSEC / LGRP_LOADAVG_IN_THREAD_MAX); 1072 1073 return (avg); 1074 } 1075 1076 /* 1077 * Run every second from clock () to update the loadavg count available to the 1078 * system and cpu-partitions. 1079 * 1080 * This works by sampling the previous usr, sys, wait time elapsed, 1081 * computing a delta, and adding that delta to the elapsed usr, sys, 1082 * wait increase. 1083 */ 1084 1085 static void 1086 loadavg_update() 1087 { 1088 cpu_t *cp; 1089 cpupart_t *cpupart; 1090 hrtime_t cpu_total; 1091 int prev; 1092 1093 cp = cpu_list; 1094 loadavg.lg_total = 0; 1095 1096 /* 1097 * first pass totals up per-cpu statistics for system and cpu 1098 * partitions 1099 */ 1100 1101 do { 1102 struct loadavg_s *lavg; 1103 1104 lavg = &cp->cpu_loadavg; 1105 1106 cpu_total = cp->cpu_acct[CMS_USER] + 1107 cp->cpu_acct[CMS_SYSTEM] + cp->cpu_waitrq; 1108 /* compute delta against last total */ 1109 scalehrtime(&cpu_total); 1110 prev = (lavg->lg_cur - 1) >= 0 ? lavg->lg_cur - 1 : 1111 S_LOADAVG_SZ + (lavg->lg_cur - 1); 1112 if (lavg->lg_loads[prev] <= 0) { 1113 lavg->lg_loads[lavg->lg_cur] = cpu_total; 1114 cpu_total = 0; 1115 } else { 1116 lavg->lg_loads[lavg->lg_cur] = cpu_total; 1117 cpu_total = cpu_total - lavg->lg_loads[prev]; 1118 if (cpu_total < 0) 1119 cpu_total = 0; 1120 } 1121 1122 lavg->lg_cur = (lavg->lg_cur + 1) % S_LOADAVG_SZ; 1123 lavg->lg_len = (lavg->lg_len + 1) < S_LOADAVG_SZ ? 1124 lavg->lg_len + 1 : S_LOADAVG_SZ; 1125 1126 loadavg.lg_total += cpu_total; 1127 cp->cpu_part->cp_loadavg.lg_total += cpu_total; 1128 1129 } while ((cp = cp->cpu_next) != cpu_list); 1130 1131 loadavg.lg_loads[loadavg.lg_cur] = loadavg.lg_total; 1132 loadavg.lg_cur = (loadavg.lg_cur + 1) % S_LOADAVG_SZ; 1133 loadavg.lg_len = (loadavg.lg_len + 1) < S_LOADAVG_SZ ? 1134 loadavg.lg_len + 1 : S_LOADAVG_SZ; 1135 /* 1136 * Second pass updates counts 1137 */ 1138 cpupart = cp_list_head; 1139 1140 do { 1141 struct loadavg_s *lavg; 1142 1143 lavg = &cpupart->cp_loadavg; 1144 lavg->lg_loads[lavg->lg_cur] = lavg->lg_total; 1145 lavg->lg_total = 0; 1146 lavg->lg_cur = (lavg->lg_cur + 1) % S_LOADAVG_SZ; 1147 lavg->lg_len = (lavg->lg_len + 1) < S_LOADAVG_SZ ? 1148 lavg->lg_len + 1 : S_LOADAVG_SZ; 1149 1150 } while ((cpupart = cpupart->cp_next) != cp_list_head); 1151 1152 } 1153 1154 /* 1155 * clock_update() - local clock update 1156 * 1157 * This routine is called by ntp_adjtime() to update the local clock 1158 * phase and frequency. The implementation is of an 1159 * adaptive-parameter, hybrid phase/frequency-lock loop (PLL/FLL). The 1160 * routine computes new time and frequency offset estimates for each 1161 * call. The PPS signal itself determines the new time offset, 1162 * instead of the calling argument. Presumably, calls to 1163 * ntp_adjtime() occur only when the caller believes the local clock 1164 * is valid within some bound (+-128 ms with NTP). If the caller's 1165 * time is far different than the PPS time, an argument will ensue, 1166 * and it's not clear who will lose. 1167 * 1168 * For uncompensated quartz crystal oscillatores and nominal update 1169 * intervals less than 1024 s, operation should be in phase-lock mode 1170 * (STA_FLL = 0), where the loop is disciplined to phase. For update 1171 * intervals greater than this, operation should be in frequency-lock 1172 * mode (STA_FLL = 1), where the loop is disciplined to frequency. 1173 * 1174 * Note: mutex(&tod_lock) is in effect. 1175 */ 1176 void 1177 clock_update(int offset) 1178 { 1179 int ltemp, mtemp, s; 1180 1181 ASSERT(MUTEX_HELD(&tod_lock)); 1182 1183 if (!(time_status & STA_PLL) && !(time_status & STA_PPSTIME)) 1184 return; 1185 ltemp = offset; 1186 if ((time_status & STA_PPSTIME) && (time_status & STA_PPSSIGNAL)) 1187 ltemp = pps_offset; 1188 1189 /* 1190 * Scale the phase adjustment and clamp to the operating range. 1191 */ 1192 if (ltemp > MAXPHASE) 1193 time_offset = MAXPHASE * SCALE_UPDATE; 1194 else if (ltemp < -MAXPHASE) 1195 time_offset = -(MAXPHASE * SCALE_UPDATE); 1196 else 1197 time_offset = ltemp * SCALE_UPDATE; 1198 1199 /* 1200 * Select whether the frequency is to be controlled and in which 1201 * mode (PLL or FLL). Clamp to the operating range. Ugly 1202 * multiply/divide should be replaced someday. 1203 */ 1204 if (time_status & STA_FREQHOLD || time_reftime == 0) 1205 time_reftime = hrestime.tv_sec; 1206 1207 mtemp = hrestime.tv_sec - time_reftime; 1208 time_reftime = hrestime.tv_sec; 1209 1210 if (time_status & STA_FLL) { 1211 if (mtemp >= MINSEC) { 1212 ltemp = ((time_offset / mtemp) * (SCALE_USEC / 1213 SCALE_UPDATE)); 1214 if (ltemp) 1215 time_freq += ltemp / SCALE_KH; 1216 } 1217 } else { 1218 if (mtemp < MAXSEC) { 1219 ltemp *= mtemp; 1220 if (ltemp) 1221 time_freq += (int)(((int64_t)ltemp * 1222 SCALE_USEC) / SCALE_KF) 1223 / (1 << (time_constant * 2)); 1224 } 1225 } 1226 if (time_freq > time_tolerance) 1227 time_freq = time_tolerance; 1228 else if (time_freq < -time_tolerance) 1229 time_freq = -time_tolerance; 1230 1231 s = hr_clock_lock(); 1232 tod_needsync = 1; 1233 hr_clock_unlock(s); 1234 } 1235 1236 /* 1237 * ddi_hardpps() - discipline CPU clock oscillator to external PPS signal 1238 * 1239 * This routine is called at each PPS interrupt in order to discipline 1240 * the CPU clock oscillator to the PPS signal. It measures the PPS phase 1241 * and leaves it in a handy spot for the clock() routine. It 1242 * integrates successive PPS phase differences and calculates the 1243 * frequency offset. This is used in clock() to discipline the CPU 1244 * clock oscillator so that intrinsic frequency error is cancelled out. 1245 * The code requires the caller to capture the time and hardware counter 1246 * value at the on-time PPS signal transition. 1247 * 1248 * Note that, on some Unix systems, this routine runs at an interrupt 1249 * priority level higher than the timer interrupt routine clock(). 