Author | Tokens | Token Proportion | Commits | Commit Proportion |
---|---|---|---|---|
Thomas Gleixner | 3612 | 49.66% | 71 | 27.00% |
Anna-Maria Gleixner | 1208 | 16.61% | 24 | 9.13% |
Peter Zijlstra | 319 | 4.39% | 11 | 4.18% |
Arjan van de Ven | 281 | 3.86% | 8 | 3.04% |
Sebastian Andrzej Siewior | 202 | 2.78% | 6 | 2.28% |
Al Viro | 188 | 2.58% | 5 | 1.90% |
John Stultz | 188 | 2.58% | 8 | 3.04% |
Rafael J. Wysocki | 152 | 2.09% | 2 | 0.76% |
Xiao Guangrong | 110 | 1.51% | 1 | 0.38% |
Marcelo Tosatti | 90 | 1.24% | 1 | 0.38% |
Oleg Nesterov | 88 | 1.21% | 7 | 2.66% |
Ingo Molnar | 59 | 0.81% | 9 | 3.42% |
Roman Zippel | 55 | 0.76% | 4 | 1.52% |
Marc Zyngier | 49 | 0.67% | 1 | 0.38% |
Arun R Bharadwaj | 47 | 0.65% | 2 | 0.76% |
Frédéric Weisbecker | 40 | 0.55% | 8 | 3.04% |
Ahmed S. Darwish | 39 | 0.54% | 1 | 0.38% |
Viresh Kumar | 36 | 0.49% | 5 | 1.90% |
George Anzinger | 34 | 0.47% | 1 | 0.38% |
Eric Dumazet | 32 | 0.44% | 2 | 0.76% |
Stanislaw Gruszka | 28 | 0.38% | 1 | 0.38% |
Stephen Hemminger | 24 | 0.33% | 2 | 0.76% |
Deepa Dinamani | 21 | 0.29% | 4 | 1.52% |
Andrew Morton | 18 | 0.25% | 4 | 1.52% |
Carsten Emde | 18 | 0.25% | 1 | 0.38% |
Ashwin Chaugule | 17 | 0.23% | 1 | 0.38% |
Christoph Lameter | 17 | 0.23% | 2 | 0.76% |
Salman Qazi | 17 | 0.23% | 1 | 0.38% |
Dimitri Sivanich | 16 | 0.22% | 2 | 0.76% |
Heiko Carstens | 14 | 0.19% | 2 | 0.76% |
Irenge Jules Bashizi | 12 | 0.16% | 1 | 0.38% |
Ben Dooks | 12 | 0.16% | 1 | 0.38% |
Hideaki Yoshifuji / 吉藤英明 | 12 | 0.16% | 1 | 0.38% |
Leon Ma | 12 | 0.16% | 1 | 0.38% |
Linus Torvalds (pre-git) | 12 | 0.16% | 5 | 1.90% |
Michael Bohan | 10 | 0.14% | 1 | 0.38% |
Suresh B. Siddha | 10 | 0.14% | 1 | 0.38% |
Costa Shulyupin | 10 | 0.14% | 1 | 0.38% |
Arnd Bergmann | 9 | 0.12% | 4 | 1.52% |
Changbin Du | 9 | 0.12% | 2 | 0.76% |
Jeffrey Ohlstein | 9 | 0.12% | 1 | 0.38% |
Benjamin Herrenschmidt | 8 | 0.11% | 1 | 0.38% |
Kees Cook | 8 | 0.11% | 1 | 0.38% |
Rusty Russell | 7 | 0.10% | 2 | 0.76% |
Andrey Vagin | 7 | 0.10% | 1 | 0.38% |
Davidlohr Bueso A | 7 | 0.10% | 1 | 0.38% |
Guenter Roeck | 6 | 0.08% | 2 | 0.76% |
Clark Williams | 6 | 0.08% | 2 | 0.76% |
Jann Horn | 6 | 0.08% | 1 | 0.38% |
Jason A. Donenfeld | 5 | 0.07% | 1 | 0.38% |
Jan Blunck | 5 | 0.07% | 1 | 0.38% |
Stas Sergeev | 5 | 0.07% | 1 | 0.38% |
Artem B. Bityutskiy | 5 | 0.07% | 1 | 0.38% |
Julien Grall | 5 | 0.07% | 2 | 0.76% |
Tony Lindgren | 5 | 0.07% | 1 | 0.38% |
Kazunori Miyazawa | 4 | 0.05% | 1 | 0.38% |
Leonid Shatz | 3 | 0.04% | 1 | 0.38% |
Toyo Abe | 3 | 0.04% | 1 | 0.38% |
Stephen Boyd | 3 | 0.04% | 2 | 0.76% |
Colin Cross | 3 | 0.04% | 1 | 0.38% |
Stephen Rothwell | 3 | 0.04% | 1 | 0.38% |
Geert Uytterhoeven | 3 | 0.04% | 1 | 0.38% |
Dario Faggioli | 3 | 0.04% | 1 | 0.38% |
Peng Liu | 2 | 0.03% | 1 | 0.38% |
Gustavo A. R. Silva | 2 | 0.03% | 1 | 0.38% |
Gautham R. Shenoy | 2 | 0.03% | 1 | 0.38% |
Luiz Fernando N. Capitulino | 2 | 0.03% | 1 | 0.38% |
Davide Libenzi | 2 | 0.03% | 1 | 0.38% |
Mauro Carvalho Chehab | 2 | 0.03% | 2 | 0.76% |
Nico Pitre | 2 | 0.03% | 1 | 0.38% |
Russell King | 2 | 0.03% | 1 | 0.38% |
Fengguang Wu | 1 | 0.01% | 1 | 0.38% |
Linus Torvalds | 1 | 0.01% | 1 | 0.38% |
Zhen Lei | 1 | 0.01% | 1 | 0.38% |
Mike Frysinger | 1 | 0.01% | 1 | 0.38% |
Vegard Nossum | 1 | 0.01% | 1 | 0.38% |
Uwe Kleine-König | 1 | 0.01% | 1 | 0.38% |
Namhyung Kim | 1 | 0.01% | 1 | 0.38% |
Pratyush Patel | 1 | 0.01% | 1 | 0.38% |
Paul Gortmaker | 1 | 0.01% | 1 | 0.38% |
Randy Dunlap | 1 | 0.01% | 1 | 0.38% |
Wen Yang | 1 | 0.01% | 1 | 0.38% |
Total | 7273 | 263 |
// SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 /* * Copyright(C) 2005-2006, Thomas Gleixner <tglx@linutronix.de> * Copyright(C) 2005-2007, Red Hat, Inc., Ingo Molnar * Copyright(C) 2006-2007 Timesys Corp., Thomas Gleixner * * High-resolution kernel timers * * In contrast to the low-resolution timeout API, aka timer wheel, * hrtimers provide finer resolution and accuracy depending on system * configuration and capabilities. * * Started by: Thomas Gleixner and Ingo Molnar * * Credits: * Based on the original timer wheel code * * Help, testing, suggestions, bugfixes, improvements were * provided by: * * George Anzinger, Andrew Morton, Steven Rostedt, Roman Zippel * et. al. */ #include <linux/cpu.h> #include <linux/export.h> #include <linux/percpu.h> #include <linux/hrtimer.h> #include <linux/notifier.h> #include <linux/syscalls.h> #include <linux/interrupt.h> #include <linux/tick.h> #include <linux/err.h> #include <linux/debugobjects.h> #include <linux/sched/signal.h> #include <linux/sched/sysctl.h> #include <linux/sched/rt.h> #include <linux/sched/deadline.h> #include <linux/sched/nohz.h> #include <linux/sched/debug.h> #include <linux/sched/isolation.h> #include <linux/timer.h> #include <linux/freezer.h> #include <linux/compat.h> #include <linux/uaccess.h> #include <trace/events/timer.h> #include "tick-internal.h" /* * Masks for selecting the soft and hard context timers from * cpu_base->active */ #define MASK_SHIFT (HRTIMER_BASE_MONOTONIC_SOFT) #define HRTIMER_ACTIVE_HARD ((1U << MASK_SHIFT) - 1) #define HRTIMER_ACTIVE_SOFT (HRTIMER_ACTIVE_HARD << MASK_SHIFT) #define HRTIMER_ACTIVE_ALL (HRTIMER_ACTIVE_SOFT | HRTIMER_ACTIVE_HARD) /* * The timer bases: * * There are more clockids than hrtimer bases. Thus, we index * into the timer bases by the hrtimer_base_type enum. When trying * to reach a base using a clockid, hrtimer_clockid_to_base() * is used to convert from clockid to the proper hrtimer_base_type. */ DEFINE_PER_CPU(struct hrtimer_cpu_base, hrtimer_bases) = { .lock = __RAW_SPIN_LOCK_UNLOCKED(hrtimer_bases.lock), .clock_base = { { .index = HRTIMER_BASE_MONOTONIC, .clockid = CLOCK_MONOTONIC, .get_time = &ktime_get, }, { .index = HRTIMER_BASE_REALTIME, .clockid = CLOCK_REALTIME, .get_time = &ktime_get_real, }, { .index = HRTIMER_BASE_BOOTTIME, .clockid = CLOCK_BOOTTIME, .get_time = &ktime_get_boottime, }, { .index = HRTIMER_BASE_TAI, .clockid = CLOCK_TAI, .get_time = &ktime_get_clocktai, }, { .index = HRTIMER_BASE_MONOTONIC_SOFT, .clockid = CLOCK_MONOTONIC, .get_time = &ktime_get, }, { .index = HRTIMER_BASE_REALTIME_SOFT, .clockid = CLOCK_REALTIME, .get_time = &ktime_get_real, }, { .index = HRTIMER_BASE_BOOTTIME_SOFT, .clockid = CLOCK_BOOTTIME, .get_time = &ktime_get_boottime, }, { .index = HRTIMER_BASE_TAI_SOFT, .clockid = CLOCK_TAI, .get_time = &ktime_get_clocktai, }, } }; static const int hrtimer_clock_to_base_table[MAX_CLOCKS] = { /* Make sure we catch unsupported clockids */ [0 ... MAX_CLOCKS - 1] = HRTIMER_MAX_CLOCK_BASES, [CLOCK_REALTIME] = HRTIMER_BASE_REALTIME, [CLOCK_MONOTONIC] = HRTIMER_BASE_MONOTONIC, [CLOCK_BOOTTIME] = HRTIMER_BASE_BOOTTIME, [CLOCK_TAI] = HRTIMER_BASE_TAI, }; /* * Functions and macros which are different for UP/SMP systems are kept in a * single place */ #ifdef CONFIG_SMP /* * We require the migration_base for lock_hrtimer_base()/switch_hrtimer_base() * such that hrtimer_callback_running() can unconditionally dereference * timer->base->cpu_base */ static struct hrtimer_cpu_base migration_cpu_base = { .clock_base = { { .cpu_base = &migration_cpu_base, .seq = SEQCNT_RAW_SPINLOCK_ZERO(migration_cpu_base.seq, &migration_cpu_base.lock), }, }, }; #define migration_base migration_cpu_base.clock_base[0] static inline bool is_migration_base(struct hrtimer_clock_base *base) { return base == &migration_base; } /* * We are using hashed locking: holding per_cpu(hrtimer_bases)[n].lock * means that all timers which are tied to this base via timer->base are * locked, and the base itself is locked too. * * So __run_timers/migrate_timers can safely modify all timers which could * be found on the lists/queues. * * When the timer's base is locked, and the timer removed from list, it is * possible to set timer->base = &migration_base and drop the lock: the timer * remains locked. */ static struct hrtimer_clock_base *lock_hrtimer_base(const struct hrtimer *timer, unsigned long *flags) __acquires(&timer->base->lock) { struct hrtimer_clock_base *base; for (;;) { base = READ_ONCE(timer->base); if (likely(base != &migration_base)) { raw_spin_lock_irqsave(&base->cpu_base->lock, *flags); if (likely(base == timer->base)) return base; /* The timer has migrated to another CPU: */ raw_spin_unlock_irqrestore(&base->cpu_base->lock, *flags); } cpu_relax(); } } /* * We do not migrate the timer when it is expiring before the next * event on the target cpu. When high resolution is enabled, we cannot * reprogram the target cpu hardware and we would cause it to fire * late. To keep it simple, we handle the high resolution enabled and * disabled case similar. * * Called with cpu_base->lock of target cpu held. */ static int