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v4.17
 
   1#define pr_fmt(fmt) KBUILD_MODNAME ": " fmt
   2
   3#include <linux/kernel.h>
   4#include <linux/sched.h>
   5#include <linux/sched/clock.h>
   6#include <linux/init.h>
   7#include <linux/export.h>
   8#include <linux/timer.h>
   9#include <linux/acpi_pmtmr.h>
  10#include <linux/cpufreq.h>
  11#include <linux/delay.h>
  12#include <linux/clocksource.h>
  13#include <linux/percpu.h>
  14#include <linux/timex.h>
  15#include <linux/static_key.h>
 
  16
  17#include <asm/hpet.h>
  18#include <asm/timer.h>
  19#include <asm/vgtod.h>
  20#include <asm/time.h>
  21#include <asm/delay.h>
  22#include <asm/hypervisor.h>
  23#include <asm/nmi.h>
  24#include <asm/x86_init.h>
  25#include <asm/geode.h>
  26#include <asm/apic.h>
  27#include <asm/intel-family.h>
  28#include <asm/i8259.h>
 
  29
  30unsigned int __read_mostly cpu_khz;	/* TSC clocks / usec, not used here */
  31EXPORT_SYMBOL(cpu_khz);
  32
  33unsigned int __read_mostly tsc_khz;
  34EXPORT_SYMBOL(tsc_khz);
  35
 
 
  36/*
  37 * TSC can be unstable due to cpufreq or due to unsynced TSCs
  38 */
  39static int __read_mostly tsc_unstable;
  40
  41/* native_sched_clock() is called before tsc_init(), so
  42   we must start with the TSC soft disabled to prevent
  43   erroneous rdtsc usage on !boot_cpu_has(X86_FEATURE_TSC) processors */
  44static int __read_mostly tsc_disabled = -1;
  45
  46static DEFINE_STATIC_KEY_FALSE(__use_tsc);
  47
  48int tsc_clocksource_reliable;
  49
  50static u32 art_to_tsc_numerator;
  51static u32 art_to_tsc_denominator;
  52static u64 art_to_tsc_offset;
  53struct clocksource *art_related_clocksource;
  54
  55struct cyc2ns {
  56	struct cyc2ns_data data[2];	/*  0 + 2*16 = 32 */
  57	seqcount_t	   seq;		/* 32 + 4    = 36 */
  58
  59}; /* fits one cacheline */
  60
  61static DEFINE_PER_CPU_ALIGNED(struct cyc2ns, cyc2ns);
  62
  63void cyc2ns_read_begin(struct cyc2ns_data *data)
 
 
 
 
 
 
  64{
  65	int seq, idx;
  66
  67	preempt_disable_notrace();
  68
  69	do {
  70		seq = this_cpu_read(cyc2ns.seq.sequence);
  71		idx = seq & 1;
  72
  73		data->cyc2ns_offset = this_cpu_read(cyc2ns.data[idx].cyc2ns_offset);
  74		data->cyc2ns_mul    = this_cpu_read(cyc2ns.data[idx].cyc2ns_mul);
  75		data->cyc2ns_shift  = this_cpu_read(cyc2ns.data[idx].cyc2ns_shift);
  76
  77	} while (unlikely(seq != this_cpu_read(cyc2ns.seq.sequence)));
  78}
  79
  80void cyc2ns_read_end(void)
  81{
  82	preempt_enable_notrace();
  83}
  84
  85/*
  86 * Accelerators for sched_clock()
  87 * convert from cycles(64bits) => nanoseconds (64bits)
  88 *  basic equation:
  89 *              ns = cycles / (freq / ns_per_sec)
  90 *              ns = cycles * (ns_per_sec / freq)
  91 *              ns = cycles * (10^9 / (cpu_khz * 10^3))
  92 *              ns = cycles * (10^6 / cpu_khz)
  93 *
  94 *      Then we use scaling math (suggested by george@mvista.com) to get:
  95 *              ns = cycles * (10^6 * SC / cpu_khz) / SC
  96 *              ns = cycles * cyc2ns_scale / SC
  97 *
  98 *      And since SC is a constant power of two, we can convert the div
  99 *  into a shift. The larger SC is, the more accurate the conversion, but
 100 *  cyc2ns_scale needs to be a 32-bit value so that 32-bit multiplication
 101 *  (64-bit result) can be used.
 102 *
 103 *  We can use khz divisor instead of mhz to keep a better precision.
 104 *  (mathieu.desnoyers@polymtl.ca)
 105 *
 106 *                      -johnstul@us.ibm.com "math is hard, lets go shopping!"
 107 */
 108
 109static void cyc2ns_data_init(struct cyc2ns_data *data)
 110{
 111	data->cyc2ns_mul = 0;
 112	data->cyc2ns_shift = 0;
 113	data->cyc2ns_offset = 0;
 114}
 115
 116static void __init cyc2ns_init(int cpu)
 117{
 118	struct cyc2ns *c2n = &per_cpu(cyc2ns, cpu);
 119
 120	cyc2ns_data_init(&c2n->data[0]);
 121	cyc2ns_data_init(&c2n->data[1]);
 122
 123	seqcount_init(&c2n->seq);
 124}
 125
 126static inline unsigned long long cycles_2_ns(unsigned long long cyc)
 127{
 128	struct cyc2ns_data data;
 129	unsigned long long ns;
 130
 131	cyc2ns_read_begin(&data);
 132
 133	ns = data.cyc2ns_offset;
 134	ns += mul_u64_u32_shr(cyc, data.cyc2ns_mul, data.cyc2ns_shift);
 135
 136	cyc2ns_read_end();
 137
 138	return ns;
 139}
 140
 141static void set_cyc2ns_scale(unsigned long khz, int cpu, unsigned long long tsc_now)
 142{
 143	unsigned long long ns_now;
 144	struct cyc2ns_data data;
 145	struct cyc2ns *c2n;
 146	unsigned long flags;
 147
 148	local_irq_save(flags);
 149	sched_clock_idle_sleep_event();
 150
 151	if (!khz)
 152		goto done;
 153
 154	ns_now = cycles_2_ns(tsc_now);
 155
 156	/*
 157	 * Compute a new multiplier as per the above comment and ensure our
 158	 * time function is continuous; see the comment near struct
 159	 * cyc2ns_data.
 160	 */
 161	clocks_calc_mult_shift(&data.cyc2ns_mul, &data.cyc2ns_shift, khz,
 162			       NSEC_PER_MSEC, 0);
 163
 164	/*
 165	 * cyc2ns_shift is exported via arch_perf_update_userpage() where it is
 166	 * not expected to be greater than 31 due to the original published
 167	 * conversion algorithm shifting a 32-bit value (now specifies a 64-bit
 168	 * value) - refer perf_event_mmap_page documentation in perf_event.h.
 169	 */
 170	if (data.cyc2ns_shift == 32) {
 171		data.cyc2ns_shift = 31;
 172		data.cyc2ns_mul >>= 1;
 173	}
 174
 175	data.cyc2ns_offset = ns_now -
 176		mul_u64_u32_shr(tsc_now, data.cyc2ns_mul, data.cyc2ns_shift);
 177
 178	c2n = per_cpu_ptr(&cyc2ns, cpu);
 179
 180	raw_write_seqcount_latch(&c2n->seq);
 181	c2n->data[0] = data;
 182	raw_write_seqcount_latch(&c2n->seq);
 183	c2n->data[1] = data;
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 184
 185done:
 186	sched_clock_idle_wakeup_event();
 187	local_irq_restore(flags);
 188}
 189
 190/*
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 191 * Scheduler clock - returns current time in nanosec units.
 192 */
 193u64 native_sched_clock(void)
 194{
 195	if (static_branch_likely(&__use_tsc)) {
 196		u64 tsc_now = rdtsc();
 197
 198		/* return the value in ns */
 199		return cycles_2_ns(tsc_now);
 200	}
 201
 202	/*
 203	 * Fall back to jiffies if there's no TSC available:
 204	 * ( But note that we still use it if the TSC is marked
 205	 *   unstable. We do this because unlike Time Of Day,
 206	 *   the scheduler clock tolerates small errors and it's
 207	 *   very important for it to be as fast as the platform
 208	 *   can achieve it. )
 209	 */
 210
 211	/* No locking but a rare wrong value is not a big deal: */
 212	return (jiffies_64 - INITIAL_JIFFIES) * (1000000000 / HZ);
 213}
 214
 215/*
 216 * Generate a sched_clock if you already have a TSC value.
 217 */
 218u64 native_sched_clock_from_tsc(u64 tsc)
 219{
 220	return cycles_2_ns(tsc);
 221}
 222
 223/* We need to define a real function for sched_clock, to override the
 224   weak default version */
 225#ifdef CONFIG_PARAVIRT
 226unsigned long long sched_clock(void)
 227{
 228	return paravirt_sched_clock();
 229}
 230
 231bool using_native_sched_clock(void)
 232{
 233	return pv_time_ops.sched_clock == native_sched_clock;
 234}
 235#else
 236unsigned long long
 237sched_clock(void) __attribute__((alias("native_sched_clock")));
 238
 239bool using_native_sched_clock(void) { return true; }
 240#endif
 241
 242int check_tsc_unstable(void)
 243{
 244	return tsc_unstable;
 245}
 246EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(check_tsc_unstable);
 247
 248#ifdef CONFIG_X86_TSC
 249int __init notsc_setup(char *str)
 250{
 251	pr_warn("Kernel compiled with CONFIG_X86_TSC, cannot disable TSC completely\n");
 252	tsc_disabled = 1;
 253	return 1;
 254}
 255#else
 256/*
 257 * disable flag for tsc. Takes effect by clearing the TSC cpu flag
 258 * in cpu/common.c
 259 */
 260int __init notsc_setup(char *str)
 261{
 262	setup_clear_cpu_cap(X86_FEATURE_TSC);
 263	return 1;
 264}
 265#endif
 266
 267__setup("notsc", notsc_setup);
 268
 269static int no_sched_irq_time;
 
 270
 271static int __init tsc_setup(char *str)
 272{
 273	if (!strcmp(str, "reliable"))
 274		tsc_clocksource_reliable = 1;
 275	if (!strncmp(str, "noirqtime", 9))
 276		no_sched_irq_time = 1;
 277	if (!strcmp(str, "unstable"))
 278		mark_tsc_unstable("boot parameter");
 
 
 279	return 1;
 280}
 281
 282__setup("tsc=", tsc_setup);
 283
 284#define MAX_RETRIES     5
 285#define SMI_TRESHOLD    50000
 286
 287/*
 288 * Read TSC and the reference counters. Take care of SMI disturbance
 289 */
 290static u64 tsc_read_refs(u64 *p, int hpet)
 291{
 292	u64 t1, t2;
 