1250 * Therefore, the variables used are distinct from the clock() 1251 * variables, except for certain exceptions: The PPS frequency pps_freq 1252 * and phase pps_offset variables are determined by this routine and 1253 * updated atomically. The time_tolerance variable can be considered a 1254 * constant, since it is infrequently changed, and then only when the 1255 * PPS signal is disabled. The watchdog counter pps_valid is updated 1256 * once per second by clock() and is atomically cleared in this 1257 * routine. 1258 * 1259 * tvp is the time of the last tick; usec is a microsecond count since the 1260 * last tick. 1261 * 1262 * Note: In Solaris systems, the tick value is actually given by 1263 * usec_per_tick. This is called from the serial driver cdintr(), 1264 * or equivalent, at a high PIL. Because the kernel keeps a 1265 * highresolution time, the following code can accept either 1266 * the traditional argument pair, or the current highres timestamp 1267 * in tvp and zero in usec. 1268 */ 1269 void 1270 ddi_hardpps(struct timeval *tvp, int usec) 1271 { 1272 int u_usec, v_usec, bigtick; 1273 time_t cal_sec; 1274 int cal_usec; 1275 1276 /* 1277 * An occasional glitch can be produced when the PPS interrupt 1278 * occurs in the clock() routine before the time variable is 1279 * updated. Here the offset is discarded when the difference 1280 * between it and the last one is greater than tick/2, but not 1281 * if the interval since the first discard exceeds 30 s. 1282 */ 1283 time_status |= STA_PPSSIGNAL; 1284 time_status &= ~(STA_PPSJITTER | STA_PPSWANDER | STA_PPSERROR); 1285 pps_valid = 0; 1286 u_usec = -tvp->tv_usec; 1287 if (u_usec < -(MICROSEC/2)) 1288 u_usec += MICROSEC; 1289 v_usec = pps_offset - u_usec; 1290 if (v_usec < 0) 1291 v_usec = -v_usec; 1292 if (v_usec > (usec_per_tick >> 1)) { 1293 if (pps_glitch > MAXGLITCH) { 1294 pps_glitch = 0; 1295 pps_tf[2] = u_usec; 1296 pps_tf[1] = u_usec; 1297 } else { 1298 pps_glitch++; 1299 u_usec = pps_offset; 1300 } 1301 } else 1302 pps_glitch = 0; 1303 1304 /* 1305 * A three-stage median filter is used to help deglitch the pps 1306 * time. The median sample becomes the time offset estimate; the 1307 * difference between the other two samples becomes the time 1308 * dispersion (jitter) estimate. 1309 */ 1310 pps_tf[2] = pps_tf[1]; 1311 pps_tf[1] = pps_tf[0]; 1312 pps_tf[0] = u_usec; 1313 if (pps_tf[0] > pps_tf[1]) { 1314 if (pps_tf[1] > pps_tf[2]) { 1315 pps_offset = pps_tf[1]; /* 0 1 2 */ 1316 v_usec = pps_tf[0] - pps_tf[2]; 1317 } else if (pps_tf[2] > pps_tf[0]) { 1318 pps_offset = pps_tf[0]; /* 2 0 1 */ 1319 v_usec = pps_tf[2] - pps_tf[1]; 1320 } else { 1321 pps_offset = pps_tf[2]; /* 0 2 1 */ 1322 v_usec = pps_tf[0] - pps_tf[1]; 1323 } 1324 } else { 1325 if (pps_tf[1] < pps_tf[2]) { 1326 pps_offset = pps_tf[1]; /* 2 1 0 */ 1327 v_usec = pps_tf[2] - pps_tf[0]; 1328 } else if (pps_tf[2] < pps_tf[0]) { 1329 pps_offset = pps_tf[0]; /* 1 0 2 */ 1330 v_usec = pps_tf[1] - pps_tf[2]; 1331 } else { 1332 pps_offset = pps_tf[2]; /* 1 2 0 */ 1333 v_usec = pps_tf[1] - pps_tf[0]; 1334 } 1335 } 1336 if (v_usec > MAXTIME) 1337 pps_jitcnt++; 1338 v_usec = (v_usec << PPS_AVG) - pps_jitter; 1339 pps_jitter += v_usec / (1 << PPS_AVG); 1340 if (pps_jitter > (MAXTIME >> 1)) 1341 time_status |= STA_PPSJITTER; 1342 1343 /* 1344 * During the calibration interval adjust the starting time when 1345 * the tick overflows. At the end of the interval compute the 1346 * duration of the interval and the difference of the hardware 1347 * counters at the beginning and end of the interval. This code 1348 * is deliciously complicated by the fact valid differences may 1349 * exceed the value of tick when using long calibration 1350 * intervals and small ticks. Note that the counter can be 1351 * greater than tick if caught at just the wrong instant, but 1352 * the values returned and used here are correct. 1353 */ 1354 bigtick = (int)usec_per_tick * SCALE_USEC; 1355 pps_usec -= pps_freq; 1356 if (pps_usec >= bigtick) 1357 pps_usec -= bigtick; 1358 if (pps_usec < 0) 1359 pps_usec += bigtick; 1360 pps_time.tv_sec++; 1361 pps_count++; 1362 if (pps_count < (1 << pps_shift)) 1363 return; 1364 pps_count = 0; 1365 pps_calcnt++; 1366 u_usec = usec * SCALE_USEC; 1367 v_usec = pps_usec - u_usec; 1368 if (v_usec >= bigtick >> 1) 1369 v_usec -= bigtick; 1370 if (v_usec < -(bigtick >> 1)) 1371 v_usec += bigtick; 1372 if (v_usec < 0) 1373 v_usec = -(-v_usec >> pps_shift); 1374 else 1375 v_usec = v_usec >> pps_shift; 1376 pps_usec = u_usec; 1377 cal_sec = tvp->tv_sec; 1378 cal_usec = tvp->tv_usec; 1379 cal_sec -= pps_time.tv_sec; 1380 cal_usec -= pps_time.tv_usec; 1381 if (cal_usec < 0) { 1382 cal_usec += MICROSEC; 1383 cal_sec--; 1384 } 1385 pps_time = *tvp; 1386 1387 /* 1388 * Check for lost interrupts, noise, excessive jitter and 1389 * excessive frequency error. The number of timer ticks during 1390 * the interval may vary +-1 tick. Add to this a margin of one 1391 * tick for the PPS signal jitter and maximum frequency 1392 * deviation. If the limits are exceeded, the calibration 1393 * interval is reset to the minimum and we start over. 1394 */ 1395 u_usec = (int)usec_per_tick << 1; 1396 if (!((cal_sec == -1 && cal_usec > (MICROSEC - u_usec)) || 1397 (cal_sec == 0 && cal_usec < u_usec)) || 1398 v_usec > time_tolerance || v_usec < -time_tolerance) { 1399 pps_errcnt++; 1400 pps_shift = PPS_SHIFT; 1401 pps_intcnt = 0; 1402 time_status |= STA_PPSERROR; 1403 return; 1404 } 1405 1406 /* 1407 * A three-stage median filter is used to help deglitch the pps 1408 * frequency. The median sample becomes the frequency offset 1409 * estimate; the difference between the other two samples 1410 * becomes the frequency dispersion (stability) estimate. 