hrtimer_check_target(struct hrtimer *timer, struct hrtimer_clock_base *new_base) { ktime_t expires; expires = ktime_sub(hrtimer_get_expires(timer), new_base->offset); return expires < new_base->cpu_base->expires_next; } static inline struct hrtimer_cpu_base *get_target_base(struct hrtimer_cpu_base *base, int pinned) { #if defined(CONFIG_SMP) && defined(CONFIG_NO_HZ_COMMON) if (static_branch_likely(&timers_migration_enabled) && !pinned) return &per_cpu(hrtimer_bases, get_nohz_timer_target()); #endif return base; } /* * We switch the timer base to a power-optimized selected CPU target, * if: * - NO_HZ_COMMON is enabled * - timer migration is enabled * - the timer callback is not running * - the timer is not the first expiring timer on the new target * * If one of the above requirements is not fulfilled we move the timer * to the current CPU or leave it on the previously assigned CPU if * the timer callback is currently running. */ static inline struct hrtimer_clock_base * switch_hrtimer_base(struct hrtimer *timer, struct hrtimer_clock_base *base, int pinned) { struct hrtimer_cpu_base *new_cpu_base, *this_cpu_base; struct hrtimer_clock_base *new_base; int basenum = base->index; this_cpu_base = this_cpu_ptr(&hrtimer_bases); new_cpu_base = get_target_base(this_cpu_base, pinned); again: new_base = &new_cpu_base->clock_base[basenum]; if (base != new_base) { /* * We are trying to move timer to new_base. * However we can't change timer's base while it is running, * so we keep it on the same CPU. No hassle vs. reprogramming * the event source in the high resolution case. The softirq * code will take care of this when the timer function has * completed. There is no conflict as we hold the lock until * the timer is enqueued. */ if (unlikely(hrtimer_callback_running(timer))) return base; /* See the comment in lock_hrtimer_base() */ WRITE_ONCE(timer->base, &migration_base); raw_spin_unlock(&base->cpu_base->lock); raw_spin_lock(&new_base->cpu_base->lock); if (new_cpu_base != this_cpu_base && hrtimer_check_target(timer, new_base)) { raw_spin_unlock(&new_base->cpu_base->lock); raw_spin_lock(&base->cpu_base->lock); new_cpu_base = this_cpu_base; WRITE_ONCE(timer->base, base); goto again; } WRITE_ONCE(timer->base, new_base); } else { if (new_cpu_base != this_cpu_base && hrtimer_check_target(timer, new_base)) { new_cpu_base = this_cpu_base; goto again; } } return new_base; } #else /* CONFIG_SMP */ static inline bool is_migration_base(struct hrtimer_clock_base *base) { return false; } static inline struct hrtimer_clock_base * lock_hrtimer_base(const struct hrtimer *timer, unsigned long *flags) __acquires(&timer->base->cpu_base->lock) { struct hrtimer_clock_base *base = timer->base; raw_spin_lock_irqsave(&base->cpu_base->lock, *flags); return base; } # define switch_hrtimer_base(t, b, p) (b) #endif /* !CONFIG_SMP */ /* * Functions for the union type storage format of ktime_t which are * too large for inlining: */ #if BITS_PER_LONG < 64 /* * Divide a ktime value by a nanosecond value */ s64 __ktime_divns(const ktime_t kt, s64 div) { int sft = 0; s64 dclc; u64 tmp; dclc = ktime_to_ns(kt); tmp = dclc < 0 ? -dclc : dclc; /* Make sure the divisor is less than 2^32: */ while (div >> 32) { sft++; div >>= 1; } tmp >>= sft; do_div(tmp, (u32) div); return dclc < 0 ? -tmp : tmp; } EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(__ktime_divns); #endif /* BITS_PER_LONG >= 64 */ /* * Add two ktime values and do a safety check for overflow: */ ktime_t ktime_add_safe(const ktime_t lhs, const ktime_t rhs) { ktime_t res = ktime_add_unsafe(lhs, rhs); /* * We use KTIME_SEC_MAX here, the maximum timeout which we can * return to user space in a timespec: */ if (res < 0 || res < lhs || res < rhs) res = ktime_set(KTIME_SEC_MAX, 0); return res; } EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(ktime_add_safe); #ifdef CONFIG_DEBUG_OBJECTS_TIMERS static const struct debug_obj_descr hrtimer_debug_descr; static void *hrtimer_debug_hint(void *addr) { return ((struct hrtimer *) addr)->function; } /* * fixup_init is called when: * - an active object is initialized */ static bool hrtimer_fixup_init(void *addr, enum debug_obj_state state) { struct hrtimer *timer = addr; switch (state) { case ODEBUG_STATE_ACTIVE: hrtimer_cancel(timer); debug_object_init(timer, &hrtimer_debug_descr); return true; default: return false; } } /* * fixup_activate is called when: * - an active object is activated * - an unknown non-static object is activated */ static bool hrtimer_fixup_activate(void *addr, enum debug_obj_state state) { switch (state) { case ODEBUG_STATE_ACTIVE: WARN_ON(1); fallthrough; default: return false; } } /* * fixup_free is called when: * - an active object is freed */ static bool hrtimer_fixup_free(void *addr, enum debug_obj_state state) { struct hrtimer *timer = addr; switch (state) { case ODEBUG_STATE_ACTIVE: hrtimer_cancel(timer); debug_object_free(timer, &hrtimer_debug_descr); return true; default: return false; } } static const struct debug_obj_descr hrtimer_debug_descr = { .name = "hrtimer", .debug_hint = hrtimer_debug_hint, .fixup_init = hrtimer_fixup_init, .fixup_activate = hrtimer_fixup_activate, .fixup_free = hrtimer_fixup_free, }; static inline void debug_hrtimer_init(struct hrtimer *timer) { debug_object_init(timer, &hrtimer_debug_descr); } static inline void debug_hrtimer_activate(struct hrtimer *timer, enum hrtimer_mode mode) { debug_object_activate(timer, &hrtimer_debug_descr); } static inline void debug_hrtimer_deactivate(struct hrtimer *timer) { debug_object_deactivate(timer, &hrtimer_debug_descr); } static void __hrtimer_init(struct hrtimer *timer, clockid_t clock_id, enum hrtimer_mode mode); void hrtimer_init_on_stack(struct hrtimer *timer, clockid_t clock_id, enum hrtimer_mode mode) { debug_object_init_on_stack(timer, &hrtimer_debug_descr); __hrtimer_init(timer, clock_id, mode); } EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(hrtimer_init_on_stack); static void __hrtimer_init_sleeper(struct hrtimer_sleeper *sl, clockid_t clock_id, enum hrtimer_mode mode); void hrtimer_init_sleeper_on_stack(struct hrtimer_sleeper *sl, clockid_t clock_id, enum hrtimer_mode mode) { debug_object_init_on_stack(&sl->timer, &hrtimer_debug_descr); __hrtimer_init_sleeper(sl, clock_id, mode); } EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(hrtimer_init_sleeper_on_stack); void destroy_hrtimer_on_stack(struct hrtimer *timer) { debug_object_free(timer, &hrtimer_debug_descr); } EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(destroy_hrtimer_on_stack); #else static inline void debug_hrtimer_init(struct hrtimer *timer) { } static inline void debug_hrtimer_activate(struct hrtimer *timer, enum hrtimer_mode mode) { } static inline void debug_hrtimer_deactivate(struct hrtimer *timer) { } #endif static inline void debug_init(struct hrtimer *timer, clockid_t clockid, enum hrtimer_mode mode) { debug_hrtimer_init(timer); trace_hrtimer_init(timer, clockid, mode); } static inline void debug_activate(struct hrtimer *timer, enum hrtimer_mode mode) { debug_hrtimer_activate(timer, mode); trace_hrtimer_start(timer, mode); } static inline void debug_deactivate(struct hrtimer *timer) { debug_hrtimer_deactivate(timer); trace_hrtimer_cancel(timer); } static struct hrtimer_clock_base * __next_base(struct hrtimer_cpu_base *cpu_base, unsigned int *active) { unsigned int idx; if (!*active) return NULL; idx = __ffs(*active); *active &= ~(1U << idx); return &cpu_base->clock_base[idx]; } #define for_each_active_base(base, cpu_base, active) \ while ((base = __next_base((cpu_base), &(active)))) static ktime_t __hrtimer_next_event_base(struct hrtimer_cpu_base *cpu_base, const struct hrtimer *exclude, unsigned int active, ktime_t expires_next) { struct hrtimer_clock_base *base; ktime_t expires; for_each_active_base(base, cpu_base, active) { struct timerqueue_node *next; struct hrtimer *timer; next = timerqueue_getnext(&base->active); timer = container_of(next, struct hrtimer, node); if (timer == exclude) { /* Get to the next timer in the queue. */ next = timerqueue_iterate_next(next); if (!next) continue; timer = container_of(next, struct hrtimer, node); } expires = ktime_sub(hrtimer_get_expires(timer), base->offset); if (expires < expires_next) { expires_next = expires; /* Skip cpu_base update if a timer is being excluded. */ if (exclude) continue; if (timer->is_soft) cpu_base->softirq_next_timer = timer; else cpu_base->next_timer = timer; } } /* * clock_was_set() might have changed base->offset of any of * the clock bases so the result might be negative. Fix it up * to prevent a false positive in clockevents_program_event(). */ if (expires_next < 0) expires_next = 