/* * Count register synchronisation. * * All CPUs will have their count registers synchronised to the CPU0 next time * value. This can cause a small timewarp for CPU0. All other CPU's should * not have done anything significant (but they may have had interrupts * enabled briefly - prom_smp_finish() should not be responsible for enabling * interrupts...) */ #include #include #include #include #include #include #include static atomic_t count_start_flag = ATOMIC_INIT(0); static atomic_t count_count_start = ATOMIC_INIT(0); static atomic_t count_count_stop = ATOMIC_INIT(0); static atomic_t count_reference = ATOMIC_INIT(0); #define COUNTON 100 #define NR_LOOPS 5 void synchronise_count_master(int cpu) { int i; unsigned long flags; unsigned int initcount; printk(KERN_INFO "Synchronize counters for CPU %u: ", cpu); local_irq_save(flags); /* * Notify the slaves that it's time to start */ atomic_set(&count_reference, read_c0_count()); atomic_set(&count_start_flag, cpu); smp_wmb(); /* Count will be initialised to current timer for all CPU's */ initcount = read_c0_count(); /* * We loop a few times to get a primed instruction cache, * then the last pass is more or less synchronised and * the master and slaves each set their cycle counters to a known * value all at once. This reduces the chance of having random offsets * between the processors, and guarantees that the maximum * delay between the cycle counters is never bigger than * the latency of information-passing (cachelines) between * two CPUs. */ for (i = 0; i < NR_LOOPS; i++) { /* slaves loop on '!= 2' */ while (atomic_read(&count_count_start) != 1) mb(); atomic_set(&count_count_stop, 0); smp_wmb(); /* this lets the slaves write their count register */ atomic_inc(&count_count_start); /* * Everyone initialises count in the last loop: */ if (i == NR_LOOPS-1) write_c0_count(initcount); /* * Wait for all slaves to leave the synchronization point: */ while (atomic_read(&count_count_stop) != 1) mb(); atomic_set(&count_count_start, 0); smp_wmb(); atomic_inc(&count_count_stop); } /* Arrange for an interrupt in a short while */ write_c0_compare(read_c0_count() + COUNTON); atomic_set(&count_start_flag, 0); local_irq_restore(flags); /* * i386 code reported the skew here, but the * count registers were almost certainly out of sync * so no point in alarming people */ printk("done.\n"); } void synchronise_count_slave(int cpu) { int i; unsigned int initcount; /* * Not every cpu is online at the time this gets called, * so we first wait for the master to say everyone is ready */ while (atomic_read(&count_start_flag) != cpu) mb(); /* Count will be initialised to next expire for all CPU's */ initcount = atomic_read(&count_reference); for (i = 0; i < NR_LOOPS; i++) { atomic_inc(&count_count_start); while (atomic_read(&count_count_start) != 2) mb(); /* * Everyone initialises count in the last loop: */ if (i == NR_LOOPS-1) write_c0_count(initcount); atomic_inc(&count_count_stop); while (atomic_read(&count_count_stop) != 2) mb(); } /* Arrange for an interrupt in a short while */ write_c0_compare(read_c0_count() + COUNTON); } #undef NR_LOOPS