1411 */ 1412 pps_ff[2] = pps_ff[1]; 1413 pps_ff[1] = pps_ff[0]; 1414 pps_ff[0] = v_usec; 1415 if (pps_ff[0] > pps_ff[1]) { 1416 if (pps_ff[1] > pps_ff[2]) { 1417 u_usec = pps_ff[1]; /* 0 1 2 */ 1418 v_usec = pps_ff[0] - pps_ff[2]; 1419 } else if (pps_ff[2] > pps_ff[0]) { 1420 u_usec = pps_ff[0]; /* 2 0 1 */ 1421 v_usec = pps_ff[2] - pps_ff[1]; 1422 } else { 1423 u_usec = pps_ff[2]; /* 0 2 1 */ 1424 v_usec = pps_ff[0] - pps_ff[1]; 1425 } 1426 } else { 1427 if (pps_ff[1] < pps_ff[2]) { 1428 u_usec = pps_ff[1]; /* 2 1 0 */ 1429 v_usec = pps_ff[2] - pps_ff[0]; 1430 } else if (pps_ff[2] < pps_ff[0]) { 1431 u_usec = pps_ff[0]; /* 1 0 2 */ 1432 v_usec = pps_ff[1] - pps_ff[2]; 1433 } else { 1434 u_usec = pps_ff[2]; /* 1 2 0 */ 1435 v_usec = pps_ff[1] - pps_ff[0]; 1436 } 1437 } 1438 1439 /* 1440 * Here the frequency dispersion (stability) is updated. If it 1441 * is less than one-fourth the maximum (MAXFREQ), the frequency 1442 * offset is updated as well, but clamped to the tolerance. It 1443 * will be processed later by the clock() routine. 1444 */ 1445 v_usec = (v_usec >> 1) - pps_stabil; 1446 if (v_usec < 0) 1447 pps_stabil -= -v_usec >> PPS_AVG; 1448 else 1449 pps_stabil += v_usec >> PPS_AVG; 1450 if (pps_stabil > MAXFREQ >> 2) { 1451 pps_stbcnt++; 1452 time_status |= STA_PPSWANDER; 1453 return; 1454 } 1455 if (time_status & STA_PPSFREQ) { 1456 if (u_usec < 0) { 1457 pps_freq -= -u_usec >> PPS_AVG; 1458 if (pps_freq < -time_tolerance) 1459 pps_freq = -time_tolerance; 1460 u_usec = -u_usec; 1461 } else { 1462 pps_freq += u_usec >> PPS_AVG; 1463 if (pps_freq > time_tolerance) 1464 pps_freq = time_tolerance; 1465 } 1466 } 1467 1468 /* 1469 * Here the calibration interval is adjusted. If the maximum 1470 * time difference is greater than tick / 4, reduce the interval 1471 * by half. If this is not the case for four consecutive 1472 * intervals, double the interval. 1473 */ 1474 if (u_usec << pps_shift > bigtick >> 2) { 1475 pps_intcnt = 0; 1476 if (pps_shift > PPS_SHIFT) 1477 pps_shift--; 1478 } else if (pps_intcnt >= 4) { 1479 pps_intcnt = 0; 1480 if (pps_shift < PPS_SHIFTMAX) 1481 pps_shift++; 1482 } else 1483 pps_intcnt++; 1484 1485 /* 1486 * If recovering from kmdb, then make sure the tod chip gets resynced. 1487 * If we took an early exit above, then we don't yet have a stable 1488 * calibration signal to lock onto, so don't mark the tod for sync 1489 * until we get all the way here. 1490 */ 1491 { 1492 int s = hr_clock_lock(); 1493 1494 tod_needsync = 1; 1495 hr_clock_unlock(s); 1496 } 1497 } 1498 1499 /* 1500 * Handle clock tick processing for a thread. 1501 * Check for timer action, enforce CPU rlimit, do profiling etc. 1502 */ 1503 void 1504 clock_tick(kthread_t *t, int pending) 1505 { 1506 struct proc *pp; 1507 klwp_id_t lwp; 1508 struct as *as; 1509 clock_t ticks; 1510 int poke = 0; /* notify another CPU */ 1511 int user_mode; 1512 size_t rss; 1513 int i, total_usec, usec; 1514 rctl_qty_t secs; 1515 1516 ASSERT(pending > 0); 1517 1518 /* Must be operating on a lwp/thread */ 1519 if ((lwp = ttolwp(t)) == NULL) { 1520 panic("clock_tick: no lwp"); 1521 /*NOTREACHED*/ 1522 } 1523 1524 for (i = 0; i < pending; i++) { 1525 CL_TICK(t); /* Class specific tick processing */ 1526 DTRACE_SCHED1(tick, kthread_t *, t); 1527 } 1528 1529 pp = ttoproc(t); 1530 1531 /* pp->p_lock makes sure that the thread does not exit */ 1532 ASSERT(MUTEX_HELD(&pp->p_lock)); 1533 1534 user_mode = (lwp->lwp_state == LWP_USER); 1535 1536 ticks = (pp->p_utime + pp->p_stime) % hz; 1537 /* 1538 * Update process times. Should use high res clock and state 1539 * changes instead of statistical sampling method. XXX 1540 */ 1541 if (user_mode) { 1542 pp->p_utime += pending; 1543 } else { 1544 pp->p_stime += pending; 1545 } 1546 1547 pp->p_ttime += pending; 1548 as = pp->p_as; 1549 1550 /* 1551 * Update user profiling statistics. Get the pc from the 1552 * lwp when the AST happens. 1553 */ 1554 if (pp->p_prof.pr_scale) { 1555 atomic_add_32(&lwp->lwp_oweupc, (int32_t)pending); 1556 if (user_mode) { 1557 poke = 1; 1558 aston(t); 1559 } 1560 } 1561 1562 /* 1563 * If CPU was in user state, process lwp-virtual time 1564 * interval timer. The value passed to itimerdecr() has to be 1565 * in microseconds and has to be less than one second. Hence 1566 * this loop. 1567 */ 1568 total_usec = usec_per_tick * pending; 1569 while (total_usec > 0) { 1570 usec = MIN(total_usec, (MICROSEC - 1)); 1571 if (user_mode && 1572 timerisset(&lwp->lwp_timer[ITIMER_VIRTUAL].it_value) && 1573 itimerdecr(&lwp->lwp_timer[ITIMER_VIRTUAL], usec) == 0) { 1574 poke = 1; 1575 sigtoproc(pp, t, SIGVTALRM); 1576 } 1577 total_usec -= usec; 1578 } 1579 1580 /* 1581 * If CPU was in user state, process lwp-profile 1582 * interval timer. 1583 */ 1584 total_usec = usec_per_tick * pending; 1585 while (total_usec > 0) { 1586 usec = MIN(total_usec, (MICROSEC - 1)); 1587 if (timerisset(&lwp->lwp_timer[ITIMER_PROF].it_value) && 1588 itimerdecr(&lwp->lwp_timer[ITIMER_PROF], usec) == 0) { 1589 poke = 1; 1590 sigtoproc(pp, t, SIGPROF); 1591 } 1592 total_usec -= usec; 1593 } 1594 1595 /* 1596 * Enforce CPU resource controls: 1597 * (a) process.max-cpu-time resource control 1598 * 1599 * Perform the check only if we have accumulated more a second. 1600 */ 1601 if ((ticks + pending) >= hz) { 1602 (void) rctl_test(rctlproc_legacy[RLIMIT_CPU], pp->p_rctls, pp, 1603 (pp->p_utime + pp->p_stime)/hz, RCA_UNSAFE_SIGINFO); 1604 } 1605 1606 /* 1607 * (b) task.max-cpu-time resource control 1608 * 1609 * If we have accumulated enough ticks, increment the task CPU 1610 * time usage and test for the resource limit. This minimizes the 1611 * number of calls to the rct_test(). The task CPU time mutex 1612 * is highly contentious as many processes can be sharing a task. 1613 */ 1614 if (pp->p_ttime >= clock_tick_proc_max) { 1615 secs = task_cpu_time_incr(pp->p_task, pp->p_ttime); 1616 pp->p_ttime = 0; 1617 if (secs) { 1618 (void) rctl_test(rc_task_cpu_time, pp->p_task->tk_rctls, 1619 pp, secs, RCA_UNSAFE_SIGINFO); 1620 } 1621 } 1622 1623 /* 1624 * Update memory usage for the currently running process. 