0; return expires_next; } /* * Recomputes cpu_base::*next_timer and returns the earliest expires_next * but does not set cpu_base::*expires_next, that is done by * hrtimer[_force]_reprogram and hrtimer_interrupt only. When updating * cpu_base::*expires_next right away, reprogramming logic would no longer * work. * * When a softirq is pending, we can ignore the HRTIMER_ACTIVE_SOFT bases, * those timers will get run whenever the softirq gets handled, at the end of * hrtimer_run_softirq(), hrtimer_update_softirq_timer() will re-add these bases. * * Therefore softirq values are those from the HRTIMER_ACTIVE_SOFT clock bases. * The !softirq values are the minima across HRTIMER_ACTIVE_ALL, unless an actual * softirq is pending, in which case they're the minima of HRTIMER_ACTIVE_HARD. * * @active_mask must be one of: * - HRTIMER_ACTIVE_ALL, * - HRTIMER_ACTIVE_SOFT, or * - HRTIMER_ACTIVE_HARD. */ static ktime_t __hrtimer_get_next_event(struct hrtimer_cpu_base *cpu_base, unsigned int active_mask) { unsigned int active; struct hrtimer *next_timer = NULL; ktime_t expires_next = KTIME_MAX; if (!cpu_base->softirq_activated && (active_mask & HRTIMER_ACTIVE_SOFT)) { active = cpu_base->active_bases & HRTIMER_ACTIVE_SOFT; cpu_base->softirq_next_timer = NULL; expires_next = __hrtimer_next_event_base(cpu_base, NULL, active, KTIME_MAX); next_timer = cpu_base->softirq_next_timer; } if (active_mask & HRTIMER_ACTIVE_HARD) { active = cpu_base->active_bases & HRTIMER_ACTIVE_HARD; cpu_base->next_timer = next_timer; expires_next = __hrtimer_next_event_base(cpu_base, NULL, active, expires_next); } return expires_next; } static ktime_t hrtimer_update_next_event(struct hrtimer_cpu_base *cpu_base) { ktime_t expires_next, soft = KTIME_MAX; /* * If the soft interrupt has already been activated, ignore the * soft bases. They will be handled in the already raised soft * interrupt. */ if (!cpu_base->softirq_activated) { soft = __hrtimer_get_next_event(cpu_base, HRTIMER_ACTIVE_SOFT); /* * Update the soft expiry time. clock_settime() might have * affected it. */ cpu_base->softirq_expires_next = soft; } expires_next = __hrtimer_get_next_event(cpu_base, HRTIMER_ACTIVE_HARD); /* * If a softirq timer is expiring first, update cpu_base->next_timer * and program the hardware with the soft expiry time. */ if (expires_next > soft) { cpu_base->next_timer = cpu_base->softirq_next_timer; expires_next = soft; } return expires_next; } static inline ktime_t hrtimer_update_base(struct hrtimer_cpu_base *base) { ktime_t *offs_real = &base->clock_base[HRTIMER_BASE_REALTIME].offset; ktime_t *offs_boot = &base->clock_base[HRTIMER_BASE_BOOTTIME].offset; ktime_t *offs_tai = &base->clock_base[HRTIMER_BASE_TAI].offset; ktime_t now = ktime_get_update_offsets_now(&base->clock_was_set_seq, offs_real, offs_boot, offs_tai); base->clock_base[HRTIMER_BASE_REALTIME_SOFT].offset = *offs_real; base->clock_base[HRTIMER_BASE_BOOTTIME_SOFT].offset = *offs_boot; base->clock_base[HRTIMER_BASE_TAI_SOFT].offset = *offs_tai; return now; } /* * Is the high resolution mode active ? */ static inline int __hrtimer_hres_active(struct hrtimer_cpu_base *cpu_base) { return IS_ENABLED(CONFIG_HIGH_RES_TIMERS) ? cpu_base->hres_active : 0; } static inline int hrtimer_hres_active(void) { return __hrtimer_hres_active(this_cpu_ptr(&hrtimer_bases)); } static void __hrtimer_reprogram(struct hrtimer_cpu_base *cpu_base, struct hrtimer *next_timer, ktime_t expires_next) { cpu_base->expires_next = expires_next; /* * If hres is not active, hardware does not have to be * reprogrammed yet. * * If a hang was detected in the last timer interrupt then we * leave the hang delay active in the hardware. We want the * system to make progress. That also prevents the following * scenario: * T1 expires 50ms from now * T2 expires 5s from now * * T1 is removed, so this code is called and would reprogram * the hardware to 5s from now. Any hrtimer_start after that * will not reprogram the hardware due to hang_detected being * set. So we'd effectively block all timers until the T2 event * fires. */ if (!__hrtimer_hres_active(cpu_base) || cpu_base->hang_detected) return; tick_program_event(expires_next, 1); } /* * Reprogram the event source with checking both queues for the * next event * Called with interrupts disabled and base->lock held */ static void hrtimer_force_reprogram(struct hrtimer_cpu_base *cpu_base, int skip_equal) { ktime_t expires_next; expires_next = hrtimer_update_next_event(cpu_base); if (skip_equal && expires_next == cpu_base->expires_next) return; __hrtimer_reprogram(cpu_base, cpu_base->next_timer, expires_next); } /* High resolution timer related functions */ #ifdef CONFIG_HIGH_RES_TIMERS /* * High resolution timer enabled ? */ static bool hrtimer_hres_enabled __read_mostly = true; unsigned int hrtimer_resolution __read_mostly = LOW_RES_NSEC; EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(hrtimer_resolution); /* * Enable / Disable high resolution mode */ static int __init setup_hrtimer_hres(char *str) { return (kstrtobool(str, &hrtimer_hres_enabled) == 0); } __setup("highres=", setup_hrtimer_hres); /* * hrtimer_high_res_enabled - query, if the highres mode is enabled */ static inline int hrtimer_is_hres_enabled(void) { return hrtimer_hres_enabled; } static void retrigger_next_event(void *arg); /* * Switch to high resolution mode */ static void hrtimer_switch_to_hres(void) { struct hrtimer_cpu_base *base = this_cpu_ptr(&hrtimer_bases); if (tick_init_highres()) { pr_warn("Could not switch to high resolution mode on CPU %u\n", base->cpu); return; } base->hres_active = 1; hrtimer_resolution = HIGH_RES_NSEC; tick_setup_sched_timer(true); /* "Retrigger" the interrupt to get things going */ retrigger_next_event(NULL); } #else static inline int hrtimer_is_hres_enabled(void) { return 0; } static inline void hrtimer_switch_to_hres(void) { } #endif /* CONFIG_HIGH_RES_TIMERS */ /* * Retrigger next event is called after clock was set with interrupts * disabled through an SMP function call or directly from low level * resume code. * * This is only invoked when: * - CONFIG_HIGH_RES_TIMERS is enabled. * - CONFIG_NOHZ_COMMON is enabled * * For the other cases this function is empty and because the call sites * are optimized out it vanishes as well, i.e. no need for lots of * #ifdeffery. */ static void retrigger_next_event(void *arg) { struct hrtimer_cpu_base *base = this_cpu_ptr(&hrtimer_bases); /* * When high resolution mode or nohz is active, then the offsets of * CLOCK_REALTIME/TAI/BOOTTIME have to be updated. Otherwise the * next tick will take care of that. * * If high resolution mode is active then the next expiring timer * must be reevaluated and the clock event device reprogrammed if * necessary. * * In the NOHZ case the update of the offset and the reevaluation * of the next expiring timer is enough. The return from the SMP * function call will take care of the reprogramming in case the * CPU was in a NOHZ idle sleep. */ if (!__hrtimer_hres_active(base) && !tick_nohz_active) return; raw_spin_lock(&base->lock); hrtimer_update_base(base); if (__hrtimer_hres_active(base)) hrtimer_force_reprogram(base, 0); else hrtimer_update_next_event(base); raw_spin_unlock(&base->lock); } /* * When a timer is enqueued and expires earlier than the already enqueued * timers, we have to check, whether it expires earlier than the timer for * which the clock event device was armed. * * Called with interrupts disabled and base->cpu_base.lock held */ static void hrtimer_reprogram(struct hrtimer *timer, bool reprogram) { struct hrtimer_cpu_base *cpu_base = this_cpu_ptr(&hrtimer_bases); struct hrtimer_clock_base *base = timer->base; ktime_t expires = ktime_sub(hrtimer_get_expires(timer), base->offset); WARN_ON_ONCE(hrtimer_get_expires_tv64(timer) < 0); /* * CLOCK_REALTIME timer might be requested with an absolute * expiry time which is less than base->offset. Set it to 0. */ if (expires < 0) expires = 0; if (timer->is_soft) { /* * soft hrtimer could be started on a remote CPU. In this * case softirq_expires_next needs to be updated on the * remote CPU. The soft hrtimer will not expire before the * first hard hrtimer on the remote CPU - * hrtimer_check_target() prevents this case. */ struct hrtimer_cpu_base *timer_cpu_base = base->cpu_base; if (timer_cpu_base->softirq_activated) return; if (!ktime_before(expires, timer_cpu_base->softirq_expires_next)) return; timer_cpu_base->softirq_next_timer = timer; timer_cpu_base->softirq_expires_next = expires; if (!ktime_before(expires, timer_cpu_base->expires_next) || !reprogram) return; } /* * If the timer is not on the current cpu, we cannot reprogram * the other cpus clock event device. */ if (base->cpu_base != cpu_base) return; if (expires >= cpu_base->expires_next) return; /* * If the hrtimer interrupt is running, then it will reevaluate the * clock bases and reprogram the clock event device. */ if (cpu_base->in_hrtirq) return; cpu_base->next_timer = timer; __hrtimer_reprogram(cpu_base, timer, expires); } static bool update_needs_ipi(struct hrtimer_cpu_base *cpu_base, unsigned int active) { struct hrtimer_clock_base *base; unsigned int seq; ktime_t expires; /* * Update the base offsets unconditionally so the following * checks whether the SMP function call is required works. * * The update is safe even when the remote CPU is in the hrtimer * interrupt or the hrtimer soft interrupt and expiring affected * bases. Either it will see the update before handling a base or * it will see it when it finishes the processing and reevaluates * the next expiring timer. */ seq = cpu_base->clock_was_set_seq; hrtimer_update_base(cpu_base); /* * If the sequence did not change over the update then the * remote CPU already handled it. */ if (seq == cpu_base->clock_was_set_seq) return false; /* * If the remote CPU is currently handling an hrtimer interrupt, it * will reevaluate the first expiring timer of all clock bases * before reprogramming. Nothing to do here. */ if (cpu_base->in_hrtirq) return false; /* * Walk the affected clock bases and check whether the first expiring * timer in a clock base is moving ahead of the first expiring timer of * @cpu_base. If so, the IPI must be invoked because per CPU clock * event devices cannot be remotely reprogrammed. */ active &= cpu_base->active_bases; for_each_active_base(base, cpu_base, active) { struct timerqueue_node *next; next = timerqueue_getnext(&base->active); expires = ktime_sub(next->expires, base->offset); if (expires < cpu_base->expires_next) return true; /* Extra check for softirq clock bases */ if (base->clockid < HRTIMER_BASE_MONOTONIC_SOFT) continue; if (cpu_base->softirq_activated) continue; if (expires < cpu_base->softirq_expires_next) return true; } return false; } /* * Clock was set. This might affect CLOCK_REALTIME, CLOCK_TAI and * CLOCK_BOOTTIME (for late sleep time injection). * * This requires to update the offsets for these clocks * vs. CLOCK_MONOTONIC. When high resolution timers are enabled, then this * also requires to eventually reprogram the per CPU clock event devices * when the change moves an affected timer ahead of the first expiring * timer on that CPU. Obviously remote per CPU clock event devices cannot * be reprogrammed. The other reason why an IPI has to be sent is when the * system is in !HIGH_RES and NOHZ mode. The NOHZ mode updates the offsets * in the tick, which obviously might be stopped, so this has to bring out * the remote CPU which might sleep in idle to get this sorted. */ void clock_was_set(unsigned int bases) { struct hrtimer_cpu_base *cpu_base = raw_cpu_ptr(&hrtimer_bases); cpumask_var_t mask; int cpu; if (!__hrtimer_hres_active(cpu_base) && !tick_nohz_active) goto out_timerfd; if (!zalloc_cpumask_var(&mask, GFP_KERNEL)) { on_each_cpu(retrigger_next_event, NULL, 1); goto out_timerfd; } /* Avoid interrupting CPUs if possible */ cpus_read_lock(); for_each_online_cpu(cpu) { unsigned long flags; cpu_base = &per_cpu(hrtimer_bases, cpu); raw_spin_lock_irqsave(&cpu_base->lock, flags); if (update_needs_ipi(cpu_base, bases)) cpumask_set_cpu(cpu, mask); raw_spin_unlock_irqrestore(&cpu_base->lock, flags); } preempt_disable(); smp_call_function_many(mask, retrigger_next_event, NULL, 1); preempt_enable(); cpus_read_unlock(); free_cpumask_var(mask); out_timerfd: timerfd_clock_was_set(); } static void clock_was_set_work(struct work_struct *work) { clock_was_set(CLOCK_SET_WALL); } static DECLARE_WORK(hrtimer_work, clock_was_set_work); /* * Called from timekeeping code to reprogram the hrtimer interrupt device * on all cpus and to notify timerfd. */ void clock_was_set_delayed(void) { schedule_work(&hrtimer_work); } /* * Called during resume either directly from via timekeeping_resume() * or in the case of s2idle from tick_unfreeze() to ensure that the * hrtimers are up to date. */ void hrtimers_resume_local(void) { lockdep_assert_irqs_disabled(); /* Retrigger on the local CPU */ retrigger_next_event(NULL); } /* * Counterpart to lock_hrtimer_base above: */ static inline void unlock_hrtimer_base(const struct hrtimer *timer, unsigned long *flags) __releases(&timer->base->cpu_base->lock) { raw_spin_unlock_irqrestore(&timer->base->cpu_base->lock, *flags); } /** * hrtimer_forward() - forward the timer expiry * @timer: hrtimer to forward * @now: forward past this time * @interval: the interval to forward * * Forward the timer expiry so it will expire in the future. * * .. note:: * This only updates the timer expiry value and does not requeue the timer. * * There is also a variant of the function hrtimer_forward_now(). * * Context: Can be safely called from the callback function of @timer. If called * from other contexts @timer must neither be enqueued nor running the * callback and the caller needs to take care of serialization. * * Return: The number of overruns are returned. */ u64 hrtimer_forward(struct hrtimer *timer, ktime_t now, ktime_t interval) { u64 orun = 1; ktime_t delta; delta = ktime_sub(now, hrtimer_get_expires(timer)); if (delta < 0) return 0; if (WARN_ON(timer->state & HRTIMER_STATE_ENQUEUED)) return 0; if (interval < hrtimer_resolution) interval = hrtimer_resolution; if (unlikely(delta >= interval)) { s64 incr = ktime_to_ns(interval); orun = ktime_divns(delta, incr); hrtimer_add_expires_ns(timer, incr * orun); if (hrtimer_get_expires_tv64(timer) > now) return orun; /* * This (and the ktime_add() below) is the * correction for exact: */ orun++; } hrtimer_add_expires(timer, interval); return orun; } EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(hrtimer_forward); /* * enqueue_hrtimer - internal function to (re)start a timer * * The timer is inserted in expiry order. Insertion into the * red black tree is O(log(n)). Must hold the base lock. * * Returns 1 when the new timer is the leftmost timer in the tree. */ static int enqueue_hrtimer(struct hrtimer *timer, struct hrtimer_clock_base *base, enum hrtimer_mode mode) { debug_activate(timer, mode); WARN_ON_ONCE(!base->cpu_base->online); base->cpu_base->active_bases |= 1 << base->index; /* Pairs with the lockless read in hrtimer_is_queued() */ WRITE_ONCE(timer->state, HRTIMER_STATE_ENQUEUED); return timerqueue_add(&base->active, &timer->node); } /* * __remove_hrtimer - internal function to remove a timer * * Caller must hold the base lock. * * High resolution timer mode reprograms the clock event device when the * timer is the one which expires next. The caller can disable this by setting * reprogram to zero. This is useful, when the context does a reprogramming * anyway (e.g. timer interrupt) */ static void __remove_hrtimer(struct hrtimer *timer, struct hrtimer_clock_base *base, u8 newstate, int reprogram) { struct hrtimer_cpu_base *cpu_base = base->cpu_base; u8 state = timer->state; /* Pairs with the lockless read in hrtimer_is_queued() */ WRITE_ONCE(timer->state, newstate); if (!(state & HRTIMER_STATE_ENQUEUED)) return; if (!timerqueue_del(&base->active, &timer->node)) cpu_base->active_bases &= ~(1 << base->index); /* * Note: If reprogram is false we do not update * cpu_base->next_timer. This happens when we remove the first * timer on a remote cpu. No harm as we never dereference * cpu_base->next_timer. So the worst thing what can happen is * an superfluous call to hrtimer_force_reprogram() on the * remote cpu later on if the same timer gets enqueued again. */ if (reprogram && timer == cpu_base->next_timer) hrtimer_force_reprogram(cpu_base, 1); } /* * remove hrtimer, called with base lock held */ static inline int remove_hrtimer(struct hrtimer *timer, struct hrtimer_clock_base *base, bool restart, bool keep_local) { u8 state = timer->state; if (state & HRTIMER_STATE_ENQUEUED) { bool reprogram; /* * Remove the timer and force reprogramming when high * resolution mode is active and the timer is on the current * CPU. If we remove a timer on another CPU, reprogramming is * skipped. The interrupt event on this CPU is fired and * reprogramming happens in the interrupt handler. This is a * rare case and less expensive than a smp call. */ debug_deactivate(timer); reprogram = base->cpu_base == this_cpu_ptr(&hrtimer_bases); /* * If the timer is not restarted then reprogramming is * required if the timer is local. If it is local and about * to be restarted, avoid programming it twice (on removal * and a moment later when it's requeued). */ if (!restart) state = HRTIMER_STATE_INACTIVE; else