 293	int i;
 294
 295	for (i = 0; i < MAX_RETRIES; i++) {
 296		t1 = get_cycles();
 297		if (hpet)
 298			*p = hpet_readl(HPET_COUNTER) & 0xFFFFFFFF;
 299		else
 300			*p = acpi_pm_read_early();
 301		t2 = get_cycles();
 302		if ((t2 - t1) < SMI_TRESHOLD)
 303			return t2;
 304	}
 305	return ULLONG_MAX;
 306}
 307
 308/*
 309 * Calculate the TSC frequency from HPET reference
 310 */
 311static unsigned long calc_hpet_ref(u64 deltatsc, u64 hpet1, u64 hpet2)
 312{
 313	u64 tmp;
 314
 315	if (hpet2 < hpet1)
 316		hpet2 += 0x100000000ULL;
 317	hpet2 -= hpet1;
 318	tmp = ((u64)hpet2 * hpet_readl(HPET_PERIOD));
 319	do_div(tmp, 1000000);
 320	deltatsc = div64_u64(deltatsc, tmp);
 321
 322	return (unsigned long) deltatsc;
 323}
 324
 325/*
 326 * Calculate the TSC frequency from PMTimer reference
 327 */
 328static unsigned long calc_pmtimer_ref(u64 deltatsc, u64 pm1, u64 pm2)
 329{
 330	u64 tmp;
 331
 332	if (!pm1 && !pm2)
 333		return ULONG_MAX;
 334
 335	if (pm2 < pm1)
 336		pm2 += (u64)ACPI_PM_OVRRUN;
 337	pm2 -= pm1;
 338	tmp = pm2 * 1000000000LL;
 339	do_div(tmp, PMTMR_TICKS_PER_SEC);
 340	do_div(deltatsc, tmp);
 341
 342	return (unsigned long) deltatsc;
 343}
 344
 345#define CAL_MS		10
 346#define CAL_LATCH	(PIT_TICK_RATE / (1000 / CAL_MS))
 347#define CAL_PIT_LOOPS	1000
 348
 349#define CAL2_MS		50
 350#define CAL2_LATCH	(PIT_TICK_RATE / (1000 / CAL2_MS))
 351#define CAL2_PIT_LOOPS	5000
 352
 353
 354/*
 355 * Try to calibrate the TSC against the Programmable
 356 * Interrupt Timer and return the frequency of the TSC
 357 * in kHz.
 358 *
 359 * Return ULONG_MAX on failure to calibrate.
 360 */
 361static unsigned long pit_calibrate_tsc(u32 latch, unsigned long ms, int loopmin)
 362{
 363	u64 tsc, t1, t2, delta;
 364	unsigned long tscmin, tscmax;
 365	int pitcnt;
 366
 367	if (!has_legacy_pic()) {
 368		/*
 369		 * Relies on tsc_early_delay_calibrate() to have given us semi
 370		 * usable udelay(), wait for the same 50ms we would have with
 371		 * the PIT loop below.
 372		 */
 373		udelay(10 * USEC_PER_MSEC);
 374		udelay(10 * USEC_PER_MSEC);
 375		udelay(10 * USEC_PER_MSEC);
 376		udelay(10 * USEC_PER_MSEC);
 377		udelay(10 * USEC_PER_MSEC);
 378		return ULONG_MAX;
 379	}
 380
 381	/* Set the Gate high, disable speaker */
 382	outb((inb(0x61) & ~0x02) | 0x01, 0x61);
 383
 384	/*
 385	 * Setup CTC channel 2* for mode 0, (interrupt on terminal
 386	 * count mode), binary count. Set the latch register to 50ms
 387	 * (LSB then MSB) to begin countdown.
 388	 */
 389	outb(0xb0, 0x43);
 390	outb(latch & 0xff, 0x42);
 391	outb(latch >> 8, 0x42);
 392
 393	tsc = t1 = t2 = get_cycles();
 394
 395	pitcnt = 0;
 396	tscmax = 0;
 397	tscmin = ULONG_MAX;
 398	while ((inb(0x61) & 0x20) == 0) {
 399		t2 = get_cycles();
 400		delta = t2 - tsc;
 401		tsc = t2;
 402		if ((unsigned long) delta < tscmin)
 403			tscmin = (unsigned int) delta;
 404		if ((unsigned long) delta > tscmax)
 405			tscmax = (unsigned int) delta;
 406		pitcnt++;
 407	}
 408
 409	/*
 410	 * Sanity checks:
 411	 *
 412	 * If we were not able to read the PIT more than loopmin
 413	 * times, then we have been hit by a massive SMI
 414	 *
 415	 * If the maximum is 10 times larger than the minimum,
 416	 * then we got hit by an SMI as well.
 417	 */
 418	if (pitcnt < loopmin || tscmax > 10 * tscmin)
 419		return ULONG_MAX;
 420
 421	/* Calculate the PIT value */
 422	delta = t2 - t1;
 423	do_div(delta, ms);
 424	return delta;
 425}
 426
 427/*
 428 * This reads the current MSB of the PIT counter, and
 429 * checks if we are running on sufficiently fast and
 430 * non-virtualized hardware.
 431 *
 432 * Our expectations are:
 433 *
 434 *  - the PIT is running at roughly 1.19MHz
 435 *
 436 *  - each IO is going to take about 1us on real hardware,
 437 *    but we allow it to be much faster (by a factor of 10) or
 438 *    _slightly_ slower (ie we allow up to a 2us read+counter
 439 *    update - anything else implies a unacceptably slow CPU
 440 *    or PIT for the fast calibration to work.
 441 *
 442 *  - with 256 PIT ticks to read the value, we have 214us to
 443 *    see the same MSB (and overhead like doing a single TSC
 444 *    read per MSB value etc).
 445 *
 446 *  - We're doing 2 reads per loop (LSB, MSB), and we expect
 447 *    them each to take about a microsecond on real hardware.
 448 *    So we expect a count value of around 100. But we'll be
 449 *    generous, and accept anything over 50.
 450 *
 451 *  - if the PIT is stuck, and we see *many* more reads, we
 452 *    return early (and the next caller of pit_expect_msb()
 453 *    then consider it a failure when they don't see the
 454 *    next expected value).
 455 *
 456 * These expectations mean that we know that we have seen the
 457 * transition from one expected value to another with a fairly
 458 * high accuracy, and we didn't miss any events. We can thus
 459 * use the TSC value at the transitions to calculate a pretty
 460 * good value for the TSC frequencty.
 461 */
 462static inline int pit_verify_msb(unsigned char val)
 463{
 464	/* Ignore LSB */
 465	inb(0x42);
 466	return inb(0x42) == val;
 467}
 468
 469static inline int pit_expect_msb(unsigned char val, u64 *tscp, unsigned long *deltap)
 470{
 471	int count;
 472	u64 tsc = 0, prev_tsc = 0;
 473
 474	for (count = 0; count < 50000; count++) {
 475		if (!pit_verify_msb(val))
 476			break;
 477		prev_tsc = tsc;
 478		tsc = get_cycles();
 479	}
 480	*deltap = get_cycles() - prev_tsc;
 481	*tscp = tsc;
 482
 483	/*
 484	 * We require _some_ success, but the quality control
 485	 * will be based on the error terms on the TSC values.
 486	 */
 487	return count > 5;
 488}
 489
 490/*
 491 * How many MSB values do we want to see? We aim for
 492 * a maximum error rate of 500ppm (in practice the
 493 * real error is much smaller), but refuse to spend
 494 * more than 50ms on it.
 495 */
 496#define MAX_QUICK_PIT_MS 50
 497#define MAX_QUICK_PIT_ITERATIONS (MAX_QUICK_PIT_MS * PIT_TICK_RATE / 1000 / 256)
 498
 499static unsigned long quick_pit_calibrate(void)
 500{
 501	int i;
 502	u64 tsc, delta;
 503	unsigned long d1, d2;
 504
 505	if (!has_legacy_pic())
 506		return 0;
 507
 508	/* Set the Gate high, disable speaker */
 509	outb((inb(0x61) & ~0x02) | 0x01, 0x61);
 510
 511	/*
 512	 * Counter 2, mode 0 (one-shot), binary count
 513	 *
 514	 * NOTE! Mode 2 decrements by two (and then the
 515	 * output is flipped each time, giving the same
 516	 * final output frequency as a decrement-by-one),
 517	 * so mode 0 is much better when looking at the
 518	 * individual counts.
 519	 */
 520	outb(0xb0, 0x43);
 521
 522	/* Start at 0xffff */
 523	outb(0xff, 0x42);
 524	outb(0xff, 0x42);
 525
 526	/*
 527	 * The PIT starts counting at the next edge, so we
 528	 * need to delay for a microsecond. The easiest way
 529	 * to do that is to just read back the 16-bit counter
 530	 * once from the PIT.
 531	 */
 532	pit_verify_msb(0);
 533
 534	if (pit_expect_msb(0xff, &tsc, &d1)) {
 535		for (i = 1; i <= MAX_QUICK_PIT_ITERATIONS; i++) {
 536			if (!pit_expect_msb(0xff-i, &delta, &d2))
 537				break;
 538
 539			delta -= tsc;
 540
 541			/*
 542			 * Extrapolate the error and fail fast if the error will
 543			 * never be below 500 ppm.
 544			 */
 545			if (i == 1 &&
 546			    d1 + d2 >= (delta * MAX_QUICK_PIT_ITERATIONS) >> 11)
 547				return 0;
 548
 549			/*
 550			 * Iterate until the error is less than 500 ppm
 551			 */
 552			if (d1+d2 >= delta >> 11)
 553				continue;
 554
 555			/*
 556			 * Check the PIT one more time to verify that
 557			 * all TSC reads were stable wrt the PIT.
 558			 *
 559			 * This also guarantees serialization of the
 560			 * last cycle read ('d2') in pit_expect_msb.
 561			 */
 562			if (!pit_verify_msb(0xfe - i))
 563				break;
 564			goto success;
 565		}
 566	}
 567	pr_info("Fast TSC calibration failed\n");
 568	return 0;
 569
 570success:
 571	/*
 572	 * Ok, if we get here, then we've seen the
 573	 * MSB of the PIT decrement 'i' times, and the
 574	 * error has shrunk to less than 500 ppm.
 575	 *
 576	 * As a result, we can depend on there not being
 577	 * any odd delays anywhere, and the TSC reads are
 578	 * reliable (within the error).
 579	 *
 580	 * kHz = ticks / time-in-seconds / 1000;
 581	 * kHz = (t2 - t1) / (I * 256 / PIT_TICK_RATE) / 1000
 582	 * kHz = ((t2 - t1) * PIT_TICK_RATE) / (I * 256 * 1000)
 583	 */
 584	delta *= PIT_TICK_RATE;
 585	do_div(delta, i*256*1000);
 586	pr_info("Fast TSC calibration using PIT\n");
 587	return delta;
 588}
 589
 590/**
 591 * native_calibrate_tsc
 592 * Determine TSC frequency via CPUID, else return 0.
 593 */
 594unsigned long native_calibrate_tsc(void)
 595{
 596	unsigned int eax_denominator, ebx_numerator, ecx_hz, edx;
 597	unsigned int crystal_khz;
 598
 599	if (boot_cpu_data.x86_vendor != X86_VENDOR_INTEL)
 600		return 0;
 601
 602	if (boot_cpu_data.cpuid_level < 0x15)
 603		return 0;
 604
 605	eax_denominator = ebx_numerator = ecx_hz = edx = 0;
 606
 607	/* CPUID 15H TSC/Crystal ratio, plus optionally Crystal Hz */
 608	cpuid(0x15, &eax_denominator, &ebx_numerator, &ecx_hz, &edx);
 609
 610	if (ebx_numerator == 0 || eax_denominator == 0)
 611		return 0;
 612
 613	crystal_khz = ecx_hz / 1000;
 614
 615	if (crystal_khz == 0) {
 616		switch (boot_cpu_data.x86_model) {
 617		case INTEL_FAM6_SKYLAKE_MOBILE:
 618		case INTEL_FAM6_SKYLAKE_DESKTOP:
 619		case INTEL_FAM6_KABYLAKE_MOBILE:
 620		case INTEL_FAM6_KABYLAKE_DESKTOP:
 621			crystal_khz = 24000;	/* 24.0 MHz */
 622			break;
 623		case INTEL_FAM6_ATOM_DENVERTON:
 624			crystal_khz = 25000;	/* 25.0 MHz */
 625			break;
 626		case INTEL_FAM6_ATOM_GOLDMONT:
 627			crystal_khz = 19200;	/* 19.2 MHz */
 628			break;
 629		}
 630	}
 631
 632	if (crystal_khz == 0)
 633		return 0;
 634	/*
 635	 * TSC frequency determined by CPUID is a "hardware reported"
 636	 * frequency and is the most accurate one so far we have. This
 637	 * is considered a known frequency.
 638	 */
 639	setup_force_cpu_cap(X86_FEATURE_TSC_KNOWN_FREQ);
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 640
 641	/*
 642	 * For Atom SoCs TSC is the only reliable clocksource.
 643	 * Mark TSC reliable so no watchdog on it.
 644	 */
 645	if (boot_cpu_data.x86_model == INTEL_FAM6_ATOM_GOLDMONT)
 646		setup_force_cpu_cap(X86_FEATURE_TSC_RELIABLE);
 647
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 648	return crystal_khz * ebx_numerator / eax_denominator;
 649}
 650
 651static unsigned long cpu_khz_from_cpuid(void)
 652{
 653	unsigned int eax_base_mhz, ebx_max_mhz, ecx_bus_mhz, edx;
 654
 655	if (boot_cpu_data.x86_vendor != X86_VENDOR_INTEL)
 656		return 0;
 657
 658	if (boot_cpu_data.cpuid_level < 0x16)
 659		return 0;
 660
 661	eax_base_mhz = ebx_max_mhz = ecx_bus_mhz = edx = 0;
 662
 663	cpuid(0x16, &eax_base_mhz, &ebx_max_mhz, &ecx_bus_mhz, &edx);
 664
 665	return eax_base_mhz * 1000;
 666}
 667
 668/**
 669 * native_calibrate_cpu - calibrate the cpu on boot
 