1625 */ 1626 rss = rm_asrss(as); 1627 PTOU(pp)->u_mem += rss; 1628 if (rss > PTOU(pp)->u_mem_max) 1629 PTOU(pp)->u_mem_max = rss; 1630 1631 /* 1632 * Notify the CPU the thread is running on. 1633 */ 1634 if (poke && t->t_cpu != CPU) 1635 poke_cpu(t->t_cpu->cpu_id); 1636 } 1637 1638 void 1639 profil_tick(uintptr_t upc) 1640 { 1641 int ticks; 1642 proc_t *p = ttoproc(curthread); 1643 klwp_t *lwp = ttolwp(curthread); 1644 struct prof *pr = &p->p_prof; 1645 1646 do { 1647 ticks = lwp->lwp_oweupc; 1648 } while (cas32(&lwp->lwp_oweupc, ticks, 0) != ticks); 1649 1650 mutex_enter(&p->p_pflock); 1651 if (pr->pr_scale >= 2 && upc >= pr->pr_off) { 1652 /* 1653 * Old-style profiling 1654 */ 1655 uint16_t *slot = pr->pr_base; 1656 uint16_t old, new; 1657 if (pr->pr_scale != 2) { 1658 uintptr_t delta = upc - pr->pr_off; 1659 uintptr_t byteoff = ((delta >> 16) * pr->pr_scale) + 1660 (((delta & 0xffff) * pr->pr_scale) >> 16); 1661 if (byteoff >= (uintptr_t)pr->pr_size) { 1662 mutex_exit(&p->p_pflock); 1663 return; 1664 } 1665 slot += byteoff / sizeof (uint16_t); 1666 } 1667 if (fuword16(slot, &old) < 0 || 1668 (new = old + ticks) > SHRT_MAX || 1669 suword16(slot, new) < 0) { 1670 pr->pr_scale = 0; 1671 } 1672 } else if (pr->pr_scale == 1) { 1673 /* 1674 * PC Sampling 1675 */ 1676 model_t model = lwp_getdatamodel(lwp); 1677 int result; 1678 #ifdef __lint 1679 model = model; 1680 #endif 1681 while (ticks-- > 0) { 1682 if (pr->pr_samples == pr->pr_size) { 1683 /* buffer full, turn off sampling */ 1684 pr->pr_scale = 0; 1685 break; 1686 } 1687 switch (SIZEOF_PTR(model)) { 1688 case sizeof (uint32_t): 1689 result = suword32(pr->pr_base, (uint32_t)upc); 1690 break; 1691 #ifdef _LP64 1692 case sizeof (uint64_t): 1693 result = suword64(pr->pr_base, (uint64_t)upc); 1694 break; 1695 #endif 1696 default: 1697 cmn_err(CE_WARN, "profil_tick: unexpected " 1698 "data model"); 1699 result = -1; 1700 break; 1701 } 1702 if (result != 0) { 1703 pr->pr_scale = 0; 1704 break; 1705 } 1706 pr->pr_base = (caddr_t)pr->pr_base + SIZEOF_PTR(model); 1707 pr->pr_samples++; 1708 } 1709 } 1710 mutex_exit(&p->p_pflock); 1711 } 1712 1713 static void 1714 delay_wakeup(void *arg) 1715 { 1716 kthread_t *t = arg; 1717 1718 mutex_enter(&t->t_delay_lock); 1719 cv_signal(&t->t_delay_cv); 1720 mutex_exit(&t->t_delay_lock); 1721 } 1722 1723 /* 1724 * The delay(9F) man page indicates that it can only be called from user or 1725 * kernel context - detect and diagnose bad calls. The following macro will 1726 * produce a limited number of messages identifying bad callers. This is done 1727 * in a macro so that caller() is meaningful. When a bad caller is identified, 1728 * switching to 'drv_usecwait(TICK_TO_USEC(ticks));' may be appropriate. 1729 */ 1730 #define DELAY_CONTEXT_CHECK() { \ 1731 uint32_t m; \ 1732 char *f; \ 1733 ulong_t off; \ 1734 \ 1735 m = delay_from_interrupt_msg; \ 1736 if (delay_from_interrupt_diagnose && servicing_interrupt() && \ 1737 !panicstr && !devinfo_freeze && \ 1738 atomic_cas_32(&delay_from_interrupt_msg, m ? m : 1, m-1)) { \ 1739 f = modgetsymname((uintptr_t)caller(), &off); \ 1740 cmn_err(CE_WARN, "delay(9F) called from " \ 1741 "interrupt context: %s`%s", \ 1742 mod_containing_pc(caller()), f ? f : "..."); \ 1743 } \ 1744 } 1745 1746 /* 1747 * delay_common: common delay code. 1748 */ 1749 static void 1750 delay_common(clock_t ticks) 1751 { 1752 kthread_t *t = curthread; 1753 clock_t deadline; 1754 clock_t timeleft; 1755 callout_id_t id; 1756 1757 /* If timeouts aren't running all we can do is spin. */ 1758 if (panicstr || devinfo_freeze) { 1759 /* Convert delay(9F) call into drv_usecwait(9F) call. */ 1760 if (ticks > 0) 1761 drv_usecwait(TICK_TO_USEC(ticks)); 1762 return; 1763 } 1764 1765 deadline = ddi_get_lbolt() + ticks; 1766 while ((timeleft = deadline - ddi_get_lbolt()) > 0) { 1767 mutex_enter(&t->t_delay_lock); 1768 id = timeout_default(delay_wakeup, t, timeleft); 1769 cv_wait(&t->t_delay_cv, &t->t_delay_lock); 1770 mutex_exit(&t->t_delay_lock); 1771 (void) untimeout_default(id, 0); 1772 } 1773 } 1774 1775 /* 1776 * Delay specified number of clock ticks. 1777 */ 1778 void 1779 delay(clock_t ticks) 1780 { 1781 DELAY_CONTEXT_CHECK(); 1782 1783 delay_common(ticks); 1784 } 1785 1786 /* 1787 * Delay a random number of clock ticks between 1 and ticks. 1788 */ 1789 void 1790 delay_random(clock_t ticks) 1791 { 1792 int r; 1793 1794 DELAY_CONTEXT_CHECK(); 1795 1796 (void) random_get_pseudo_bytes((void *)&r, sizeof (r)); 1797 if (ticks == 0) 1798 ticks = 1; 1799 ticks = (r % ticks) + 1; 1800 delay_common(ticks); 1801 } 1802 1803 /* 1804 * Like delay, but interruptible by a signal. 1805 */ 1806 int 1807 delay_sig(clock_t ticks) 1808 { 1809 kthread_t *t = curthread; 1810 clock_t deadline; 1811 clock_t rc; 1812 1813 /* If timeouts aren't running all we can do is spin. */ 1814 if (panicstr || devinfo_freeze) { 1815 if (ticks > 0) 1816 drv_usecwait(TICK_TO_USEC(ticks)); 1817 return (0); 1818 } 1819 1820 deadline = ddi_get_lbolt() + ticks; 1821 mutex_enter(&t->t_delay_lock); 1822 do { 1823 rc = cv_timedwait_sig(&t->t_delay_cv, 1824 &t->t_delay_lock, deadline); 1825 /* loop until past deadline or signaled */ 1826 } while (rc > 0); 1827 mutex_exit(&t->t_delay_lock); 1828 if (rc == 0) 1829 return (EINTR); 1830 return (0); 1831 } 1832 1833 1834 #define SECONDS_PER_DAY 86400 1835 1836 /* 1837 * Initialize the system time based on the TOD chip. approx is used as 1838 * an approximation of time (e.g. from the filesystem) in the event that 1839 * the TOD chip has been cleared or is unresponsive. An approx of -1 1840 * means the filesystem doesn't keep time. 1841 */ 1842 void 1843 clkset(time_t approx) 1844 { 1845 timestruc_t ts; 1846 int spl; 1847 int set_clock = 0; 1848 1849 mutex_enter(&tod_lock); 1850 ts = tod_get(); 1851 1852 if (ts.tv_sec > 365 * SECONDS_PER_DAY) { 1853 /* 1854 * If the TOD chip is reporting some time after 1971, 1855 * then it probably didn't lose power or become otherwise 1856 * cleared in the recent past; check to assure that 1857 * the time coming from the filesystem isn't in the future 1858 * according to the TOD chip. 1859 */ 1860 if (approx != -1 && approx > ts.tv_sec) { 1861 cmn_err(CE_WARN, "Last shutdown is later " 1862 "than time on time-of-day chip; check date."); 1863 } 1864 } else { 1865 /* 1866 * If the TOD chip isn't giving correct time, set it to the 1867 * greater of i) approx and ii) 1987. That way if approx 1868 * is negative or is earlier than 1987, we set the clock 1869 * back to a time when Oliver North, ALF and Dire Straits 1870 * were all on the collective brain: 1987. 