reprogram &= !keep_local; __remove_hrtimer(timer, base, state, reprogram); return 1; } return 0; } static inline ktime_t hrtimer_update_lowres(struct hrtimer *timer, ktime_t tim, const enum hrtimer_mode mode) { #ifdef CONFIG_TIME_LOW_RES /* * CONFIG_TIME_LOW_RES indicates that the system has no way to return * granular time values. For relative timers we add hrtimer_resolution * (i.e. one jiffie) to prevent short timeouts. */ timer->is_rel = mode & HRTIMER_MODE_REL; if (timer->is_rel) tim = ktime_add_safe(tim, hrtimer_resolution); #endif return tim; } static void hrtimer_update_softirq_timer(struct hrtimer_cpu_base *cpu_base, bool reprogram) { ktime_t expires; /* * Find the next SOFT expiration. */ expires = __hrtimer_get_next_event(cpu_base, HRTIMER_ACTIVE_SOFT); /* * reprogramming needs to be triggered, even if the next soft * hrtimer expires at the same time than the next hard * hrtimer. cpu_base->softirq_expires_next needs to be updated! */ if (expires == KTIME_MAX) return; /* * cpu_base->*next_timer is recomputed by __hrtimer_get_next_event() * cpu_base->*expires_next is only set by hrtimer_reprogram() */ hrtimer_reprogram(cpu_base->softirq_next_timer, reprogram); } static int __hrtimer_start_range_ns(struct hrtimer *timer, ktime_t tim, u64 delta_ns, const enum hrtimer_mode mode, struct hrtimer_clock_base *base) { struct hrtimer_clock_base *new_base; bool force_local, first; /* * If the timer is on the local cpu base and is the first expiring * timer then this might end up reprogramming the hardware twice * (on removal and on enqueue). To avoid that by prevent the * reprogram on removal, keep the timer local to the current CPU * and enforce reprogramming after it is queued no matter whether * it is the new first expiring timer again or not. */ force_local = base->cpu_base == this_cpu_ptr(&hrtimer_bases); force_local &= base->cpu_base->next_timer == timer; /* * Remove an active timer from the queue. In case it is not queued * on the current CPU, make sure that remove_hrtimer() updates the * remote data correctly. * * If it's on the current CPU and the first expiring timer, then * skip reprogramming, keep the timer local and enforce * reprogramming later if it was the first expiring timer. This * avoids programming the underlying clock event twice (once at * removal and once after enqueue). */ remove_hrtimer(timer, base, true, force_local); if (mode & HRTIMER_MODE_REL) tim = ktime_add_safe(tim, base->get_time()); tim = hrtimer_update_lowres(timer, tim, mode); hrtimer_set_expires_range_ns(timer, tim, delta_ns); /* Switch the timer base, if necessary: */ if (!force_local) { new_base = switch_hrtimer_base(timer, base, mode & HRTIMER_MODE_PINNED); } else { new_base = base; } first = enqueue_hrtimer(timer, new_base, mode); if (!force_local) return first; /* * Timer was forced to stay on the current CPU to avoid * reprogramming on removal and enqueue. Force reprogram the * hardware by evaluating the new first expiring timer. */ hrtimer_force_reprogram(new_base->cpu_base, 1); return 0; } /** * hrtimer_start_range_ns - (re)start an hrtimer * @timer: the timer to be added * @tim: expiry time * @delta_ns: "slack" range for the timer * @mode: timer mode: absolute (HRTIMER_MODE_ABS) or * relative (HRTIMER_MODE_REL), and pinned (HRTIMER_MODE_PINNED); * softirq based mode is considered for debug purpose only! */ void hrtimer_start_range_ns(struct hrtimer *timer, ktime_t tim, u64 delta_ns, const enum hrtimer_mode mode) { struct hrtimer_clock_base *base; unsigned long flags; /* * Check whether the HRTIMER_MODE_SOFT bit and hrtimer.is_soft * match on CONFIG_PREEMPT_RT = n. With PREEMPT_RT check the hard * expiry mode because unmarked timers are moved to softirq expiry. */ if (!IS_ENABLED(CONFIG_PREEMPT_RT)) WARN_ON_ONCE(!(mode & HRTIMER_MODE_SOFT) ^ !timer->is_soft); else WARN_ON_ONCE(!(mode & HRTIMER_MODE_HARD) ^ !timer->is_hard); base = lock_hrtimer_base(timer, &flags); if (__hrtimer_start_range_ns(timer, tim, delta_ns, mode, base)) hrtimer_reprogram(timer, true); unlock_hrtimer_base(timer, &flags); } EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(hrtimer_start_range_ns); /** * hrtimer_try_to_cancel - try to deactivate a timer * @timer: hrtimer to stop * * Returns: * * * 0 when the timer was not active * * 1 when the timer was active * * -1 when the timer is currently executing the callback function and * cannot be stopped */ int hrtimer_try_to_cancel(struct hrtimer *timer) { struct hrtimer_clock_base *base; unsigned long flags; int ret = -1; /* * Check lockless first. If the timer is not active (neither * enqueued nor running the callback, nothing to do here. The * base lock does not serialize against a concurrent enqueue, * so we can avoid taking it. */ if (!hrtimer_active(timer)) return 0; base = lock_hrtimer_base(timer, &flags); if (!hrtimer_callback_running(timer)) ret = remove_hrtimer(timer, base, false, false); unlock_hrtimer_base(timer, &flags); return ret; } EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(hrtimer_try_to_cancel); #ifdef CONFIG_PREEMPT_RT static void hrtimer_cpu_base_init_expiry_lock(struct hrtimer_cpu_base *base) { spin_lock_init(&base->softirq_expiry_lock); } static void hrtimer_cpu_base_lock_expiry(struct hrtimer_cpu_base *base) { spin_lock(&base->softirq_expiry_lock); } static void hrtimer_cpu_base_unlock_expiry(struct hrtimer_cpu_base *base) { spin_unlock(&base->softirq_expiry_lock); } /* * The counterpart to hrtimer_cancel_wait_running(). * * If there is a waiter for cpu_base->expiry_lock, then it was waiting for * the timer callback to finish. Drop expiry_lock and reacquire it. That * allows the waiter to acquire the lock and make progress. */ static void hrtimer_sync_wait_running(struct hrtimer_cpu_base *cpu_base, unsigned long flags) { if (atomic_read(&cpu_base->timer_waiters)) { raw_spin_unlock_irqrestore(&cpu_base->lock, flags); spin_unlock(&cpu_base->softirq_expiry_lock); spin_lock(&cpu_base->softirq_expiry_lock); raw_spin_lock_irq(&cpu_base->lock); } } /* * This function is called on PREEMPT_RT kernels when the fast path * deletion of a timer failed because the timer callback function was * running. * * This prevents priority inversion: if the soft irq thread is preempted * in the middle of a timer callback, then calling del_timer_sync() can * lead to two issues: * * - If the caller is on a remote CPU then it has to spin wait for the timer * handler to complete. This can result in unbound priority inversion. * * - If the caller originates from the task which preempted the timer * handler on the same CPU, then spin waiting for the timer handler to * complete is never going to end. */ void hrtimer_cancel_wait_running(const struct hrtimer *timer) { /* Lockless read. Prevent the compiler from reloading it below */ struct hrtimer_clock_base *base = READ_ONCE(timer->base); /* * Just relax if the timer expires in hard interrupt context or if * it is currently on the migration base. */ if (!timer->is_soft || is_migration_base(base)) { cpu_relax(); return; } /* * Mark the base as contended and grab the expiry lock, which is * held by the softirq across the timer callback. Drop the lock * immediately so the softirq can expire the next timer. In theory * the timer could already be running again, but that's more than * unlikely and just causes another wait loop. */ atomic_inc(&base->cpu_base->timer_waiters); spin_lock_bh(&base->cpu_base->softirq_expiry_lock); atomic_dec(&base->cpu_base->timer_waiters); spin_unlock_bh(&base->cpu_base->softirq_expiry_lock); } #else static inline void hrtimer_cpu_base_init_expiry_lock(struct hrtimer_cpu_base *base) { } static inline void hrtimer_cpu_base_lock_expiry(struct hrtimer_cpu_base *base) { } static inline void hrtimer_cpu_base_unlock_expiry(struct hrtimer_cpu_base *base) { } static inline void hrtimer_sync_wait_running(struct hrtimer_cpu_base *base, unsigned long flags) { } #endif /** * hrtimer_cancel - cancel a timer and wait for the handler to finish. * @timer: the timer to be cancelled * * Returns: * 0 when the timer was not active * 1 when the timer was active */ int hrtimer_cancel(struct hrtimer *timer) { int ret; do { ret = hrtimer_try_to_cancel(timer); if (ret < 0) hrtimer_cancel_wait_running(timer); } while (ret < 0); return ret; } EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(hrtimer_cancel); /** * __hrtimer_get_remaining - get remaining time for the timer * @timer: the timer to read * @adjust: adjust relative timers when CONFIG_TIME_LOW_RES=y */ ktime_t __hrtimer_get_remaining(const struct hrtimer *timer, bool adjust) { unsigned long flags; ktime_t rem; lock_hrtimer_base(timer, &flags); if (IS_ENABLED(CONFIG_TIME_LOW_RES) && adjust) rem = hrtimer_expires_remaining_adjusted(timer); else rem = hrtimer_expires_remaining(timer); unlock_hrtimer_base(timer, &flags); return rem; } EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(__hrtimer_get_remaining); #ifdef CONFIG_NO_HZ_COMMON /** * hrtimer_get_next_event - get the time until next expiry event * * Returns the next expiry time or KTIME_MAX if no timer is pending. */ u64 hrtimer_get_next_event(void) { struct hrtimer_cpu_base *cpu_base = this_cpu_ptr(&hrtimer_bases); u64 expires = KTIME_MAX; unsigned long flags; raw_spin_lock_irqsave(&cpu_base->lock, flags); if (!