 670 */
 671unsigned long native_calibrate_cpu(void)
 672{
 673	u64 tsc1, tsc2, delta, ref1, ref2;
 674	unsigned long tsc_pit_min = ULONG_MAX, tsc_ref_min = ULONG_MAX;
 675	unsigned long flags, latch, ms, fast_calibrate;
 676	int hpet = is_hpet_enabled(), i, loopmin;
 677
 678	fast_calibrate = cpu_khz_from_cpuid();
 679	if (fast_calibrate)
 680		return fast_calibrate;
 681
 682	fast_calibrate = cpu_khz_from_msr();
 683	if (fast_calibrate)
 684		return fast_calibrate;
 685
 686	local_irq_save(flags);
 687	fast_calibrate = quick_pit_calibrate();
 688	local_irq_restore(flags);
 689	if (fast_calibrate)
 690		return fast_calibrate;
 691
 692	/*
 693	 * Run 5 calibration loops to get the lowest frequency value
 694	 * (the best estimate). We use two different calibration modes
 695	 * here:
 696	 *
 697	 * 1) PIT loop. We set the PIT Channel 2 to oneshot mode and
 698	 * load a timeout of 50ms. We read the time right after we
 699	 * started the timer and wait until the PIT count down reaches
 700	 * zero. In each wait loop iteration we read the TSC and check
 701	 * the delta to the previous read. We keep track of the min
 702	 * and max values of that delta. The delta is mostly defined
 703	 * by the IO time of the PIT access, so we can detect when a
 704	 * SMI/SMM disturbance happened between the two reads. If the
 705	 * maximum time is significantly larger than the minimum time,
 706	 * then we discard the result and have another try.
 707	 *
 708	 * 2) Reference counter. If available we use the HPET or the
 709	 * PMTIMER as a reference to check the sanity of that value.
 710	 * We use separate TSC readouts and check inside of the
 711	 * reference read for a SMI/SMM disturbance. We dicard
 712	 * disturbed values here as well. We do that around the PIT
 713	 * calibration delay loop as we have to wait for a certain
 714	 * amount of time anyway.
 715	 */
 716
 717	/* Preset PIT loop values */
 718	latch = CAL_LATCH;
 719	ms = CAL_MS;
 720	loopmin = CAL_PIT_LOOPS;
 721
 722	for (i = 0; i < 3; i++) {
 723		unsigned long tsc_pit_khz;
 724
 725		/*
 726		 * Read the start value and the reference count of
 727		 * hpet/pmtimer when available. Then do the PIT
 728		 * calibration, which will take at least 50ms, and
 729		 * read the end value.
 730		 */
 731		local_irq_save(flags);
 732		tsc1 = tsc_read_refs(&ref1, hpet);
 733		tsc_pit_khz = pit_calibrate_tsc(latch, ms, loopmin);
 734		tsc2 = tsc_read_refs(&ref2, hpet);
 735		local_irq_restore(flags);
 736
 737		/* Pick the lowest PIT TSC calibration so far */
 738		tsc_pit_min = min(tsc_pit_min, tsc_pit_khz);
 739
 740		/* hpet or pmtimer available ? */
 741		if (ref1 == ref2)
 742			continue;
 743
 744		/* Check, whether the sampling was disturbed by an SMI */
 745		if (tsc1 == ULLONG_MAX || tsc2 == ULLONG_MAX)
 746			continue;
 747
 748		tsc2 = (tsc2 - tsc1) * 1000000LL;
 749		if (hpet)
 750			tsc2 = calc_hpet_ref(tsc2, ref1, ref2);
 751		else
 752			tsc2 = calc_pmtimer_ref(tsc2, ref1, ref2);
 753
 754		tsc_ref_min = min(tsc_ref_min, (unsigned long) tsc2);
 755
 756		/* Check the reference deviation */
 757		delta = ((u64) tsc_pit_min) * 100;
 758		do_div(delta, tsc_ref_min);
 759
 760		/*
 761		 * If both calibration results are inside a 10% window
 762		 * then we can be sure, that the calibration
 763		 * succeeded. We break out of the loop right away. We
 764		 * use the reference value, as it is more precise.
 765		 */
 766		if (delta >= 90 && delta <= 110) {
 767			pr_info("PIT calibration matches %s. %d loops\n",
 768				hpet ? "HPET" : "PMTIMER", i + 1);
 769			return tsc_ref_min;
 770		}
 771
 772		/*
 773		 * Check whether PIT failed more than once. This
 774		 * happens in virtualized environments. We need to
 775		 * give the virtual PC a slightly longer timeframe for
 776		 * the HPET/PMTIMER to make the result precise.
 777		 */
 778		if (i == 1 && tsc_pit_min == ULONG_MAX) {
 779			latch = CAL2_LATCH;
 780			ms = CAL2_MS;
 781			loopmin = CAL2_PIT_LOOPS;
 782		}
 783	}
 784
 785	/*
 786	 * Now check the results.
 787	 */
 788	if (tsc_pit_min == ULONG_MAX) {
 789		/* PIT gave no useful value */
 790		pr_warn("Unable to calibrate against PIT\n");
 791
 792		/* We don't have an alternative source, disable TSC */
 793		if (!hpet && !ref1 && !ref2) {
 794			pr_notice("No reference (HPET/PMTIMER) available\n");
 795			return 0;
 796		}
 797
 798		/* The alternative source failed as well, disable TSC */
 799		if (tsc_ref_min == ULONG_MAX) {
 800			pr_warn("HPET/PMTIMER calibration failed\n");
 801			return 0;
 802		}
 803
 804		/* Use the alternative source */
 805		pr_info("using %s reference calibration\n",
 806			hpet ? "HPET" : "PMTIMER");
 807
 808		return tsc_ref_min;
 809	}
 810
 811	/* We don't have an alternative source, use the PIT calibration value */
 812	if (!hpet && !ref1 && !ref2) {
 813		pr_info("Using PIT calibration value\n");
 814		return tsc_pit_min;
 815	}
 816
 817	/* The alternative source failed, use the PIT calibration value */
 818	if (tsc_ref_min == ULONG_MAX) {
 819		pr_warn("HPET/PMTIMER calibration failed. Using PIT calibration.\n");
 820		return tsc_pit_min;
 821	}
 822
 823	/*
 824	 * The calibration values differ too much. In doubt, we use
 825	 * the PIT value as we know that there are PMTIMERs around
 826	 * running at double speed. At least we let the user know:
 827	 */
 828	pr_warn("PIT calibration deviates from %s: %lu %lu\n",
 829		hpet ? "HPET" : "PMTIMER", tsc_pit_min, tsc_ref_min);
 830	pr_info("Using PIT calibration value\n");
 831	return tsc_pit_min;
 832}
 833
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 834void recalibrate_cpu_khz(void)
 835{
 836#ifndef CONFIG_SMP
 837	unsigned long cpu_khz_old = cpu_khz;
 838
 839	if (!boot_cpu_has(X86_FEATURE_TSC))
 840		return;
 841
 842	cpu_khz = x86_platform.calibrate_cpu();
 843	tsc_khz = x86_platform.calibrate_tsc();
 844	if (tsc_khz == 0)
 845		tsc_khz = cpu_khz;
 846	else if (abs(cpu_khz - tsc_khz) * 10 > tsc_khz)
 847		cpu_khz = tsc_khz;
 848	cpu_data(0).loops_per_jiffy = cpufreq_scale(cpu_data(0).loops_per_jiffy,
 849						    cpu_khz_old, cpu_khz);
 850#endif
 851}
 852
 853EXPORT_SYMBOL(recalibrate_cpu_khz);
 854
 855
 856static unsigned long long cyc2ns_suspend;
 857
 858void tsc_save_sched_clock_state(void)
 859{
 860	if (!sched_clock_stable())
 861		return;
 862
 863	cyc2ns_suspend = sched_clock();
 864}
 865
 866/*
 867 * Even on processors with invariant TSC, TSC gets reset in some the
 868 * ACPI system sleep states. And in some systems BIOS seem to reinit TSC to
 869 * arbitrary value (still sync'd across cpu's) during resume from such sleep
 870 * states. To cope up with this, recompute the cyc2ns_offset for each cpu so
 871 * that sched_clock() continues from the point where it was left off during
 872 * suspend.
 873 */
 874void tsc_restore_sched_clock_state(void)
 875{
 876	unsigned long long offset;
 877	unsigned long flags;
 878	int cpu;
 879
 880	if (!sched_clock_stable())
 881		return;
 882
 883	local_irq_save(flags);
 884
 885	/*
 886	 * We're coming out of suspend, there's no concurrency yet; don't
 887	 * bother being nice about the RCU stuff, just write to both
 888	 * data fields.
 889	 */
 890
 891	this_cpu_write(cyc2ns.data[0].cyc2ns_offset, 0);
 892	this_cpu_write(cyc2ns.data[1].cyc2ns_offset, 0);
 893
 894	offset = cyc2ns_suspend - sched_clock();
 895
 896	for_each_possible_cpu(cpu) {
 897		per_cpu(cyc2ns.data[0].cyc2ns_offset, cpu) = offset;
 898		per_cpu(cyc2ns.data[1].cyc2ns_offset, cpu) = offset;
 899	}
 900
 901	local_irq_restore(flags);
 902}
 903
 904#ifdef CONFIG_CPU_FREQ
 905/* Frequency scaling support. Adjust the TSC based timer when the cpu frequency
 