1871 */ 1872 timestruc_t tmp; 1873 time_t diagnose_date = (1987 - 1970) * 365 * SECONDS_PER_DAY; 1874 ts.tv_sec = (approx > diagnose_date ? approx : diagnose_date); 1875 ts.tv_nsec = 0; 1876 1877 /* 1878 * Attempt to write the new time to the TOD chip. Set spl high 1879 * to avoid getting preempted between the tod_set and tod_get. 1880 */ 1881 spl = splhi(); 1882 tod_set(ts); 1883 tmp = tod_get(); 1884 splx(spl); 1885 1886 if (tmp.tv_sec != ts.tv_sec && tmp.tv_sec != ts.tv_sec + 1) { 1887 tod_broken = 1; 1888 dosynctodr = 0; 1889 cmn_err(CE_WARN, "Time-of-day chip unresponsive."); 1890 } else { 1891 cmn_err(CE_WARN, "Time-of-day chip had " 1892 "incorrect date; check and reset."); 1893 } 1894 set_clock = 1; 1895 } 1896 1897 if (!boot_time) { 1898 boot_time = ts.tv_sec; 1899 set_clock = 1; 1900 } 1901 1902 if (set_clock) 1903 set_hrestime(&ts); 1904 1905 mutex_exit(&tod_lock); 1906 } 1907 1908 int timechanged; /* for testing if the system time has been reset */ 1909 1910 void 1911 set_hrestime(timestruc_t *ts) 1912 { 1913 int spl = hr_clock_lock(); 1914 hrestime = *ts; 1915 membar_enter(); /* hrestime must be visible before timechanged++ */ 1916 timedelta = 0; 1917 timechanged++; 1918 hr_clock_unlock(spl); 1919 callout_hrestime(); 1920 } 1921 1922 static uint_t deadman_seconds; 1923 static uint32_t deadman_panics; 1924 static int deadman_enabled = 0; 1925 static int deadman_panic_timers = 1; 1926 1927 static void 1928 deadman(void) 1929 { 1930 if (panicstr) { 1931 /* 1932 * During panic, other CPUs besides the panic 1933 * master continue to handle cyclics and some other 1934 * interrupts. The code below is intended to be 1935 * single threaded, so any CPU other than the master 1936 * must keep out. 1937 */ 1938 if (CPU->cpu_id != panic_cpu.cpu_id) 1939 return; 1940 1941 if (!deadman_panic_timers) 1942 return; /* allow all timers to be manually disabled */ 1943 1944 /* 1945 * If we are generating a crash dump or syncing filesystems and 1946 * the corresponding timer is set, decrement it and re-enter 1947 * the panic code to abort it and advance to the next state. 1948 * The panic states and triggers are explained in panic.c. 1949 */ 1950 if (panic_dump) { 1951 if (dump_timeleft && (--dump_timeleft == 0)) { 1952 panic("panic dump timeout"); 1953 /*NOTREACHED*/ 1954 } 1955 } else if (panic_sync) { 1956 if (sync_timeleft && (--sync_timeleft == 0)) { 1957 panic("panic sync timeout"); 1958 /*NOTREACHED*/ 1959 } 1960 } 1961 1962 return; 1963 } 1964 1965 if (deadman_counter != CPU->cpu_deadman_counter) { 1966 CPU->cpu_deadman_counter = deadman_counter; 1967 CPU->cpu_deadman_countdown = deadman_seconds; 1968 return; 1969 } 1970 1971 if (--CPU->cpu_deadman_countdown > 0) 1972 return; 1973 1974 /* 1975 * Regardless of whether or not we actually bring the system down, 1976 * bump the deadman_panics variable. 1977 * 1978 * N.B. deadman_panics is incremented once for each CPU that 1979 * passes through here. It's expected that all the CPUs will 1980 * detect this condition within one second of each other, so 1981 * when deadman_enabled is off, deadman_panics will 1982 * typically be a multiple of the total number of CPUs in 1983 * the system. 1984 */ 1985 atomic_add_32(&deadman_panics, 1); 1986 1987 if (!deadman_enabled) { 1988 CPU->cpu_deadman_countdown = deadman_seconds; 1989 return; 1990 } 1991 1992 /* 1993 * If we're here, we want to bring the system down. 1994 */ 1995 panic("deadman: timed out after %d seconds of clock " 1996 "inactivity", deadman_seconds); 1997 /*NOTREACHED*/ 1998 } 1999 2000 /*ARGSUSED*/ 2001 static void 2002 deadman_online(void *arg, cpu_t *cpu, cyc_handler_t *hdlr, cyc_time_t *when) 2003 { 2004 cpu->cpu_deadman_counter = 0; 2005 cpu->cpu_deadman_countdown = deadman_seconds; 2006 2007 hdlr->cyh_func = (cyc_func_t)deadman; 2008 hdlr->cyh_level = CY_HIGH_LEVEL; 2009 hdlr->cyh_arg = NULL; 2010 2011 /* 2012 * Stagger the CPUs so that they don't all run deadman() at 2013 * the same time. Simplest reason to do this is to make it 2014 * more likely that only one CPU will panic in case of a 2015 * timeout. This is (strictly speaking) an aesthetic, not a 2016 * technical consideration. 2017 */ 2018 when->cyt_when = cpu->cpu_id * (NANOSEC / NCPU); 2019 when->cyt_interval = NANOSEC; 2020 } 2021 2022 2023 void 2024 deadman_init(void) 2025 { 2026 cyc_omni_handler_t hdlr; 2027 2028 if (deadman_seconds == 0) 2029 deadman_seconds = snoop_interval / MICROSEC; 2030 2031 if (snooping) 2032 deadman_enabled = 1; 2033 2034 hdlr.cyo_online = deadman_online; 2035 hdlr.cyo_offline = NULL; 2036 hdlr.cyo_arg = NULL; 2037 2038 mutex_enter(&cpu_lock); 2039 deadman_cyclic = cyclic_add_omni(&hdlr); 2040 mutex_exit(&cpu_lock); 2041 } 2042 2043 /* 2044 * tod_fault() is for updating tod validate mechanism state: 2045 * (1) TOD_NOFAULT: for resetting the state to 'normal'. 2046 * currently used for debugging only 2047 * (2) The following four cases detected by tod validate mechanism: 2048 * TOD_REVERSED: current tod value is less than previous value. 2049 * TOD_STALLED: current tod value hasn't advanced. 