__hrtimer_hres_active(cpu_base)) expires = __hrtimer_get_next_event(cpu_base, HRTIMER_ACTIVE_ALL); raw_spin_unlock_irqrestore(&cpu_base->lock, flags); return expires; } /** * hrtimer_next_event_without - time until next expiry event w/o one timer * @exclude: timer to exclude * * Returns the next expiry time over all timers except for the @exclude one or * KTIME_MAX if none of them is pending. */ u64 hrtimer_next_event_without(const struct hrtimer *exclude) { struct hrtimer_cpu_base *cpu_base = this_cpu_ptr(&hrtimer_bases); u64 expires = KTIME_MAX; unsigned long flags; raw_spin_lock_irqsave(&cpu_base->lock, flags); if (__hrtimer_hres_active(cpu_base)) { unsigned int active; if (!cpu_base->softirq_activated) { active = cpu_base->active_bases & HRTIMER_ACTIVE_SOFT; expires = __hrtimer_next_event_base(cpu_base, exclude, active, KTIME_MAX); } active = cpu_base->active_bases & HRTIMER_ACTIVE_HARD; expires = __hrtimer_next_event_base(cpu_base, exclude, active, expires); } raw_spin_unlock_irqrestore(&cpu_base->lock, flags); return expires; } #endif static inline int hrtimer_clockid_to_base(clockid_t clock_id) { if (likely(clock_id < MAX_CLOCKS)) { int base = hrtimer_clock_to_base_table[clock_id]; if (likely(base != HRTIMER_MAX_CLOCK_BASES)) return base; } WARN(1, "Invalid clockid %d. Using MONOTONIC\n", clock_id); return HRTIMER_BASE_MONOTONIC; } static void __hrtimer_init(struct hrtimer *timer, clockid_t clock_id, enum hrtimer_mode mode) { bool softtimer = !!(mode & HRTIMER_MODE_SOFT); struct hrtimer_cpu_base *cpu_base; int base; /* * On PREEMPT_RT enabled kernels hrtimers which are not explicitly * marked for hard interrupt expiry mode are moved into soft * interrupt context for latency reasons and because the callbacks * can invoke functions which might sleep on RT, e.g. spin_lock(). */ if (IS_ENABLED(CONFIG_PREEMPT_RT) && !(mode & HRTIMER_MODE_HARD)) softtimer = true; memset(timer, 0, sizeof(struct hrtimer)); cpu_base = raw_cpu_ptr(&hrtimer_bases); /* * POSIX magic: Relative CLOCK_REALTIME timers are not affected by * clock modifications, so they needs to become CLOCK_MONOTONIC to * ensure POSIX compliance. */ if (clock_id == CLOCK_REALTIME && mode & HRTIMER_MODE_REL) clock_id = CLOCK_MONOTONIC; base = softtimer ? HRTIMER_MAX_CLOCK_BASES / 2 : 0; base += hrtimer_clockid_to_base(clock_id); timer->is_soft = softtimer; timer->is_hard = !!(mode & HRTIMER_MODE_HARD); timer->base = &cpu_base->clock_base[base]; timerqueue_init(&timer->node); } /** * hrtimer_init - initialize a timer to the given clock * @timer: the timer to be initialized * @clock_id: the clock to be used * @mode: The modes which are relevant for initialization: * HRTIMER_MODE_ABS, HRTIMER_MODE_REL, HRTIMER_MODE_ABS_SOFT, * HRTIMER_MODE_REL_SOFT * * The PINNED variants of the above can be handed in, * but the PINNED bit is ignored as pinning happens * when the hrtimer is started */ void hrtimer_init(struct hrtimer *timer, clockid_t clock_id, enum hrtimer_mode mode) { debug_init(timer, clock_id, mode); __hrtimer_init(timer, clock_id, mode); } EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(hrtimer_init); /* * A timer is active, when it is enqueued into the rbtree or the * callback function is running or it's in the state of being migrated * to another cpu. * * It is important for this function to not return a false negative. */ bool hrtimer_active(const struct hrtimer *timer) { struct hrtimer_clock_base *base; unsigned int seq; do { base = READ_ONCE(timer->base); seq = raw_read_seqcount_begin(&base->seq); if (timer->state != HRTIMER_STATE_INACTIVE || base->running == timer) return true; } while (read_seqcount_retry(&base->seq, seq) || base != READ_ONCE(timer->base)); return false; } EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(hrtimer_active); /* * The write_seqcount_barrier()s in __run_hrtimer() split the thing into 3 * distinct sections: * * - queued: the timer is queued * - callback: the timer is being ran * - post: the timer is inactive or (re)queued * * On the read side we ensure we observe timer->state and cpu_base->running * from the same section, if anything changed while we looked at it, we retry. * This includes timer->base changing because sequence numbers alone are * insufficient for that. * * The sequence numbers are required because otherwise we could still observe * a false negative if the read side got smeared over multiple consecutive * __run_hrtimer() invocations. */ static void __run_hrtimer(struct hrtimer_cpu_base *cpu_base, struct hrtimer_clock_base *base, struct hrtimer *timer, ktime_t *now, unsigned long flags) __must_hold(&cpu_base->lock) { enum hrtimer_restart (*fn)(struct hrtimer *); bool expires_in_hardirq; int restart; lockdep_assert_held(&cpu_base->lock); debug_deactivate(timer); base->running = timer; /* * Separate the ->running assignment from the ->state assignment. * * As with a regular write barrier, this ensures the read side in * hrtimer_active() cannot observe base->running == NULL && * timer->state == INACTIVE. */ raw_write_seqcount_barrier(&base->seq); __remove_hrtimer(timer, base, HRTIMER_STATE_INACTIVE, 0); fn = timer->function; /* * Clear the 'is relative' flag for the TIME_LOW_RES case. If the * timer is restarted with a period then it becomes an absolute * timer. If its not restarted it does not matter. */ if (IS_ENABLED(CONFIG_TIME_LOW_RES)) timer->is_rel = false; /* * The timer is marked as running in the CPU base, so it is * protected against migration to a different CPU even if the lock * is dropped. */ raw_spin_unlock_irqrestore(&cpu_base->lock, flags); trace_hrtimer_expire_entry(timer, now); expires_in_hardirq = lockdep_hrtimer_enter(timer); restart = fn(timer); lockdep_hrtimer_exit(expires_in_hardirq); trace_hrtimer_expire_exit(timer); raw_spin_lock_irq(&cpu_base->lock); /* * Note: We clear the running state after enqueue_hrtimer and * we do not reprogram the event hardware. Happens either in * hrtimer_start_range_ns() or in hrtimer_interrupt() * * Note: Because we dropped the cpu_base->lock above, * hrtimer_start_range_ns() can have popped in and enqueued the timer * for us already. */ if (restart != HRTIMER_NORESTART && !(timer->state & HRTIMER_STATE_ENQUEUED)) enqueue_hrtimer(timer, base, HRTIMER_MODE_ABS); /* * Separate the ->running assignment from the ->state assignment. * * As with a regular write barrier, this ensures the read side in * hrtimer_active() cannot observe base->running.timer == NULL && * timer->state == INACTIVE. */ raw_write_seqcount_barrier(&base->seq); WARN_ON_ONCE(base->running != timer); base->running = NULL; } static void __hrtimer_run_queues(struct hrtimer_cpu_base *cpu_base, ktime_t now, unsigned long flags, unsigned int active_mask) { struct hrtimer_clock_base *base; unsigned int active = cpu_base->active_bases & active_mask; for_each_active_base(base, cpu_base, active) { struct timerqueue_node *node; ktime_t basenow; basenow = ktime_add(now, base->offset); while ((node = timerqueue_getnext(&base->active))) { struct hrtimer *timer; timer = container_of(node, struct hrtimer, node); /* * The immediate goal for using the softexpires is * minimizing wakeups, not running timers at the * earliest interrupt after their soft expiration. * This allows us to avoid using a Priority Search * Tree, which can answer a stabbing query for * overlapping intervals and instead use the simple * BST we already have. * We don't add extra wakeups by delaying timers that * are right-of a not yet expired timer, because that * timer will have to trigger a wakeup anyway. */ if (basenow < hrtimer_get_softexpires_tv64(timer)) break; __run_hrtimer(cpu_base, base, timer, &basenow, flags); if (active_mask == HRTIMER_ACTIVE_SOFT) hrtimer_sync_wait_running(cpu_base, flags); } } } static __latent_entropy void hrtimer_run_softirq(struct softirq_action *h) { struct hrtimer_cpu_base *cpu_base = this_cpu_ptr(&hrtimer_bases); unsigned long flags; ktime_t now; hrtimer_cpu_base_lock_expiry(cpu_base); raw_spin_lock_irqsave(&cpu_base->lock, flags); now = hrtimer_update_base(cpu_base); __hrtimer_run_queues(cpu_base, now, flags, HRTIMER_ACTIVE_SOFT); cpu_base->softirq_activated = 0; hrtimer_update_softirq_timer(cpu_base, true); raw_spin_unlock_irqrestore(&cpu_base->lock, flags); hrtimer_cpu_base_unlock_expiry(cpu_base); } #ifdef CONFIG_HIGH_RES_TIMERS /* * High resolution timer interrupt * Called with interrupts disabled */ void hrtimer_interrupt(struct clock_event_device *dev) { struct hrtimer_cpu_base *cpu_base = this_cpu_ptr(&hrtimer_bases); ktime_t expires_next, now, entry_time, delta; unsigned long flags; int retries = 0; BUG_ON(!cpu_base->hres_active); cpu_base->nr_events++; dev->next_event = KTIME_MAX; raw_spin_lock_irqsave(&cpu_base->lock, flags); entry_time = now = hrtimer_update_base(cpu_base); retry: cpu_base->in_hrtirq = 1; /* * We set expires_next to KTIME_MAX here with cpu_base->lock * held to prevent that a timer is enqueued in our queue via * the migration code. This does not affect enqueueing of * timers which run their callback and need to be requeued on * this CPU. */ cpu_base->expires_next = KTIME_MAX; if (!ktime_before(now, cpu_base->softirq_expires_next)) { cpu_base->softirq_expires_next = KTIME_MAX; cpu_base->softirq_activated = 1; raise_softirq_irqoff(HRTIMER_SOFTIRQ); } __hrtimer_run_queues(cpu_base, now, flags, HRTIMER_ACTIVE_HARD); /* Reevaluate the clock bases for the [soft] next expiry */ expires_next = hrtimer_update_next_event(cpu_base); /* * Store the new expiry value so the migration code can verify * against it. */ cpu_base->expires_next = expires_next; cpu_base->in_hrtirq = 0; raw_spin_unlock_irqrestore(&cpu_base->lock, flags); /* Reprogramming necessary ? */ if (!tick_program_event(expires_next, 0)) { cpu_base->hang_detected = 0; return; } /* * The next timer was already expired due to: * - tracing * - long lasting callbacks * - being scheduled away when running in a VM * * We need to prevent that we loop forever in the hrtimer * interrupt routine. We give it 3 attempts to avoid * overreacting on some spurious event. * * Acquire base lock for updating the offsets and retrieving * the current time. */ raw_spin_lock_irqsave(&cpu_base->lock, flags); now = hrtimer_update_base(cpu_base); cpu_base->nr_retries++; if (++retries < 3) goto retry; /* * Give the system a chance to do something else than looping * here. We stored the entry time, so we know exactly how long * we spent here. We schedule the next event this amount of * time away. */ cpu_base->nr_hangs++; cpu_base->hang_detected = 1; raw_spin_unlock_irqrestore(&cpu_base->lock, flags); delta = ktime_sub(now, entry_time); if ((unsigned int)delta > cpu_base->max_hang_time) cpu_base->max_hang_time = (unsigned int) delta; /* * Limit it to a sensible value as we enforce a longer * delay. Give the CPU at least 100ms to catch up. */ if (delta > 100 * NSEC_PER_MSEC) expires_next = ktime_add_ns(now, 100 * NSEC_PER_MSEC); else expires_next = ktime_add(now, delta); tick_program_event(expires_next, 1); pr_warn_once("hrtimer: interrupt took %llu ns\n", ktime_to_ns(delta)); } /* called with interrupts disabled */ static inline void __hrtimer_peek_ahead_timers(void) { struct tick_device *td; if (!hrtimer_hres_active()) return; td = this_cpu_ptr(&tick_cpu_device); if (td && td->evtdev) hrtimer_interrupt(td->evtdev); } #else /* CONFIG_HIGH_RES_TIMERS */ static inline void __hrtimer_peek_ahead_timers(void) { } #endif /* !CONFIG_HIGH_RES_TIMERS */ /* * Called from run_local_timers in hardirq context every jiffy */ void hrtimer_run_queues(void) { struct hrtimer_cpu_base *cpu_base = this_cpu_ptr(&hrtimer_bases); unsigned long flags; ktime_t now; if (__hrtimer_hres_active(cpu_base)) return; /* * This _is_ ugly: We have to check periodically, whether we * can switch to highres and / or nohz mode. The clocksource * switch happens with xtime_lock held. Notification from * there only sets the check bit in the tick_oneshot code, * otherwise we might deadlock vs. xtime_lock. */ if (tick_check_oneshot_change(!hrtimer_is_hres_enabled())) { hrtimer_switch_to_hres(); return; } raw_spin_lock_irqsave(&cpu_base->lock, flags); now = hrtimer_update_base(cpu_base); if (!ktime_before(now, cpu_base->softirq_expires_next)) { cpu_base->softirq_expires_next = KTIME_MAX; cpu_base->softirq_activated = 1; raise_softirq_irqoff(HRTIMER_SOFTIRQ); } __hrtimer_run_queues(cpu_base, now, flags, HRTIMER_ACTIVE_HARD); raw_spin_unlock_irqrestore(&cpu_base->lock, flags); } /* * Sleep related functions: */ static enum hrtimer_restart hrtimer_wakeup(struct hrtimer *timer) { struct hrtimer_sleeper *t = container_of(timer, struct hrtimer_sleeper, timer); struct task_struct *task = t->task; t->task = NULL; if (task) wake_up_process(task); return HRTIMER_NORESTART; } /** * hrtimer_sleeper_start_expires - Start a hrtimer sleeper timer * @sl: sleeper to be started * @mode: timer mode abs/rel * * Wrapper around hrtimer_start_expires() for hrtimer_sleeper based timers * to allow PREEMPT_RT to tweak the delivery mode (soft/hardirq context) */ void hrtimer_sleeper_start_expires(struct hrtimer_sleeper *sl, enum hrtimer_mode mode) { /* * Make the enqueue delivery mode check work on RT. If the sleeper * was initialized for hard interrupt delivery, force the mode bit. * This is a special case for hrtimer_sleepers because * hrtimer_init_sleeper() determines the delivery mode on RT so the * fiddling with this decision is avoided at the call sites. */ if (IS_ENABLED(CONFIG_PREEMPT_RT) && sl->timer.is_hard) mode |= HRTIMER_MODE_HARD; hrtimer_start_expires(&sl->timer, mode); } EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(hrtimer_sleeper_start_expires); static void __hrtimer_init_sleeper(struct hrtimer_sleeper *sl, clockid_t clock_id, enum hrtimer_mode mode) { /* * On PREEMPT_RT enabled kernels hrtimers which are not explicitly * marked for hard interrupt expiry mode are moved into soft * interrupt context either for latency reasons or because the * hrtimer callback takes regular spinlocks or invokes other * functions which are not suitable for hard interrupt context on * PREEMPT_RT. * * The hrtimer_sleeper callback is RT compatible in hard interrupt * context, but there is a latency concern: Untrusted userspace can * spawn many threads which arm timers for the same expiry time on * the same CPU. That causes a latency spike due to the wakeup of * a gazillion threads. * * OTOH, privileged real-time user space applications rely on the * low latency of hard interrupt wakeups. If the current task is in * a real-time scheduling class, mark the mode for hard interrupt * expiry. */ if (IS_ENABLED(CONFIG_PREEMPT_RT)) { if (task_is_realtime(current) && !(mode & HRTIMER_MODE_SOFT)) mode |= HRTIMER_MODE_HARD; } __hrtimer_init(&sl->timer, clock_id, mode); sl->timer.function = hrtimer_wakeup; sl->task = current; } /** * hrtimer_init_sleeper - initialize sleeper to the given clock * @sl: sleeper to be initialized * @clock_id: the clock to be used * @mode: timer mode abs/rel */ void hrtimer_init_sleeper(struct hrtimer_sleeper *sl, clockid_t clock_id, enum hrtimer_mode mode) { debug_init(&sl->timer, clock_id, mode); __hrtimer_init_sleeper(sl, clock_id, mode); } EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(hrtimer_init_sleeper); int nanosleep_copyout(struct restart_block *restart, struct timespec64 *ts) { switch(restart->nanosleep.type) { #ifdef CONFIG_COMPAT_32BIT_TIME case TT_COMPAT: if (put_old_timespec32(ts, restart->nanosleep.compat_rmtp)) return -EFAULT; break; #endif case TT_NATIVE: if (put_timespec64(ts, restart->nanosleep.rmtp)) return -EFAULT; break; default: BUG(); } return -ERESTART_RESTARTBLOCK; } static int __sched do_nanosleep(struct hrtimer_sleeper *t, enum hrtimer_mode mode) { struct restart_block *restart; do { set_current_state(TASK_INTERRUPTIBLE|TASK_FREEZABLE); hrtimer_sleeper_start_expires(t, mode); if (likely(t->task)) schedule(); hrtimer_cancel(&t->timer); mode = HRTIMER_MODE_ABS; } while (t->task && !signal_pending(current)); __set_current_state(TASK_RUNNING); if (!t->task) return 0; restart = ¤t->restart_block; if (restart->nanosleep.type != TT_NONE) { ktime_t rem = hrtimer_expires_remaining(&t->timer); struct timespec64 rmt; if (rem <= 0) return 0; rmt = ktime_to_timespec64(rem); return nanosleep_copyout(restart, &rmt); } return -ERESTART_RESTARTBLOCK; } static long __sched hrtimer_nanosleep_restart(struct restart_block *restart) { struct hrtimer_sleeper t; int ret; hrtimer_init_sleeper_on_stack(&t, restart->nanosleep.clockid, HRTIMER_MODE_ABS); hrtimer_set_expires_tv64(&t.timer, restart->nanosleep.expires); ret = do_nanosleep(&t, HRTIMER_MODE_ABS); destroy_hrtimer_on_stack(&t.timer); return ret; } long hrtimer_nanosleep(ktime_t rqtp, const enum hrtimer_mode mode, const