 906 * changes.
 907 *
 908 * RED-PEN: On SMP we assume all CPUs run with the same frequency.  It's
 909 * not that important because current Opteron setups do not support
 910 * scaling on SMP anyroads.
 911 *
 912 * Should fix up last_tsc too. Currently gettimeofday in the
 913 * first tick after the change will be slightly wrong.
 914 */
 915
 916static unsigned int  ref_freq;
 917static unsigned long loops_per_jiffy_ref;
 918static unsigned long tsc_khz_ref;
 919
 920static int time_cpufreq_notifier(struct notifier_block *nb, unsigned long val,
 921				void *data)
 922{
 923	struct cpufreq_freqs *freq = data;
 924	unsigned long *lpj;
 925
 926	lpj = &boot_cpu_data.loops_per_jiffy;
 927#ifdef CONFIG_SMP
 928	if (!(freq->flags & CPUFREQ_CONST_LOOPS))
 929		lpj = &cpu_data(freq->cpu).loops_per_jiffy;
 930#endif
 931
 932	if (!ref_freq) {
 933		ref_freq = freq->old;
 934		loops_per_jiffy_ref = *lpj;
 935		tsc_khz_ref = tsc_khz;
 936	}
 
 937	if ((val == CPUFREQ_PRECHANGE  && freq->old < freq->new) ||
 938			(val == CPUFREQ_POSTCHANGE && freq->old > freq->new)) {
 939		*lpj = cpufreq_scale(loops_per_jiffy_ref, ref_freq, freq->new);
 
 940
 941		tsc_khz = cpufreq_scale(tsc_khz_ref, ref_freq, freq->new);
 942		if (!(freq->flags & CPUFREQ_CONST_LOOPS))
 943			mark_tsc_unstable("cpufreq changes");
 944
 945		set_cyc2ns_scale(tsc_khz, freq->cpu, rdtsc());
 946	}
 947
 948	return 0;
 949}
 950
 951static struct notifier_block time_cpufreq_notifier_block = {
 952	.notifier_call  = time_cpufreq_notifier
 953};
 954
 955static int __init cpufreq_register_tsc_scaling(void)
 956{
 957	if (!boot_cpu_has(X86_FEATURE_TSC))
 958		return 0;
 959	if (boot_cpu_has(X86_FEATURE_CONSTANT_TSC))
 960		return 0;
 961	cpufreq_register_notifier(&time_cpufreq_notifier_block,
 962				CPUFREQ_TRANSITION_NOTIFIER);
 963	return 0;
 964}
 965
 966core_initcall(cpufreq_register_tsc_scaling);
 967
 968#endif /* CONFIG_CPU_FREQ */
 969
 970#define ART_CPUID_LEAF (0x15)
 971#define ART_MIN_DENOMINATOR (1)
 972
 973
 974/*
 975 * If ART is present detect the numerator:denominator to convert to TSC
 976 */
 977static void __init detect_art(void)
 978{
 979	unsigned int unused[2];
 980
 981	if (boot_cpu_data.cpuid_level < ART_CPUID_LEAF)
 982		return;
 983
 984	/*
 985	 * Don't enable ART in a VM, non-stop TSC and TSC_ADJUST required,
 986	 * and the TSC counter resets must not occur asynchronously.
 987	 */
 988	if (boot_cpu_has(X86_FEATURE_HYPERVISOR) ||
 989	    !boot_cpu_has(X86_FEATURE_NONSTOP_TSC) ||
 990	    !boot_cpu_has(X86_FEATURE_TSC_ADJUST) ||
 991	    tsc_async_resets)
 992		return;
 993
 994	cpuid(ART_CPUID_LEAF, &art_to_tsc_denominator,
 995	      &art_to_tsc_numerator, unused, unused+1);
 996
 997	if (art_to_tsc_denominator < ART_MIN_DENOMINATOR)
 998		return;
 999
1000	rdmsrl(MSR_IA32_TSC_ADJUST, art_to_tsc_offset);
1001
1002	/* Make this sticky over multiple CPU init calls */
1003	setup_force_cpu_cap(X86_FEATURE_ART);
1004}
1005
1006
1007/* clocksource code */
1008
1009static void tsc_resume(struct clocksource *cs)
1010{
1011	tsc_verify_tsc_adjust(true);
1012}
1013
1014/*
1015 * We used to compare the TSC to the cycle_last value in the clocksource
1016 * structure to avoid a nasty time-warp. This can be observed in a
1017 * very small window right after one CPU updated cycle_last under
1018 * xtime/vsyscall_gtod lock and the other CPU reads a TSC value which
1019 * is smaller than the cycle_last reference value due to a TSC which
1020 * is slighty behind. This delta is nowhere else observable, but in
1021 * that case it results in a forward time jump in the range of hours
1022 * due to the unsigned delta calculation of the time keeping core
1023 * code, which is necessary to support wrapping clocksources like pm
1024 * timer.
1025 *
1026 * This sanity check is now done in the core timekeeping code.
1027 * checking the result of read_tsc() - cycle_last for being negative.
1028 * That works because CLOCKSOURCE_MASK(64) does not mask out any bit.
1029 */
1030static u64 read_tsc(struct clocksource *cs)
1031{
1032	return (u64)rdtsc_ordered();
1033}
1034
1035static void tsc_cs_mark_unstable(struct clocksource *cs)
1036{
1037	if (tsc_unstable)
1038		return;
1039
1040	tsc_unstable = 1;
1041	if (using_native_sched_clock())
1042		clear_sched_clock_stable();
1043	disable_sched_clock_irqtime();
1044	pr_info("Marking TSC unstable due to clocksource watchdog\n");
1045}
1046
1047static void tsc_cs_tick_stable(struct clocksource *cs)
1048{
1049	if (tsc_unstable)
1050		return;
1051
1052	if (using_native_sched_clock())
1053		sched_clock_tick_stable();
1054}
1055
 
 
 
 
 
 
1056/*
1057 * .mask MUST be CLOCKSOURCE_MASK(64). See comment above read_tsc()
1058 */
1059static struct clocksource clocksource_tsc_early = {
1060	.name                   = "tsc-early",
1061	.rating                 = 299,
1062	.read                   = read_tsc,
1063	.mask                   = CLOCKSOURCE_MASK(64),
1064	.flags                  = CLOCK_SOURCE_IS_CONTINUOUS |
 
1065				  CLOCK_SOURCE_MUST_VERIFY,
1066	.archdata               = { .vclock_mode = VCLOCK_TSC },
 
1067	.resume			= tsc_resume,
1068	.mark_unstable		= tsc_cs_mark_unstable,
1069	.tick_stable		= tsc_cs_tick_stable,
1070	.list			= LIST_HEAD_INIT(clocksource_tsc_early.list),
1071};
1072
1073/*
1074 * Must mark VALID_FOR_HRES early such that when we unregister tsc_early
1075 * this one will immediately take over. We will only register if TSC has
1076 * been found good.
1077 */
1078static struct clocksource clocksource_tsc = {
1079	.name                   = "tsc",
1080	.rating                 = 300,
1081	.read                   = read_tsc,
1082	.mask                   = CLOCKSOURCE_MASK(64),
1083	.flags                  = CLOCK_SOURCE_IS_CONTINUOUS |
1084				  CLOCK_SOURCE_VALID_FOR_HRES |
1085				  CLOCK_SOURCE_MUST_VERIFY,
1086	.archdata               = { .vclock_mode = VCLOCK_TSC },
 
 
1087	.resume			= tsc_resume,
1088	.mark_unstable		= tsc_cs_mark_unstable,
1089	.tick_stable		= tsc_cs_tick_stable,
1090	.list			= LIST_HEAD_INIT(clocksource_tsc.list),
1091};
1092
1093void mark_tsc_unstable(char *reason)
1094{
1095	if (tsc_unstable)
1096		return;
1097
1098	tsc_unstable = 1;
1099	if (using_native_sched_clock())
1100		clear_sched_clock_stable();
1101	disable_sched_clock_irqtime();
1102	pr_info("Marking TSC unstable due to %s\n", reason);
1103
1104	clocksource_mark_unstable(&clocksource_tsc_early);
1105	clocksource_mark_unstable(&clocksource_tsc);
1106}
1107
1108EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(mark_tsc_unstable);
1109
 
 
 
 
 
 
1110static void __init check_system_tsc_reliable(void)
1111{
1112#if defined(CONFIG_MGEODEGX1) || defined(CONFIG_MGEODE_LX) || defined(CONFIG_X86_GENERIC)
1113	if (is_geode_lx()) {
1114		/* RTSC counts during suspend */
1115#define RTSC_SUSP 0x100
1116		unsigned long res_low, res_high;
1117
1118		rdmsr_safe(MSR_GEODE_BUSCONT_CONF0, &res_low, &res_high);
1119		/* Geode_LX - the OLPC CPU has a very reliable TSC */
1120		if (res_low & RTSC_SUSP)
1121			tsc_clocksource_reliable = 1;
1122	}
1123#endif
1124	if (boot_cpu_has(X86_FEATURE_TSC_RELIABLE))
1125		tsc_clocksource_reliable = 1;
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
1126}
1127
1128/*
1129 * Make an educated guess if the TSC is trustworthy and synchronized
1130 * over all CPUs.
1131 */
1132int unsynchronized_tsc(void)
1133{
1134	if (!boot_cpu_has(X86_FEATURE_TSC) || tsc_unstable)
1135		return 1;
1136
1137#ifdef CONFIG_SMP
1138	if (apic_is_clustered_box())
1139		return 1;
1140#endif
1141
1142	if (boot_cpu_has(X86_FEATURE_CONSTANT_TSC))
1143		return 0;
1144
1145	if (tsc_clocksource_reliable)
1146		return 0;
1147	/*
1148	 * Intel systems are normally all synchronized.
1149	 * Exceptions must mark TSC as unstable:
1150	 */
1151	if (boot_cpu_data.x86_vendor != X86_VENDOR_INTEL) {
1152		/* assume multi socket systems are not synchronized: */
1153		if (num_possible_cpus() > 1)
1154			return 1;
1155	}
1156
1157	return 0;
1158}
1159
1160/*
1161 * Convert ART to TSC given numerator/denominator found in detect_art()
1162 */
1163struct system_counterval_t convert_art_to_tsc(u64 art)
1164{
1165	u64 tmp, res, rem;
1166
1167	rem = do_div(art, art_to_tsc_denominator);
1168
1169	res = art * art_to_tsc_numerator;
1170	tmp = rem * art_to_tsc_numerator;
1171
1172	do_div(tmp, art_to_tsc_denominator);
1173	res += tmp + art_to_tsc_offset;
1174
1175	return (struct system_counterval_t) {.cs = art_related_clocksource,
1176			.cycles = res};
1177}
1178EXPORT_SYMBOL(convert_art_to_tsc);
1179
1180/**
1181 * convert_art_ns_to_tsc() - Convert ART in nanoseconds to TSC.
1182 * @art_ns: ART (Always Running Timer) in unit of nanoseconds
1183 *
1184 * PTM requires all timestamps to be in units of nanoseconds. When user
1185 * software requests a cross-timestamp, this function converts system timestamp
1186 * to TSC.
1187 *
1188 * This is valid when CPU feature flag X86_FEATURE_TSC_KNOWN_FREQ is set
1189 * indicating the tsc_khz is derived from CPUID[15H]. Drivers should check
1190 * that this flag is set before conversion to TSC is attempted.
1191 *
1192 * Return:
1193 * struct system_counterval_t - system counter value with the pointer to the
1194 *	corresponding clocksource
1195 *	@cycles:	System counter value
1196 *	@cs:		Clocksource corresponding to system counter value. Used
1197 *			by timekeeping code to verify comparibility of two cycle
1198 *			values.
1199 */
1200
1201struct system_counterval_t convert_art_ns_to_tsc(u64 art_ns)
1202{
1203	u64 tmp, res, rem;
1204
1205	rem = do_div(art_ns, USEC_PER_SEC);
1206
1207	res = art_ns * tsc_khz;
1208	tmp = rem * tsc_khz;
1209
1210	do_div(tmp, USEC_PER_SEC);
1211	res += tmp;
1212
1213	return (struct system_counterval_t) { .cs = art_related_clocksource,
1214					      .cycles = res};
1215}
1216EXPORT_SYMBOL(convert_art_ns_to_tsc);
1217
1218
1219static void tsc_refine_calibration_work(struct work_struct *work);
1220static DECLARE_DELAYED_WORK(tsc_irqwork, tsc_refine_calibration_work);
1221/**
1222 * tsc_refine_calibration_work - Further refine tsc freq calibration
1223 * @work - ignored.
1224 *
1225 * This functions uses delayed work over a period of a
1226 * second to further refine the TSC freq value. Since this is
1227 * timer based, instead of loop based, we don't block the boot
1228 * process while this longer calibration is done.
1229 *
1230 * If there are any calibration anomalies (too many SMIs, etc),
1231 * or the refined calibration is off by 1% of the fast early
1232 * calibration, we throw out the new calibration and use the
1233 * early calibration.
1234 */
1235static void tsc_refine_calibration_work(struct work_struct *work)
1236{
1237	static u64 tsc_start = -1, ref_start;
1238	static int hpet;
1239	u64 tsc_stop, ref_stop, delta;
1240	unsigned long freq;
1241	int cpu;
1242
1243	/* Don't bother refining TSC on unstable systems */
1244	if (tsc_unstable)
1245		goto unreg;
1246
1247	/*
1248	 * Since the work is started early in boot, we may be
1249	 * delayed the first time we expire. So set the workqueue
1250	 * again once we know timers are working.
1251	 */
1252	if (tsc_start == -1) {
 