2050 * TOD_JUMPED: current tod value advanced too far from previous value. 2051 * TOD_RATECHANGED: the ratio between average tod delta and 2052 * average tick delta has changed. 2053 * (3) TOD_RDONLY: when the TOD clock is not writeable e.g. because it is 2054 * a virtual TOD provided by a hypervisor. 2055 */ 2056 enum tod_fault_type 2057 tod_fault(enum tod_fault_type ftype, int off) 2058 { 2059 ASSERT(MUTEX_HELD(&tod_lock)); 2060 2061 if (tod_faulted != ftype) { 2062 switch (ftype) { 2063 case TOD_NOFAULT: 2064 plat_tod_fault(TOD_NOFAULT); 2065 cmn_err(CE_NOTE, "Restarted tracking " 2066 "Time of Day clock."); 2067 tod_faulted = ftype; 2068 break; 2069 case TOD_REVERSED: 2070 case TOD_JUMPED: 2071 if (tod_faulted == TOD_NOFAULT) { 2072 plat_tod_fault(ftype); 2073 cmn_err(CE_WARN, "Time of Day clock error: " 2074 "reason [%s by 0x%x]. -- " 2075 " Stopped tracking Time Of Day clock.", 2076 tod_fault_table[ftype], off); 2077 tod_faulted = ftype; 2078 } 2079 break; 2080 case TOD_STALLED: 2081 case TOD_RATECHANGED: 2082 if (tod_faulted == TOD_NOFAULT) { 2083 plat_tod_fault(ftype); 2084 cmn_err(CE_WARN, "Time of Day clock error: " 2085 "reason [%s]. -- " 2086 " Stopped tracking Time Of Day clock.", 2087 tod_fault_table[ftype]); 2088 tod_faulted = ftype; 2089 } 2090 break; 2091 case TOD_RDONLY: 2092 if (tod_faulted == TOD_NOFAULT) { 2093 plat_tod_fault(ftype); 2094 cmn_err(CE_NOTE, "!Time of Day clock is " 2095 "Read-Only; set of Date/Time will not " 2096 "persist across reboot."); 2097 tod_faulted = ftype; 2098 } 2099 break; 2100 default: 2101 break; 2102 } 2103 } 2104 return (tod_faulted); 2105 } 2106 2107 /* 2108 * Two functions that allow tod_status_flag to be manipulated by functions 2109 * external to this file. 2110 */ 2111 2112 void 2113 tod_status_set(int tod_flag) 2114 { 2115 tod_status_flag |= tod_flag; 2116 } 2117 2118 void 2119 tod_status_clear(int tod_flag) 2120 { 2121 tod_status_flag &= ~tod_flag; 2122 } 2123 2124 /* 2125 * Record a timestamp and the value passed to tod_set(). The next call to 2126 * tod_validate() can use these values, prev_set_tick and prev_set_tod, 2127 * when checking the timestruc_t returned by tod_get(). Ordinarily, 2128 * tod_validate() will use prev_tick and prev_tod for this task but these 2129 * become obsolete, and will be re-assigned with the prev_set_* values, 2130 * in the case when the TOD is re-written. 2131 */ 2132 void 2133 tod_set_prev(timestruc_t ts) 2134 { 2135 if ((tod_validate_enable == 0) || (tod_faulted != TOD_NOFAULT) || 2136 tod_validate_deferred) { 2137 return; 2138 } 2139 prev_set_tick = gethrtime(); 2140 /* 2141 * A negative value will be set to zero in utc_to_tod() so we fake 2142 * a zero here in such a case. This would need to change if the 2143 * behavior of utc_to_tod() changes. 2144 */ 2145 prev_set_tod = ts.tv_sec < 0 ? 0 : ts.tv_sec; 2146 } 2147 2148 /* 2149 * tod_validate() is used for checking values returned by tod_get(). 2150 * Four error cases can be detected by this routine: 2151 * TOD_REVERSED: current tod value is less than previous. 2152 * TOD_STALLED: current tod value hasn't advanced. 2153 * TOD_JUMPED: current tod value advanced too far from previous value. 2154 * TOD_RATECHANGED: the ratio between average tod delta and 2155 * average tick delta has changed. 2156 */ 2157 time_t 2158 tod_validate(time_t tod) 2159 { 2160 time_t diff_tod; 2161 hrtime_t diff_tick; 2162 2163 long dtick; 2164 int dtick_delta; 2165 2166 int off = 0; 2167 enum tod_fault_type tod_bad = TOD_NOFAULT; 2168 2169 static int firsttime = 1; 2170 2171 static time_t prev_tod = 0; 2172 static hrtime_t prev_tick = 0; 2173 static long dtick_avg = TOD_REF_FREQ; 2174 2175 int cpr_resume_done = 0; 2176 int dr_resume_done = 0; 2177 2178 hrtime_t tick = gethrtime(); 2179 2180 ASSERT(MUTEX_HELD(&tod_lock)); 2181 2182 /* 2183 * tod_validate_enable is patchable via /etc/system. 2184 * If TOD is already faulted, or if TOD validation is deferred, 2185 * there is nothing to do. 2186 */ 2187 if ((tod_validate_enable == 0) || (tod_faulted != TOD_NOFAULT) || 2188 tod_validate_deferred) { 2189 return (tod); 2190 } 2191 2192 /* 2193 * If this is the first time through, we just need to save the tod 2194 * we were called with and hrtime so we can use them next time to 2195 * validate tod_get(). 2196 */ 2197 if (firsttime) { 2198 firsttime = 0; 2199 prev_tod = tod; 2200 prev_tick = tick; 2201 return (tod); 2202 } 2203 2204 /* 2205 * Handle any flags that have been turned on by tod_status_set(). 2206 * In the case where a tod_set() is done and then a subsequent 2207 * tod_get() fails (ie, both TOD_SET_DONE and TOD_GET_FAILED are 2208 * true), we treat the TOD_GET_FAILED with precedence by switching 2209 * off the flag, returning tod and leaving TOD_SET_DONE asserted 2210 * until such time as tod_get() completes successfully. 2211 */ 2212 if (tod_status_flag & TOD_GET_FAILED) { 2213 /* 2214 * tod_get() has encountered an issue, possibly transitory, 2215 * when reading TOD. We'll just return the incoming tod 2216 * value (which is actually hrestime.tv_sec in this case) 2217 * and when we get a genuine tod, following a successful 2218 * tod_get(), we can validate using prev_tod and prev_tick. 2219 */ 2220 tod_status_flag &= ~TOD_GET_FAILED; 2221 return (tod); 2222 } else if (tod_status_flag & TOD_SET_DONE) { 2223 /* 2224 * TOD has been modified. Just before the TOD was written, 2225 * tod_set_prev() saved tod and hrtime; we can now use 2226 * those values, prev_set_tod and prev_set_tick, to validate 2227 * the incoming tod that's just been read. 2228 */ 2229 prev_tod = prev_set_tod; 2230 prev_tick = prev_set_tick; 2231 dtick_avg = TOD_REF_FREQ; 2232 tod_status_flag &= ~TOD_SET_DONE; 2233 /* 2234 * If a tod_set() preceded a cpr_suspend() without an 2235 * intervening tod_validate(), we need to ensure that a 2236 * TOD_JUMPED condition is ignored. 