clockid_t clockid) { struct restart_block *restart; struct hrtimer_sleeper t; int ret = 0; u64 slack; slack = current->timer_slack_ns; if (rt_task(current)) slack = 0; hrtimer_init_sleeper_on_stack(&t, clockid, mode); hrtimer_set_expires_range_ns(&t.timer, rqtp, slack); ret = do_nanosleep(&t, mode); if (ret != -ERESTART_RESTARTBLOCK) goto out; /* Absolute timers do not update the rmtp value and restart: */ if (mode == HRTIMER_MODE_ABS) { ret = -ERESTARTNOHAND; goto out; } restart = ¤t->restart_block; restart->nanosleep.clockid = t.timer.base->clockid; restart->nanosleep.expires = hrtimer_get_expires_tv64(&t.timer); set_restart_fn(restart, hrtimer_nanosleep_restart); out: destroy_hrtimer_on_stack(&t.timer); return ret; } #ifdef CONFIG_64BIT SYSCALL_DEFINE2(nanosleep, struct __kernel_timespec __user *, rqtp, struct __kernel_timespec __user *, rmtp) { struct timespec64 tu; if (get_timespec64(&tu, rqtp)) return -EFAULT; if (!timespec64_valid(&tu)) return -EINVAL; current->restart_block.fn = do_no_restart_syscall; current->restart_block.nanosleep.type = rmtp ? TT_NATIVE : TT_NONE; current->restart_block.nanosleep.rmtp = rmtp; return hrtimer_nanosleep(timespec64_to_ktime(tu), HRTIMER_MODE_REL, CLOCK_MONOTONIC); } #endif #ifdef CONFIG_COMPAT_32BIT_TIME SYSCALL_DEFINE2(nanosleep_time32, struct old_timespec32 __user *, rqtp, struct old_timespec32 __user *, rmtp) { struct timespec64 tu; if (get_old_timespec32(&tu, rqtp)) return -EFAULT; if (!timespec64_valid(&tu)) return -EINVAL; current->restart_block.fn = do_no_restart_syscall; current->restart_block.nanosleep.type = rmtp ? TT_COMPAT : TT_NONE; current->restart_block.nanosleep.compat_rmtp = rmtp; return hrtimer_nanosleep(timespec64_to_ktime(tu), HRTIMER_MODE_REL, CLOCK_MONOTONIC); } #endif /* * Functions related to boot-time initialization: */ int hrtimers_prepare_cpu(unsigned int cpu) { struct hrtimer_cpu_base *cpu_base = &per_cpu(hrtimer_bases, cpu); int i; for (i = 0; i < HRTIMER_MAX_CLOCK_BASES; i++) { struct hrtimer_clock_base *clock_b = &cpu_base->clock_base[i]; clock_b->cpu_base = cpu_base; seqcount_raw_spinlock_init(&clock_b->seq, &cpu_base->lock); timerqueue_init_head(&clock_b->active); } cpu_base->cpu = cpu; cpu_base->active_bases = 0; cpu_base->hres_active = 0; cpu_base->hang_detected = 0; cpu_base->next_timer = NULL; cpu_base->softirq_next_timer = NULL; cpu_base->expires_next = KTIME_MAX; cpu_base->softirq_expires_next = KTIME_MAX; cpu_base->online = 1; hrtimer_cpu_base_init_expiry_lock(cpu_base); return 0; } #ifdef CONFIG_HOTPLUG_CPU static void migrate_hrtimer_list(struct hrtimer_clock_base *old_base, struct hrtimer_clock_base *new_base) { struct hrtimer *timer; struct timerqueue_node *node; while ((node = timerqueue_getnext(&old_base->active))) { timer = container_of(node, struct hrtimer, node); BUG_ON(hrtimer_callback_running(timer)); debug_deactivate(timer); /* * Mark it as ENQUEUED not INACTIVE otherwise the * timer could be seen as !active and just vanish away * under us on another CPU */ __remove_hrtimer(timer, old_base, HRTIMER_STATE_ENQUEUED, 0); timer->base = new_base; /* * Enqueue the timers on the new cpu. This does not * reprogram the event device in case the timer * expires before the earliest on this CPU, but we run * hrtimer_interrupt after we migrated everything to * sort out already expired timers and reprogram the * event device. */ enqueue_hrtimer(timer, new_base, HRTIMER_MODE_ABS); } } int hrtimers_cpu_dying(unsigned int dying_cpu) { int i, ncpu = cpumask_any_and(cpu_active_mask, housekeeping_cpumask(HK_TYPE_TIMER)); struct hrtimer_cpu_base *old_base, *new_base; old_base = this_cpu_ptr(&hrtimer_bases); new_base = &per_cpu(hrtimer_bases, ncpu); /* * The caller is globally serialized and nobody else * takes two locks at once, deadlock is not possible. */ raw_spin_lock(&old_base->lock); raw_spin_lock_nested(&new_base->lock, SINGLE_DEPTH_NESTING); for (i = 0; i < HRTIMER_MAX_CLOCK_BASES; i++) { migrate_hrtimer_list(&old_base->clock_base[i], &new_base->clock_base[i]); } /* * The migration might have changed the first expiring softirq * timer on this CPU. Update it. */ __hrtimer_get_next_event(new_base, HRTIMER_ACTIVE_SOFT); /* Tell the other CPU to retrigger the next event */ smp_call_function_single(ncpu, retrigger_next_event, NULL, 0); raw_spin_unlock(&new_base->lock); old_base->online = 0; raw_spin_unlock(&old_base->lock); return 0; } #endif /* CONFIG_HOTPLUG_CPU */ void __init hrtimers_init(void) { hrtimers_prepare_cpu(smp_processor_id()); open_softirq(HRTIMER_SOFTIRQ, hrtimer_run_softirq); } /** * schedule_hrtimeout_range_clock - sleep until timeout * @expires: timeout value (ktime_t) * @delta: slack in expires timeout (ktime_t) for SCHED_OTHER tasks * @mode: timer mode * @clock_id: timer clock to be used */ int __sched schedule_hrtimeout_range_clock(ktime_t *expires, u64 delta, const enum hrtimer_mode mode, clockid_t clock_id) { struct hrtimer_sleeper t; /* * Optimize when a zero timeout value is given. It does not * matter whether this is an absolute or a relative time. */ if (expires && *expires == 0) { __set_current_state(TASK_RUNNING); return 0; } /* * A NULL parameter means "infinite" */ if (!expires) { schedule(); return -EINTR; } /* * Override any slack passed by the user if under * rt contraints. */ if (rt_task(current)) delta = 0; hrtimer_init_sleeper_on_stack(&t, clock_id, mode); hrtimer_set_expires_range_ns(&t.timer, *expires, delta); hrtimer_sleeper_start_expires(&t, mode); if (likely(t.task)) schedule(); hrtimer_cancel(&t.timer); destroy_hrtimer_on_stack(&t.timer); __set_current_state(TASK_RUNNING); return !t.task ? 0 : -EINTR; } EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(schedule_hrtimeout_range_clock); /** * schedule_hrtimeout_range - sleep until timeout * @expires: timeout value (ktime_t) * @delta: slack in expires timeout (ktime_t) for SCHED_OTHER tasks * @mode: timer mode * * Make the current task sleep until the given expiry time has * elapsed. The routine will return immediately unless * the current task state has been set (see set_current_state()). * * The @delta argument gives the kernel the freedom to schedule the * actual wakeup to a time that is both power and performance friendly * for regular (non RT/DL) tasks. * The kernel give the normal best effort behavior for "@expires+@delta", * but may decide to fire the timer earlier, but no earlier than @expires. * * You can set the task state as follows - * * %TASK_UNINTERRUPTIBLE - at least @timeout time is guaranteed to * pass before the routine returns unless the current task is explicitly * woken up, (e.g. by wake_up_process()). * * %TASK_INTERRUPTIBLE - the routine may return early if a signal is * delivered to the current task or the current task is explicitly woken * up. * * The current task state is guaranteed to be TASK_RUNNING when this * routine returns. * * Returns 0 when the timer has expired. If the task was woken before the * timer expired by a signal (only possible in state TASK_INTERRUPTIBLE) or * by an explicit wakeup, it returns -EINTR. */ int __sched schedule_hrtimeout_range(ktime_t *expires, u64 delta, const enum hrtimer_mode mode) { return schedule_hrtimeout_range_clock(expires, delta, mode, CLOCK_MONOTONIC); } EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(schedule_hrtimeout_range); /** * schedule_hrtimeout - sleep until timeout * @expires: timeout value (ktime_t) * @mode: timer mode * * Make the current task sleep until the given expiry time has * elapsed. The routine will return immediately unless * the current task state has been set (see set_current_state()). * * You can set the task state as follows - * * %TASK_UNINTERRUPTIBLE - at least @timeout time is guaranteed to * pass before the routine returns unless the current task is explicitly * woken up, (e.g. by wake_up_process()). * * %TASK_INTERRUPTIBLE - the routine may return early if a signal is * delivered to the current task or the current task is explicitly woken * up. * * The current task state is guaranteed to be TASK_RUNNING when this * routine returns. * * Returns 0 when the timer has expired. If the task was woken before the * timer expired by a signal (only possible in state TASK_INTERRUPTIBLE) or * by an explicit wakeup, it returns -EINTR. */ int __sched schedule_hrtimeout(ktime_t *expires, const enum hrtimer_mode mode) { return schedule_hrtimeout_range(expires, 0, mode); } EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(schedule_hrtimeout);
Information contained on this website is for historical information purposes only and does not indicate or represent copyright ownership.
Created with Cregit http://github.com/cregit/cregit
Version 2.0-RC1