1253		/*
1254		 * Only set hpet once, to avoid mixing hardware
1255		 * if the hpet becomes enabled later.
1256		 */
1257		hpet = is_hpet_enabled();
1258		schedule_delayed_work(&tsc_irqwork, HZ);
1259		tsc_start = tsc_read_refs(&ref_start, hpet);
 
1260		return;
1261	}
1262
1263	tsc_stop = tsc_read_refs(&ref_stop, hpet);
1264
1265	/* hpet or pmtimer available ? */
1266	if (ref_start == ref_stop)
1267		goto out;
1268
1269	/* Check, whether the sampling was disturbed by an SMI */
1270	if (tsc_start == ULLONG_MAX || tsc_stop == ULLONG_MAX)
1271		goto out;
1272
1273	delta = tsc_stop - tsc_start;
1274	delta *= 1000000LL;
1275	if (hpet)
1276		freq = calc_hpet_ref(delta, ref_start, ref_stop);
1277	else
1278		freq = calc_pmtimer_ref(delta, ref_start, ref_stop);
1279
1280	/* Make sure we're within 1% */
1281	if (abs(tsc_khz - freq) > tsc_khz/100)
1282		goto out;
1283
1284	tsc_khz = freq;
1285	pr_info("Refined TSC clocksource calibration: %lu.%03lu MHz\n",
1286		(unsigned long)tsc_khz / 1000,
1287		(unsigned long)tsc_khz % 1000);
1288
1289	/* Inform the TSC deadline clockevent devices about the recalibration */
1290	lapic_update_tsc_freq();
1291
1292	/* Update the sched_clock() rate to match the clocksource one */
1293	for_each_possible_cpu(cpu)
1294		set_cyc2ns_scale(tsc_khz, cpu, tsc_stop);
1295
1296out:
1297	if (tsc_unstable)
1298		goto unreg;
1299
1300	if (boot_cpu_has(X86_FEATURE_ART))
1301		art_related_clocksource = &clocksource_tsc;
1302	clocksource_register_khz(&clocksource_tsc, tsc_khz);
1303unreg:
1304	clocksource_unregister(&clocksource_tsc_early);
1305}
1306
1307
1308static int __init init_tsc_clocksource(void)
1309{
1310	if (!boot_cpu_has(X86_FEATURE_TSC) || tsc_disabled > 0 || !tsc_khz)
1311		return 0;
1312
1313	if (tsc_unstable)
1314		goto unreg;
1315
1316	if (tsc_clocksource_reliable)
1317		clocksource_tsc.flags &= ~CLOCK_SOURCE_MUST_VERIFY;
1318
1319	if (boot_cpu_has(X86_FEATURE_NONSTOP_TSC_S3))
1320		clocksource_tsc.flags |= CLOCK_SOURCE_SUSPEND_NONSTOP;
1321
1322	/*
1323	 * When TSC frequency is known (retrieved via MSR or CPUID), we skip
1324	 * the refined calibration and directly register it as a clocksource.
1325	 */
1326	if (boot_cpu_has(X86_FEATURE_TSC_KNOWN_FREQ)) {
1327		if (boot_cpu_has(X86_FEATURE_ART))
1328			art_related_clocksource = &clocksource_tsc;
1329		clocksource_register_khz(&clocksource_tsc, tsc_khz);
1330unreg:
1331		clocksource_unregister(&clocksource_tsc_early);
1332		return 0;
1333	}
1334
1335	schedule_delayed_work(&tsc_irqwork, 0);
1336	return 0;
1337}
1338/*
1339 * We use device_initcall here, to ensure we run after the hpet
1340 * is fully initialized, which may occur at fs_initcall time.
1341 */
1342device_initcall(init_tsc_clocksource);
1343
1344void __init tsc_early_delay_calibrate(void)
1345{
1346	unsigned long lpj;
1347
1348	if (!boot_cpu_has(X86_FEATURE_TSC))
1349		return;
1350
1351	cpu_khz = x86_platform.calibrate_cpu();
1352	tsc_khz = x86_platform.calibrate_tsc();
1353
1354	tsc_khz = tsc_khz ? : cpu_khz;
1355	if (!tsc_khz)
1356		return;
1357
1358	lpj = tsc_khz * 1000;
1359	do_div(lpj, HZ);
1360	loops_per_jiffy = lpj;
1361}
1362
1363void __init tsc_init(void)
1364{
1365	u64 lpj, cyc;
1366	int cpu;
1367
1368	if (!boot_cpu_has(X86_FEATURE_TSC)) {
1369		setup_clear_cpu_cap(X86_FEATURE_TSC_DEADLINE_TIMER);
1370		return;
1371	}
1372
1373	cpu_khz = x86_platform.calibrate_cpu();
1374	tsc_khz = x86_platform.calibrate_tsc();
1375
1376	/*
1377	 * Trust non-zero tsc_khz as authorative,
1378	 * and use it to sanity check cpu_khz,
1379	 * which will be off if system timer is off.
1380	 */
1381	if (tsc_khz == 0)
1382		tsc_khz = cpu_khz;
1383	else if (abs(cpu_khz - tsc_khz) * 10 > tsc_khz)
1384		cpu_khz = tsc_khz;
1385
1386	if (!tsc_khz) {
1387		mark_tsc_unstable("could not calculate TSC khz");
1388		setup_clear_cpu_cap(X86_FEATURE_TSC_DEADLINE_TIMER);
1389		return;
1390	}
1391
1392	pr_info("Detected %lu.%03lu MHz processor\n",
1393		(unsigned long)cpu_khz / 1000,
1394		(unsigned long)cpu_khz % 1000);
1395
1396	if (cpu_khz != tsc_khz) {
1397		pr_info("Detected %lu.%03lu MHz TSC",
1398			(unsigned long)tsc_khz / 1000,
1399			(unsigned long)tsc_khz % 1000);
1400	}
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
1401
1402	/* Sanitize TSC ADJUST before cyc2ns gets initialized */
1403	tsc_store_and_check_tsc_adjust(true);
 
 
 
1404
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
1405	/*
1406	 * Secondary CPUs do not run through tsc_init(), so set up
1407	 * all the scale factors for all CPUs, assuming the same
1408	 * speed as the bootup CPU. (cpufreq notifiers will fix this
1409	 * up if their speed diverges)
1410	 */
1411	cyc = rdtsc();
1412	for_each_possible_cpu(cpu) {
1413		cyc2ns_init(cpu);
1414		set_cyc2ns_scale(tsc_khz, cpu, cyc);
1415	}
1416
1417	if (tsc_disabled > 0)
 
1418		return;
 
1419
1420	/* now allow native_sched_clock() to use rdtsc */
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
1421
1422	tsc_disabled = 0;
1423	static_branch_enable(&__use_tsc);
1424
1425	if (!no_sched_irq_time)
1426		enable_sched_clock_irqtime();
1427
1428	lpj = ((u64)tsc_khz * 1000);
1429	do_div(lpj, HZ);
1430	lpj_fine = lpj;
1431
1432	use_tsc_delay();
1433
1434	check_system_tsc_reliable();
1435
1436	if (unsynchronized_tsc()) {
1437		mark_tsc_unstable("TSCs unsynchronized");
1438		return;
1439	}
1440
 
 
 
1441	clocksource_register_khz(&clocksource_tsc_early, tsc_khz);
1442	detect_art();
1443}
1444
1445#ifdef CONFIG_SMP
1446/*
1447 * If we have a constant TSC and are using the TSC for the delay loop,
1448 * we can skip clock calibration if another cpu in the same socket has already
1449 * been calibrated. This assumes that CONSTANT_TSC applies to all
1450 * cpus in the socket - this should be a safe assumption.
1451 */
1452unsigned long calibrate_delay_is_known(void)
1453{
1454	int sibling, cpu = smp_processor_id();
1455	int constant_tsc = cpu_has(&cpu_data(cpu), X86_FEATURE_CONSTANT_TSC);
1456	const struct cpumask *mask = topology_core_cpumask(cpu);
1457
1458	if (tsc_disabled || !constant_tsc || !mask)
1459		return 0;
1460
1461	sibling = cpumask_any_but(mask, cpu);
1462	if (sibling < nr_cpu_ids)
1463		return cpu_data(sibling).loops_per_jiffy;
1464	return 0;
1465}
1466#endif
v6.2
   1// SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-only
   2#define pr_fmt(fmt) KBUILD_MODNAME ": " fmt
   3
   4#include <linux/kernel.h>
   5#include <linux/sched.h>
   6#include <linux/sched/clock.h>
   7#include <linux/init.h>
   8#include <linux/export.h>
   9#include <linux/timer.h>
  10#include <linux/acpi_pmtmr.h>
  11#include <linux/cpufreq.h>
  12#include <linux/delay.h>
  13#include <linux/clocksource.h>
  14#include <linux/percpu.h>
  15#include <linux/timex.h>
  16#include <linux/static_key.h>
  17#include <linux/static_call.h>
  18
  19#include <asm/hpet.h>
  20#include <asm/timer.h>
  21#include <asm/vgtod.h>
  22#include <asm/time.h>
  23#include <asm/delay.h>
  24#include <asm/hypervisor.h>
  25#include <asm/nmi.h>
  26#include <asm/x86_init.h>
  27#include <asm/geode.h>
  28#include <asm/apic.h>
  29#include <asm/intel-family.h>
  30#include <asm/i8259.h>
  31#include <asm/uv/uv.h>
  32
  33unsigned int __read_mostly cpu_khz;	/* TSC clocks / usec, not used here */
  34EXPORT_SYMBOL(cpu_khz);
  35
  36unsigned int __read_mostly tsc_khz;
  37EXPORT_SYMBOL(tsc_khz);
  38
  39#define KHZ	1000
  40
  41/*
  42 * TSC can be unstable due to cpufreq or due to unsynced TSCs
  43 */
  44static int __read_mostly tsc_unstable;
  45static unsigned int __initdata tsc_early_khz;
 