2237 * Note this isn't a concern in the case of DR as we've 2238 * just reassigned dtick_avg, above. 2239 */ 2240 if (tod_status_flag & TOD_CPR_RESUME_DONE) { 2241 cpr_resume_done = 1; 2242 tod_status_flag &= ~TOD_CPR_RESUME_DONE; 2243 } 2244 } else if (tod_status_flag & TOD_CPR_RESUME_DONE) { 2245 /* 2246 * The system's coming back from a checkpoint resume. 2247 */ 2248 cpr_resume_done = 1; 2249 tod_status_flag &= ~TOD_CPR_RESUME_DONE; 2250 /* 2251 * We need to handle the possibility of a CPR suspend 2252 * operation having been initiated whilst a DR event was 2253 * in-flight. 2254 */ 2255 if (tod_status_flag & TOD_DR_RESUME_DONE) { 2256 dr_resume_done = 1; 2257 tod_status_flag &= ~TOD_DR_RESUME_DONE; 2258 } 2259 } else if (tod_status_flag & TOD_DR_RESUME_DONE) { 2260 /* 2261 * A Dynamic Reconfiguration event has taken place. 2262 */ 2263 dr_resume_done = 1; 2264 tod_status_flag &= ~TOD_DR_RESUME_DONE; 2265 } 2266 2267 /* test hook */ 2268 switch (tod_unit_test) { 2269 case 1: /* for testing jumping tod */ 2270 tod += tod_test_injector; 2271 tod_unit_test = 0; 2272 break; 2273 case 2: /* for testing stuck tod bit */ 2274 tod |= 1 << tod_test_injector; 2275 tod_unit_test = 0; 2276 break; 2277 case 3: /* for testing stalled tod */ 2278 tod = prev_tod; 2279 tod_unit_test = 0; 2280 break; 2281 case 4: /* reset tod fault status */ 2282 (void) tod_fault(TOD_NOFAULT, 0); 2283 tod_unit_test = 0; 2284 break; 2285 default: 2286 break; 2287 } 2288 2289 diff_tod = tod - prev_tod; 2290 diff_tick = tick - prev_tick; 2291 2292 ASSERT(diff_tick >= 0); 2293 2294 if (diff_tod < 0) { 2295 /* ERROR - tod reversed */ 2296 tod_bad = TOD_REVERSED; 2297 off = (int)(prev_tod - tod); 2298 } else if (diff_tod == 0) { 2299 /* tod did not advance */ 2300 if (diff_tick > TOD_STALL_THRESHOLD) { 2301 /* ERROR - tod stalled */ 2302 tod_bad = TOD_STALLED; 2303 } else { 2304 /* 2305 * Make sure we don't update prev_tick 2306 * so that diff_tick is calculated since 2307 * the first diff_tod == 0 2308 */ 2309 return (tod); 2310 } 2311 } else { 2312 /* calculate dtick */ 2313 dtick = diff_tick / diff_tod; 2314 2315 /* update dtick averages */ 2316 dtick_avg += ((dtick - dtick_avg) / TOD_FILTER_N); 2317 2318 /* 2319 * Calculate dtick_delta as 2320 * variation from reference freq in quartiles 2321 */ 2322 dtick_delta = (dtick_avg - TOD_REF_FREQ) / 2323 (TOD_REF_FREQ >> 2); 2324 2325 /* 2326 * Even with a perfectly functioning TOD device, 2327 * when the number of elapsed seconds is low the 2328 * algorithm can calculate a rate that is beyond 2329 * tolerance, causing an error. The algorithm is 2330 * inaccurate when elapsed time is low (less than 2331 * 5 seconds). 2332 */ 2333 if (diff_tod > 4) { 2334 if (dtick < TOD_JUMP_THRESHOLD) { 2335 /* 2336 * If we've just done a CPR resume, we detect 2337 * a jump in the TOD but, actually, what's 2338 * happened is that the TOD has been increasing 2339 * whilst the system was suspended and the tick 2340 * count hasn't kept up. We consider the first 2341 * occurrence of this after a resume as normal 2342 * and ignore it; otherwise, in a non-resume 2343 * case, we regard it as a TOD problem. 2344 */ 2345 if (!cpr_resume_done) { 2346 /* ERROR - tod jumped */ 2347 tod_bad = TOD_JUMPED; 2348 off = (int)diff_tod; 2349 } 2350 } 2351 if (dtick_delta) { 2352 /* 2353 * If we've just done a DR resume, dtick_avg 2354 * can go a bit askew so we reset it and carry 2355 * on; otherwise, the TOD is in error. 2356 */ 2357 if (dr_resume_done) { 2358 dtick_avg = TOD_REF_FREQ; 2359 } else { 2360 /* ERROR - change in clock rate */ 2361 tod_bad = TOD_RATECHANGED; 2362 } 2363 } 2364 } 2365 } 2366 2367 if (tod_bad != TOD_NOFAULT) { 2368 (void) tod_fault(tod_bad, off); 2369 2370 /* 2371 * Disable dosynctodr since we are going to fault 2372 * the TOD chip anyway here 2373 */ 2374 dosynctodr = 0; 2375 2376 /* 2377 * Set tod to the correct value from hrestime 2378 */ 2379 tod = hrestime.tv_sec; 2380 } 2381 2382 prev_tod = tod; 2383 prev_tick = tick; 2384 return (tod); 2385 } 2386 2387 static void 2388 calcloadavg(int nrun, uint64_t *hp_ave) 2389 { 2390 static int64_t f[3] = { 135, 27, 9 }; 2391 uint_t i; 2392 int64_t q, r; 2393 2394 /* 2395 * Compute load average over the last 1, 5, and 15 minutes 2396 * (60, 300, and 900 seconds). The constants in f[3] are for 2397 * exponential decay: 2398 * (1 - exp(-1/60)) << 13 = 135, 2399 * (1 - exp(-1/300)) << 13 = 27, 2400 * (1 - exp(-1/900)) << 13 = 9. 2401 */ 2402 2403 /* 2404 * a little hoop-jumping to avoid integer overflow 2405 */ 2406 for (i = 0; i < 3; i++) { 2407 q = (hp_ave[i] >> 16) << 7; 2408 r = (hp_ave[i] & 0xffff) << 7; 2409 hp_ave[i] += ((nrun - q) * f[i] - ((r * f[i]) >> 16)) >> 4; 2410 } 2411 } 2412 2413 /* 2414 * lbolt_hybrid() is used by ddi_get_lbolt() and ddi_get_lbolt64() to 2415 * calculate the value of lbolt according to the current mode. In the event 2416 * driven mode (the default), lbolt is calculated by dividing the current hires 2417 * time by the number of nanoseconds per clock tick. In the cyclic driven mode 2418 * an internal variable is incremented at each firing of the lbolt cyclic 2419 * and returned by lbolt_cyclic_driven(). 2420 * 2421 * The system will transition from event to cyclic driven mode when the number 2422 * of calls to lbolt_event_driven() exceeds the (per CPU) threshold within a 2423 * window of time. It does so by reprograming lbolt_cyclic from CY_INFINITY to 2424 * nsec_per_tick. The lbolt cyclic will remain ON while at least one CPU is 2425 * causing enough activity to cross the thresholds. 2426 */ 2427 int64_t 2428 lbolt_bootstrap(void) 2429 { 2430 return (0); 2431 } 2432 2433 /* ARGSUSED */ 2434 uint_t 2435 lbolt_ev_to_cyclic(caddr_t arg1, caddr_t arg2) 2436 { 2437 hrtime_t ts, exp; 2438 int ret; 2439 2440 ASSERT(lbolt_hybrid != lbolt_cyclic_driven); 2441 2442 kpreempt_disable(); 2443 2444 ts = gethrtime(); 2445 lb_info->lbi_internal = (ts/nsec_per_tick); 2446 2447 /* 2448 * Align the next expiration to a clock tick boundary. 