 
 
 
  46
  47static DEFINE_STATIC_KEY_FALSE(__use_tsc);
  48
  49int tsc_clocksource_reliable;
  50
  51static u32 art_to_tsc_numerator;
  52static u32 art_to_tsc_denominator;
  53static u64 art_to_tsc_offset;
  54static struct clocksource *art_related_clocksource;
  55
  56struct cyc2ns {
  57	struct cyc2ns_data data[2];	/*  0 + 2*16 = 32 */
  58	seqcount_latch_t   seq;		/* 32 + 4    = 36 */
  59
  60}; /* fits one cacheline */
  61
  62static DEFINE_PER_CPU_ALIGNED(struct cyc2ns, cyc2ns);
  63
  64static int __init tsc_early_khz_setup(char *buf)
  65{
  66	return kstrtouint(buf, 0, &tsc_early_khz);
  67}
  68early_param("tsc_early_khz", tsc_early_khz_setup);
  69
  70__always_inline void cyc2ns_read_begin(struct cyc2ns_data *data)
  71{
  72	int seq, idx;
  73
  74	preempt_disable_notrace();
  75
  76	do {
  77		seq = this_cpu_read(cyc2ns.seq.seqcount.sequence);
  78		idx = seq & 1;
  79
  80		data->cyc2ns_offset = this_cpu_read(cyc2ns.data[idx].cyc2ns_offset);
  81		data->cyc2ns_mul    = this_cpu_read(cyc2ns.data[idx].cyc2ns_mul);
  82		data->cyc2ns_shift  = this_cpu_read(cyc2ns.data[idx].cyc2ns_shift);
  83
  84	} while (unlikely(seq != this_cpu_read(cyc2ns.seq.seqcount.sequence)));
  85}
  86
  87__always_inline void cyc2ns_read_end(void)
  88{
  89	preempt_enable_notrace();
  90}
  91
  92/*
  93 * Accelerators for sched_clock()
  94 * convert from cycles(64bits) => nanoseconds (64bits)
  95 *  basic equation:
  96 *              ns = cycles / (freq / ns_per_sec)
  97 *              ns = cycles * (ns_per_sec / freq)
  98 *              ns = cycles * (10^9 / (cpu_khz * 10^3))
  99 *              ns = cycles * (10^6 / cpu_khz)
 100 *
 101 *      Then we use scaling math (suggested by george@mvista.com) to get:
 102 *              ns = cycles * (10^6 * SC / cpu_khz) / SC
 103 *              ns = cycles * cyc2ns_scale / SC
 104 *
 105 *      And since SC is a constant power of two, we can convert the div
 106 *  into a shift. The larger SC is, the more accurate the conversion, but
 107 *  cyc2ns_scale needs to be a 32-bit value so that 32-bit multiplication
 108 *  (64-bit result) can be used.
 109 *
 110 *  We can use khz divisor instead of mhz to keep a better precision.
 111 *  (mathieu.desnoyers@polymtl.ca)
 112 *
 113 *                      -johnstul@us.ibm.com "math is hard, lets go shopping!"
 114 */
 115
 116static __always_inline unsigned long long cycles_2_ns(unsigned long long cyc)
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 117{
 118	struct cyc2ns_data data;
 119	unsigned long long ns;
 120
 121	cyc2ns_read_begin(&data);
 122
 123	ns = data.cyc2ns_offset;
 124	ns += mul_u64_u32_shr(cyc, data.cyc2ns_mul, data.cyc2ns_shift);
 125
 126	cyc2ns_read_end();
 127
 128	return ns;
 129}
 130
 131static void __set_cyc2ns_scale(unsigned long khz, int cpu, unsigned long long tsc_now)
 132{
 133	unsigned long long ns_now;
 134	struct cyc2ns_data data;
 135	struct cyc2ns *c2n;
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 136
 137	ns_now = cycles_2_ns(tsc_now);
 138
 139	/*
 140	 * Compute a new multiplier as per the above comment and ensure our
 141	 * time function is continuous; see the comment near struct
 142	 * cyc2ns_data.
 143	 */
 144	clocks_calc_mult_shift(&data.cyc2ns_mul, &data.cyc2ns_shift, khz,
 145			       NSEC_PER_MSEC, 0);
 146
 147	/*
 148	 * cyc2ns_shift is exported via arch_perf_update_userpage() where it is
 149	 * not expected to be greater than 31 due to the original published
 150	 * conversion algorithm shifting a 32-bit value (now specifies a 64-bit
 151	 * value) - refer perf_event_mmap_page documentation in perf_event.h.
 152	 */
 153	if (data.cyc2ns_shift == 32) {
 154		data.cyc2ns_shift = 31;
 155		data.cyc2ns_mul >>= 1;
 156	}
 157
 158	data.cyc2ns_offset = ns_now -
 159		mul_u64_u32_shr(tsc_now, data.cyc2ns_mul, data.cyc2ns_shift);
 160
 161	c2n = per_cpu_ptr(&cyc2ns, cpu);
 162
 163	raw_write_seqcount_latch(&c2n->seq);
 164	c2n->data[0] = data;
 165	raw_write_seqcount_latch(&c2n->seq);
 166	c2n->data[1] = data;
 167}
 168
 169static void set_cyc2ns_scale(unsigned long khz, int cpu, unsigned long long tsc_now)
 170{
 171	unsigned long flags;
 172
 173	local_irq_save(flags);
 174	sched_clock_idle_sleep_event();
 175
 176	if (khz)
 177		__set_cyc2ns_scale(khz, cpu, tsc_now);
 178
 
 179	sched_clock_idle_wakeup_event();
 180	local_irq_restore(flags);
 181}
 182
 183/*
 184 * Initialize cyc2ns for boot cpu
 185 */
 186static void __init cyc2ns_init_boot_cpu(void)
 187{
 188	struct cyc2ns *c2n = this_cpu_ptr(&cyc2ns);
 189
 190	seqcount_latch_init(&c2n->seq);
 191	__set_cyc2ns_scale(tsc_khz, smp_processor_id(), rdtsc());
 192}
 193
 194/*
 195 * Secondary CPUs do not run through tsc_init(), so set up
 196 * all the scale factors for all CPUs, assuming the same
 197 * speed as the bootup CPU.
 198 */
 199static void __init cyc2ns_init_secondary_cpus(void)
 200{
 201	unsigned int cpu, this_cpu = smp_processor_id();
 202	struct cyc2ns *c2n = this_cpu_ptr(&cyc2ns);
 203	struct cyc2ns_data *data = c2n->data;
 204
 205	for_each_possible_cpu(cpu) {
 206		if (cpu != this_cpu) {
 207			seqcount_latch_init(&c2n->seq);
 208			c2n = per_cpu_ptr(&cyc2ns, cpu);
 209			c2n->data[0] = data[0];
 210			c2n->data[1] = data[1];
 211		}
 212	}
 213}
 214
 215/*
 216 * Scheduler clock - returns current time in nanosec units.
 217 */
 218u64 native_sched_clock(void)
 219{
 220	if (static_branch_likely(&__use_tsc)) {
 221		u64 tsc_now = rdtsc();
 222
 223		/* return the value in ns */
 224		return cycles_2_ns(tsc_now);
 225	}
 226
 227	/*
 228	 * Fall back to jiffies if there's no TSC available:
 229	 * ( But note that we still use it if the TSC is marked
 230	 *   unstable. We do this because unlike Time Of Day,
 231	 *   the scheduler clock tolerates small errors and it's
 232	 *   very important for it to be as fast as the platform
 233	 *   can achieve it. )
 234	 */
 235
 236	/* No locking but a rare wrong value is not a big deal: */
 237	return (jiffies_64 - INITIAL_JIFFIES) * (1000000000 / HZ);
 238}
 239
 240/*
 241 * Generate a sched_clock if you already have a TSC value.
 242 */
 243u64 native_sched_clock_from_tsc(u64 tsc)
 244{
 245	return cycles_2_ns(tsc);
 246}
 247
 248/* We need to define a real function for sched_clock, to override the
 249   weak default version */
 250#ifdef CONFIG_PARAVIRT
 251unsigned long long sched_clock(void)
 252{
 253	return paravirt_sched_clock();
 254}
 255
 256bool using_native_sched_clock(void)
 257{
 258	return static_call_query(pv_sched_clock) == native_sched_clock;
 259}
 260#else
 261unsigned long long
 262sched_clock(void) __attribute__((alias("native_sched_clock")));
 263
 264bool using_native_sched_clock(void) { return true; }
 265#endif
 266
 267int check_tsc_unstable(void)
 268{
 269	return tsc_unstable;
 270}
 271EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(check_tsc_unstable);
 272
 273#ifdef CONFIG_X86_TSC
 274int __init notsc_setup(char *str)
 275{
 276	mark_tsc_unstable("boot parameter notsc");
 
 277	return 1;
 278}
 279#else
 280/*
 281 * disable flag for tsc. Takes effect by clearing the TSC cpu flag
 282 * in cpu/common.c
 283 */
 284int __init notsc_setup(char *str)
 285{
 286	setup_clear_cpu_cap(X86_FEATURE_TSC);
 287	return 1;
 288}
 289#endif
 290
 291__setup("notsc", notsc_setup);
 292
 293static int no_sched_irq_time;
 294static int no_tsc_watchdog;
 295
 296static int __init tsc_setup(char *str)
 297{
 298	if (!strcmp(str, "reliable"))
 299		tsc_clocksource_reliable = 1;
 300	if (!strncmp(str, "noirqtime", 9))
 301		no_sched_irq_time = 1;
 302	if (!strcmp(str, "unstable"))
 303		mark_tsc_unstable("boot parameter");
 304	if (!strcmp(str, "nowatchdog"))
 305		no_tsc_watchdog = 1;
 306	return 1;
 307}
 308
 309__setup("tsc=", tsc_setup);
 310
 311#define MAX_RETRIES		5
 312#define TSC_DEFAULT_THRESHOLD	0x20000
 313
 314/*
 315 * Read TSC and the reference counters. Take care of any disturbances
 316 */
 317static u64 tsc_read_refs(u64 *p, int hpet)
 318{
 319	u64 t1, t2;
 320	u64 thresh = tsc_khz ? tsc_khz >> 5 : TSC_DEFAULT_THRESHOLD;
 321	int i;
 322
 323	for (i = 0; i < MAX_RETRIES; i++) {
 324		t1 = get_cycles();
 325		if (hpet)
 326			*p = hpet_readl(HPET_COUNTER) & 0xFFFFFFFF;
 327		else
 328			*p = acpi_pm_read_early();
 329		t2 = get_cycles();
 330		if ((t2 - t1) < thresh)
 331			return t2;
 332	}
 333	return ULLONG_MAX;
 334}
 335
 336/*
 337 * Calculate the TSC frequency from HPET reference
 338 */
 339static unsigned long calc_hpet_ref(u64 deltatsc, u64 hpet1, u64 hpet2)
 340{
 341	u64 tmp;
 342
 343	if (hpet2 < hpet1)
 344		hpet2 += 0x100000000ULL;
 345	hpet2 -= hpet1;
 346	tmp = ((u64)hpet2 * hpet_readl(HPET_PERIOD));
 347	do_div(tmp, 1000000);
 348	deltatsc = div64_u64(deltatsc, tmp);
 349
 350	return (unsigned long) deltatsc;
 351}
 352
 353/*
 354 * Calculate the TSC frequency from PMTimer reference
 355 */
 356static unsigned long calc_pmtimer_ref(u64 deltatsc, u64 pm1, u64 pm2)
 357{
 358	u64 tmp;
 359
 360	if (!pm1 && !pm2)
 361		return ULONG_MAX;
 362
 363	if (pm2 < pm1)
 364		pm2 += (u64)ACPI_PM_OVRRUN;
 365	pm2 -= pm1;
 366	tmp = pm2 * 1000000000LL;
 367	do_div(tmp, PMTMR_TICKS_PER_SEC);
 368	do_div(deltatsc, tmp);
 369
 370	return (unsigned long) deltatsc;
 371}
 372
 373#define CAL_MS		10
 374#define CAL_LATCH	(PIT_TICK_RATE / (1000 / CAL_MS))
 375#define CAL_PIT_LOOPS	1000
 376
 377#define CAL2_MS		50
 378#define CAL2_LATCH	(PIT_TICK_RATE / (1000 / CAL2_MS))
 379#define CAL2_PIT_LOOPS	5000
 380
 381
 382/*
 383 * Try to calibrate the TSC against the Programmable
 384 * Interrupt Timer and return the frequency of the TSC
 385 * in kHz.
 386 *
 387 * Return ULONG_MAX on failure to calibrate.
 388 */
 389static unsigned long pit_calibrate_tsc(u32 latch, unsigned long ms, int loopmin)
 390{
 391	u64 tsc, t1, t2, delta;
 392	unsigned long tscmin, tscmax;
 393	int pitcnt;
 394
 395	if (!has_legacy_pic()) {
 396		/*
 397		 * Relies on tsc_early_delay_calibrate() to have given us semi
 398		 * usable udelay(), wait for the same 50ms we would have with
 399		 * the PIT loop below.
 400		 */
 401		udelay(10 * USEC_PER_MSEC);
 402		udelay(10 * USEC_PER_MSEC);
 403		udelay(10 * USEC_PER_MSEC);
 404		udelay(10 * USEC_PER_MSEC);
 405		udelay(10 * USEC_PER_MSEC);
 406		return ULONG_MAX;
 407	}
 408
 409	/* Set the Gate high, disable speaker */
 410	outb((inb(0x61) & ~0x02) | 0x01, 0x61);
 411
 412	/*
 413	 * Setup CTC channel 2* for mode 0, (interrupt on terminal
 414	 * count mode), binary count. Set the latch register to 50ms
 415	 * (LSB then MSB) to begin countdown.
 416	 */
 417	outb(0xb0, 0x43);
 418	outb(latch & 0xff, 0x42);
 419	outb(latch >> 8, 0x42);
 420
 421	tsc = t1 = t2 = get_cycles();
 422
 423	pitcnt = 0;
 424	tscmax = 0;
 425	tscmin = ULONG_MAX;
 426	while ((inb(0x61) & 0x20) == 0) {
 427		t2 = get_cycles();
 428		delta = t2 - tsc;
 429		tsc = t2;
 430		if ((unsigned long) delta < tscmin)
 431			tscmin = (unsigned int) delta;
 432		if ((unsigned long) delta > tscmax)
 433			tscmax = (unsigned int) delta;
 434		pitcnt++;
 435	}
 436
 437	/*
 438	 * Sanity checks:
 439	 *
 440	 * If we were not able to read the PIT more than loopmin
 441	 * times, then we have been hit by a massive SMI
 442	 *
 443	 * If the maximum is 10 times larger than the minimum,
 444	 * then we got hit by an SMI as well.
 445	 */
 446	if (pitcnt < loopmin || tscmax > 10 * tscmin)
 447		return ULONG_MAX;
 448
 449	/* Calculate the PIT value */
 450	delta = t2 - t1;
 451	do_div(delta, ms);
 452	return delta;
 453}
 454
 455/*
 456 * This reads the current MSB of the PIT counter, and
 457 * checks if we are running on sufficiently fast and
 458 * non-virtualized hardware.
 459 *
 460 * Our expectations are:
 461 *
 462 *  - the PIT is running at roughly 1.19MHz
 463 *
 464 *  - each IO is going to take about 1us on real hardware,
 465 *    but we allow it to be much faster (by a factor of 10) or
 466 *    _slightly_ slower (ie we allow up to a 2us read+counter
 467 *    update - anything else implies a unacceptably slow CPU
 468 *    or PIT for the fast calibration to work.
 469 *
 470 *  - with 256 PIT ticks to read the value, we have 214us to
 471 *    see the same MSB (and overhead like doing a single TSC
 472 *    read per MSB value etc).
 473 *
 474 *  - We're doing 2 reads per loop (LSB, MSB), and we expect
 475 *    them each to take about a microsecond on real hardware.
 476 *    So we expect a count value of around 100. But we'll be
 477 *    generous, and accept anything over 50.
 478 *
 479 *  - if the PIT is stuck, and we see *many* more reads, we
 480 *    return early (and the next caller of pit_expect_msb()
 481 *    then consider it a failure when they don't see the
 482 *    next expected value).
 483 *
 484 * These expectations mean that we know that we have seen the
 485 * transition from one expected value to another with a fairly
 486 * high accuracy, and we didn't miss any events. We can thus
 487 * use the TSC value at the transitions to calculate a pretty
 488 * good value for the TSC frequency.
 489 */
 490static inline int pit_verify_msb(unsigned char val)
 491{
 492	/* Ignore LSB */
 493	inb(0x42);
 494	return inb(0x42) == val;
 495}
 496
 497static inline int pit_expect_msb(unsigned char val, u64 *tscp, unsigned long *deltap)
 498{
 499	int count;
 500	u64 tsc = 0, prev_tsc = 0;
 501
 502	for (count = 0; count < 50000; count++) {
 503		if (!pit_verify_msb(val))
 504			break;
 505		prev_tsc = tsc;
 506		tsc = get_cycles();
 507	}
 508	*deltap = get_cycles() - prev_tsc;
 509	*tscp = tsc;
 510
 511	/*
 512	 * We require _some_ success, but the quality control
 513	 * will be based on the error terms on the TSC values.
 514	 */
 515	return count > 5;
 516}
 517
 518/*
 519 * How many MSB values do we want to see? We aim for
 520 * a maximum error rate of 500ppm (in practice the
 521 * real error is much smaller), but refuse to spend
 522 * more than 50ms on it.
 523 */
 524#define MAX_QUICK_PIT_MS 50
 525#define MAX_QUICK_PIT_ITERATIONS (MAX_QUICK_PIT_MS * PIT_TICK_RATE / 1000 / 256)
 526
 527static unsigned long quick_pit_calibrate(void)
 528{
 529	int i;
 530	u64 tsc, delta;
 531	unsigned long d1, d2;
 532
 533	if (!has_legacy_pic())
 534		return 0;
 535
 536	/* Set the Gate high, disable speaker */
 537	outb((inb(0x61) & ~0x02) | 0x01, 0x61);
 538
 539	/*
 540	 * Counter 2, mode 0 (one-shot), binary count
 541	 *
 542	 * NOTE! Mode 2 decrements by two (and then the
 543	 * output is flipped each time, giving the same
 544	 * final output frequency as a decrement-by-one),
 545	 * so mode 0 is much better when looking at the
 546	 * individual counts.
 547	 */
 548	outb(0xb0, 0x43);
 549
 550	/* Start at 0xffff */
 551	outb(0xff, 0x42);
 552	outb(0xff, 0x42);
 553
 554	/*
 555	 * The PIT starts counting at the next edge, so we
 556	 * need to delay for a microsecond. The easiest way
 557	 * to do that is to just read back the 16-bit counter
 558	 * once from the PIT.
 559	 */
 560	pit_verify_msb(0);
 561
 562	if (pit_expect_msb(0xff, &tsc, &d1)) {
 563		for (i = 1; i <= MAX_QUICK_PIT_ITERATIONS; i++) {
 564			if (!pit_expect_msb(0xff-i, &delta, &d2))
 565				break;
 566
 567			delta -= tsc;
 568
 569			/*
 570			 * Extrapolate the error and fail fast if the error will
 571			 * never be below 500 ppm.
 572			 */
 573			if (i == 1 &&
 574			    d1 + d2 >= (delta * MAX_QUICK_PIT_ITERATIONS) >> 11)
 575				return 0;
 576
 577			/*
 578			 * Iterate until the error is less than 500 ppm
 579			 */
 580			if (d1+d2 >= delta >> 11)
 581				continue;
 582
 583			/*
 584			 * Check the PIT one more time to verify that
 585			 * all TSC reads were stable wrt the PIT.
 586			 *
 587			 * This also guarantees serialization of the
 588			 * last cycle read ('d2') in pit_expect_msb.
 589			 */
 590			if (!pit_verify_msb(0xfe - i))
 591				break;
 592			goto success;
 593		}
 594	}
 595	pr_info("Fast TSC calibration failed\n");
 596	return 0;
 597
 598success:
 599	/*
 600	 * Ok, if we get here, then we've seen the
 601	 * MSB of the PIT decrement 'i' times, and the
 602	 * error has shrunk to less than 500 ppm.
 603	 *
 604	 * As a result, we can depend on there not being
 605	 * any odd delays anywhere, and the TSC reads are
 606	 * reliable (within the error).
 607	 *
 608	 * kHz = ticks / time-in-seconds / 1000;
 609	 * kHz = (t2 - t1) / (I * 256 / PIT_TICK_RATE) / 1000
 610	 * kHz = ((t2 - t1) * PIT_TICK_RATE) / (I * 256 * 1000)
 611	 */
 612	delta *= PIT_TICK_RATE;
 613	do_div(delta, i*256*1000);
 614	pr_info("Fast TSC calibration using PIT\n");
 615	return delta;
 616}
 617
 618/**
 619 * native_calibrate_tsc
 620 * Determine TSC frequency via CPUID, else return 0.
 621 */
 622unsigned long native_calibrate_tsc(void)
 623{
 624	unsigned int eax_denominator, ebx_numerator, ecx_hz, edx;
 625	unsigned int crystal_khz;
 626
 627	if (boot_cpu_data.x86_vendor != X86_VENDOR_INTEL)
 628		return 0;
 629
 630	if (boot_cpu_data.cpuid_level < 0x15)
 631		return 0;
 632
 633	eax_denominator = ebx_numerator = ecx_hz = edx = 0;
 634
 635	/* CPUID 15H TSC/Crystal ratio, plus optionally Crystal Hz */
 636	cpuid(0x15, &eax_denominator, &ebx_numerator, &ecx_hz, &edx);
 637
 638	if (ebx_numerator == 0 || eax_denominator == 0)
 639		return 0;
 640
 641	crystal_khz = ecx_hz / 1000;
 642
 643	/*
 644	 * Denverton SoCs don't report crystal clock, and also don't support
 645	 * CPUID.0x16 for the calculation below, so hardcode the 25MHz crystal
 646	 * clock.
 647	 */
 648	if (crystal_khz == 0 &&
 649			boot_cpu_data.x86_model == INTEL_FAM6_ATOM_GOLDMONT_D)
 650		crystal_khz = 25000;
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 651
 