2449 */ 2450 exp = ts + nsec_per_tick - 1; 2451 exp = (exp/nsec_per_tick) * nsec_per_tick; 2452 2453 ret = cyclic_reprogram(lb_info->id.lbi_cyclic_id, exp); 2454 ASSERT(ret); 2455 2456 lbolt_hybrid = lbolt_cyclic_driven; 2457 lb_info->lbi_cyc_deactivate = B_FALSE; 2458 lb_info->lbi_cyc_deac_start = lb_info->lbi_internal; 2459 2460 kpreempt_enable(); 2461 2462 ret = atomic_dec_32_nv(&lb_info->lbi_token); 2463 ASSERT(ret == 0); 2464 2465 return (1); 2466 } 2467 2468 int64_t 2469 lbolt_event_driven(void) 2470 { 2471 hrtime_t ts; 2472 int64_t lb; 2473 int ret, cpu = CPU->cpu_seqid; 2474 2475 ts = gethrtime(); 2476 ASSERT(ts > 0); 2477 2478 ASSERT(nsec_per_tick > 0); 2479 lb = (ts/nsec_per_tick); 2480 2481 /* 2482 * Switch to cyclic mode if the number of calls to this routine 2483 * has reached the threshold within the interval. 2484 */ 2485 if ((lb - lb_cpu[cpu].lbc_cnt_start) < lb_info->lbi_thresh_interval) { 2486 2487 if (--lb_cpu[cpu].lbc_counter == 0) { 2488 /* 2489 * Reached the threshold within the interval, reset 2490 * the usage statistics. 2491 */ 2492 lb_cpu[cpu].lbc_counter = lb_info->lbi_thresh_calls; 2493 lb_cpu[cpu].lbc_cnt_start = lb; 2494 2495 /* 2496 * Make sure only one thread reprograms the 2497 * lbolt cyclic and changes the mode. 2498 */ 2499 if (panicstr == NULL && 2500 atomic_cas_32(&lb_info->lbi_token, 0, 1) == 0) { 2501 2502 if (lbolt_hybrid == lbolt_cyclic_driven) { 2503 ret = atomic_dec_32_nv( 2504 &lb_info->lbi_token); 2505 ASSERT(ret == 0); 2506 } else { 2507 lbolt_softint_post(); 2508 } 2509 } 2510 } 2511 } else { 2512 /* 2513 * Exceeded the interval, reset the usage statistics. 2514 */ 2515 lb_cpu[cpu].lbc_counter = lb_info->lbi_thresh_calls; 2516 lb_cpu[cpu].lbc_cnt_start = lb; 2517 } 2518 2519 ASSERT(lb >= lb_info->lbi_debug_time); 2520 2521 return (lb - lb_info->lbi_debug_time); 2522 } 2523 2524 int64_t 2525 lbolt_cyclic_driven(void) 2526 { 2527 int64_t lb = lb_info->lbi_internal; 2528 int cpu; 2529 2530 /* 2531 * If a CPU has already prevented the lbolt cyclic from deactivating 2532 * itself, don't bother tracking the usage. Otherwise check if we're 2533 * within the interval and how the per CPU counter is doing. 2534 */ 2535 if (lb_info->lbi_cyc_deactivate) { 2536 cpu = CPU->cpu_seqid; 2537 if ((lb - lb_cpu[cpu].lbc_cnt_start) < 2538 lb_info->lbi_thresh_interval) { 2539 2540 if (lb_cpu[cpu].lbc_counter == 0) 2541 /* 2542 * Reached the threshold within the interval, 2543 * prevent the lbolt cyclic from turning itself 2544 * off. 2545 */ 2546 lb_info->lbi_cyc_deactivate = B_FALSE; 2547 else 2548 lb_cpu[cpu].lbc_counter--; 2549 } else { 2550 /* 2551 * Only reset the usage statistics when we have 2552 * exceeded the interval. 2553 */ 2554 lb_cpu[cpu].lbc_counter = lb_info->lbi_thresh_calls; 2555 lb_cpu[cpu].lbc_cnt_start = lb; 2556 } 2557 } 2558 2559 ASSERT(lb >= lb_info->lbi_debug_time); 2560 2561 return (lb - lb_info->lbi_debug_time); 2562 } 2563 2564 /* 2565 * The lbolt_cyclic() routine will fire at a nsec_per_tick interval to satisfy 2566 * performance needs of ddi_get_lbolt() and ddi_get_lbolt64() consumers. 2567 * It is inactive by default, and will be activated when switching from event 2568 * to cyclic driven lbolt. The cyclic will turn itself off unless signaled 2569 * by lbolt_cyclic_driven(). 2570 */ 2571 static void 2572 lbolt_cyclic(void) 2573 { 2574 int ret; 2575 2576 lb_info->lbi_internal++; 2577 2578 if (!lbolt_cyc_only) { 2579 2580 if (lb_info->lbi_cyc_deactivate) { 2581 /* 2582 * Switching from cyclic to event driven mode. 2583 */ 2584 if (panicstr == NULL && 2585 atomic_cas_32(&lb_info->lbi_token, 0, 1) == 0) { 2586 2587 if (lbolt_hybrid == lbolt_event_driven) { 2588 ret = atomic_dec_32_nv( 2589 &lb_info->lbi_token); 2590 ASSERT(ret == 0); 2591 return; 2592 } 2593 2594 kpreempt_disable(); 2595 2596 lbolt_hybrid = lbolt_event_driven; 2597 ret = cyclic_reprogram( 2598 lb_info->id.lbi_cyclic_id, 2599 CY_INFINITY); 2600 ASSERT(ret); 2601 2602 kpreempt_enable(); 2603 2604 ret = atomic_dec_32_nv(&lb_info->lbi_token); 2605 ASSERT(ret == 0); 2606 } 2607 } 2608 2609 /* 2610 * The lbolt cyclic should not try to deactivate itself before 2611 * the sampling period has elapsed. 2612 */ 2613 if (lb_info->lbi_internal - lb_info->lbi_cyc_deac_start >= 2614 lb_info->lbi_thresh_interval) { 2615 lb_info->lbi_cyc_deactivate = B_TRUE; 2616 lb_info->lbi_cyc_deac_start = lb_info->lbi_internal; 2617 } 2618 } 2619 } 2620 2621 /* 2622 * Since the lbolt service was historically cyclic driven, it must be 'stopped' 2623 * when the system drops into the kernel debugger. lbolt_debug_entry() is 2624 * called by the KDI system claim callbacks to record a hires timestamp at 2625 * debug enter time. lbolt_debug_return() is called by the sistem release 2626 * callbacks to account for the time spent in the debugger. The value is then 2627 * accumulated in the lb_info structure and used by lbolt_event_driven() and 2628 * lbolt_cyclic_driven(), as well as the mdb_get_lbolt() routine. 2629 */ 2630 void 2631 lbolt_debug_entry(void) 2632 { 2633 if (lbolt_hybrid != lbolt_bootstrap) { 2634 ASSERT(lb_info != NULL); 2635 lb_info->lbi_debug_ts = gethrtime(); 2636 } 2637 } 2638 2639 /* 2640 * Calculate the time spent in the debugger and add it to the lbolt info 2641 * structure. We also update the internal lbolt value in case we were in 2642 * cyclic driven mode going in. 2643 */ 2644 void 2645 lbolt_debug_return(void) 2646 { 2647 hrtime_t ts; 2648 2649 if (lbolt_hybrid != lbolt_bootstrap) { 2650 ASSERT(lb_info != NULL); 2651 ASSERT(nsec_per_tick > 0); 2652 2653 ts = gethrtime(); 2654 lb_info->lbi_internal = (ts/nsec_per_tick); 2655 lb_info->lbi_debug_time += 2656 ((ts - lb_info->lbi_debug_ts)/nsec_per_tick); 2657 2658 lb_info->lbi_debug_ts = 0; 2659 } 2660 } 2661