 
 652	/*
 653	 * TSC frequency reported directly by CPUID is a "hardware reported"
 654	 * frequency and is the most accurate one so far we have. This
 655	 * is considered a known frequency.
 656	 */
 657	if (crystal_khz != 0)
 658		setup_force_cpu_cap(X86_FEATURE_TSC_KNOWN_FREQ);
 659
 660	/*
 661	 * Some Intel SoCs like Skylake and Kabylake don't report the crystal
 662	 * clock, but we can easily calculate it to a high degree of accuracy
 663	 * by considering the crystal ratio and the CPU speed.
 664	 */
 665	if (crystal_khz == 0 && boot_cpu_data.cpuid_level >= 0x16) {
 666		unsigned int eax_base_mhz, ebx, ecx, edx;
 667
 668		cpuid(0x16, &eax_base_mhz, &ebx, &ecx, &edx);
 669		crystal_khz = eax_base_mhz * 1000 *
 670			eax_denominator / ebx_numerator;
 671	}
 672
 673	if (crystal_khz == 0)
 674		return 0;
 675
 676	/*
 677	 * For Atom SoCs TSC is the only reliable clocksource.
 678	 * Mark TSC reliable so no watchdog on it.
 679	 */
 680	if (boot_cpu_data.x86_model == INTEL_FAM6_ATOM_GOLDMONT)
 681		setup_force_cpu_cap(X86_FEATURE_TSC_RELIABLE);
 682
 683#ifdef CONFIG_X86_LOCAL_APIC
 684	/*
 685	 * The local APIC appears to be fed by the core crystal clock
 686	 * (which sounds entirely sensible). We can set the global
 687	 * lapic_timer_period here to avoid having to calibrate the APIC
 688	 * timer later.
 689	 */
 690	lapic_timer_period = crystal_khz * 1000 / HZ;
 691#endif
 692
 693	return crystal_khz * ebx_numerator / eax_denominator;
 694}
 695
 696static unsigned long cpu_khz_from_cpuid(void)
 697{
 698	unsigned int eax_base_mhz, ebx_max_mhz, ecx_bus_mhz, edx;
 699
 700	if (boot_cpu_data.x86_vendor != X86_VENDOR_INTEL)
 701		return 0;
 702
 703	if (boot_cpu_data.cpuid_level < 0x16)
 704		return 0;
 705
 706	eax_base_mhz = ebx_max_mhz = ecx_bus_mhz = edx = 0;
 707
 708	cpuid(0x16, &eax_base_mhz, &ebx_max_mhz, &ecx_bus_mhz, &edx);
 709
 710	return eax_base_mhz * 1000;
 711}
 712
 713/*
 714 * calibrate cpu using pit, hpet, and ptimer methods. They are available
 715 * later in boot after acpi is initialized.
 716 */
 717static unsigned long pit_hpet_ptimer_calibrate_cpu(void)
 718{
 719	u64 tsc1, tsc2, delta, ref1, ref2;
 720	unsigned long tsc_pit_min = ULONG_MAX, tsc_ref_min = ULONG_MAX;
 721	unsigned long flags, latch, ms;
 722	int hpet = is_hpet_enabled(), i, loopmin;
 723
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 724	/*
 725	 * Run 5 calibration loops to get the lowest frequency value
 726	 * (the best estimate). We use two different calibration modes
 727	 * here:
 728	 *
 729	 * 1) PIT loop. We set the PIT Channel 2 to oneshot mode and
 730	 * load a timeout of 50ms. We read the time right after we
 731	 * started the timer and wait until the PIT count down reaches
 732	 * zero. In each wait loop iteration we read the TSC and check
 733	 * the delta to the previous read. We keep track of the min
 734	 * and max values of that delta. The delta is mostly defined
 735	 * by the IO time of the PIT access, so we can detect when
 736	 * any disturbance happened between the two reads. If the
 737	 * maximum time is significantly larger than the minimum time,
 738	 * then we discard the result and have another try.
 739	 *
 740	 * 2) Reference counter. If available we use the HPET or the
 741	 * PMTIMER as a reference to check the sanity of that value.
 742	 * We use separate TSC readouts and check inside of the
 743	 * reference read for any possible disturbance. We discard
 744	 * disturbed values here as well. We do that around the PIT
 745	 * calibration delay loop as we have to wait for a certain
 746	 * amount of time anyway.
 747	 */
 748
 749	/* Preset PIT loop values */
 750	latch = CAL_LATCH;
 751	ms = CAL_MS;
 752	loopmin = CAL_PIT_LOOPS;
 753
 754	for (i = 0; i < 3; i++) {
 755		unsigned long tsc_pit_khz;
 756
 757		/*
 758		 * Read the start value and the reference count of
 759		 * hpet/pmtimer when available. Then do the PIT
 760		 * calibration, which will take at least 50ms, and
 761		 * read the end value.
 762		 */
 763		local_irq_save(flags);
 764		tsc1 = tsc_read_refs(&ref1, hpet);
 765		tsc_pit_khz = pit_calibrate_tsc(latch, ms, loopmin);
 766		tsc2 = tsc_read_refs(&ref2, hpet);
 767		local_irq_restore(flags);
 768
 769		/* Pick the lowest PIT TSC calibration so far */
 770		tsc_pit_min = min(tsc_pit_min, tsc_pit_khz);
 771
 772		/* hpet or pmtimer available ? */
 773		if (ref1 == ref2)
 774			continue;
 775
 776		/* Check, whether the sampling was disturbed */
 777		if (tsc1 == ULLONG_MAX || tsc2 == ULLONG_MAX)
 778			continue;
 779
 780		tsc2 = (tsc2 - tsc1) * 1000000LL;
 781		if (hpet)
 782			tsc2 = calc_hpet_ref(tsc2, ref1, ref2);
 783		else
 784			tsc2 = calc_pmtimer_ref(tsc2, ref1, ref2);
 785
 786		tsc_ref_min = min(tsc_ref_min, (unsigned long) tsc2);
 787
 788		/* Check the reference deviation */
 789		delta = ((u64) tsc_pit_min) * 100;
 790		do_div(delta, tsc_ref_min);
 791
 792		/*
 793		 * If both calibration results are inside a 10% window
 794		 * then we can be sure, that the calibration
 795		 * succeeded. We break out of the loop right away. We
 796		 * use the reference value, as it is more precise.
 797		 */
 798		if (delta >= 90 && delta <= 110) {
 799			pr_info("PIT calibration matches %s. %d loops\n",
 800				hpet ? "HPET" : "PMTIMER", i + 1);
 801			return tsc_ref_min;
 802		}
 803
 804		/*
 805		 * Check whether PIT failed more than once. This
 806		 * happens in virtualized environments. We need to
 807		 * give the virtual PC a slightly longer timeframe for
 808		 * the HPET/PMTIMER to make the result precise.
 809		 */
 810		if (i == 1 && tsc_pit_min == ULONG_MAX) {
 811			latch = CAL2_LATCH;
 812			ms = CAL2_MS;
 813			loopmin = CAL2_PIT_LOOPS;
 814		}
 815	}
 816
 817	/*
 818	 * Now check the results.
 819	 */
 820	if (tsc_pit_min == ULONG_MAX) {
 821		/* PIT gave no useful value */
 822		pr_warn("Unable to calibrate against PIT\n");
 823
 824		/* We don't have an alternative source, disable TSC */
 825		if (!hpet && !ref1 && !ref2) {
 826			pr_notice("No reference (HPET/PMTIMER) available\n");
 827			return 0;
 828		}
 829
 830		/* The alternative source failed as well, disable TSC */
 831		if (tsc_ref_min == ULONG_MAX) {
 832			pr_warn("HPET/PMTIMER calibration failed\n");
 833			return 0;
 834		}
 835
 836		/* Use the alternative source */
 837		pr_info("using %s reference calibration\n",
 838			hpet ? "HPET" : "PMTIMER");
 839
 840		return tsc_ref_min;
 841	}
 842
 843	/* We don't have an alternative source, use the PIT calibration value */
 844	if (!hpet && !ref1 && !ref2) {
 845		pr_info("Using PIT calibration value\n");
 846		return tsc_pit_min;
 847	}
 848
 849	/* The alternative source failed, use the PIT calibration value */
 850	if (tsc_ref_min == ULONG_MAX) {
 851		pr_warn("HPET/PMTIMER calibration failed. Using PIT calibration.\n");
 852		return tsc_pit_min;
 853	}
 854
 855	/*
 856	 * The calibration values differ too much. In doubt, we use
 857	 * the PIT value as we know that there are PMTIMERs around
 858	 * running at double speed. At least we let the user know:
 859	 */
 860	pr_warn("PIT calibration deviates from %s: %lu %lu\n",
 861		hpet ? "HPET" : "PMTIMER", tsc_pit_min, tsc_ref_min);
 862	pr_info("Using PIT calibration value\n");
 863	return tsc_pit_min;
 864}
 865
 866/**
 867 * native_calibrate_cpu_early - can calibrate the cpu early in boot
 868 */
 869unsigned long native_calibrate_cpu_early(void)
 870{
 871	unsigned long flags, fast_calibrate = cpu_khz_from_cpuid();
 872
 873	if (!fast_calibrate)
 874		fast_calibrate = cpu_khz_from_msr();
 875	if (!fast_calibrate) {
 876		local_irq_save(flags);
 877		fast_calibrate = quick_pit_calibrate();
 878		local_irq_restore(flags);
 879	}
 880	return fast_calibrate;
 881}
 882
 883
 884/**
 885 * native_calibrate_cpu - calibrate the cpu
 886 */
 887static unsigned long native_calibrate_cpu(void)
 888{
 889	unsigned long tsc_freq = native_calibrate_cpu_early();
 890
 891	if (!tsc_freq)
 892		tsc_freq = pit_hpet_ptimer_calibrate_cpu();
 893
 894	return tsc_freq;
 895}
 896
 897void recalibrate_cpu_khz(void)
 898{
 899#ifndef CONFIG_SMP
 900	unsigned long cpu_khz_old = cpu_khz;
 901
 902	if (!boot_cpu_has(X86_FEATURE_TSC))
 903		return;
 904
 905	cpu_khz = x86_platform.calibrate_cpu();
 906	tsc_khz = x86_platform.calibrate_tsc();
 907	if (tsc_khz == 0)
 908		tsc_khz = cpu_khz;
 909	else if (abs(cpu_khz - tsc_khz) * 10 > tsc_khz)
 910		cpu_khz = tsc_khz;
 911	cpu_data(0).loops_per_jiffy = cpufreq_scale(cpu_data(0).loops_per_jiffy,
 912						    cpu_khz_old, cpu_khz);
 913#endif
 914}
 915
 916EXPORT_SYMBOL(recalibrate_cpu_khz);
 917
 918
 919static unsigned long long cyc2ns_suspend;
 920
 921void tsc_save_sched_clock_state(void)
 922{
 923	if (!sched_clock_stable())
 924		return;
 925
 926	cyc2ns_suspend = sched_clock();
 927}
 928
 929/*
 930 * Even on processors with invariant TSC, TSC gets reset in some the
 931 * ACPI system sleep states. And in some systems BIOS seem to reinit TSC to
 932 * arbitrary value (still sync'd across cpu's) during resume from such sleep
 933 * states. To cope up with this, recompute the cyc2ns_offset for each cpu so
 934 * that sched_clock() continues from the point where it was left off during
 935 * suspend.
 936 */
 937void tsc_restore_sched_clock_state(void)
 938{
 939	unsigned long long offset;
 940	unsigned long flags;
 941	int cpu;
 942
 943	if (!sched_clock_stable())
 944		return;
 945
 946	local_irq_save(flags);
 947
 948	/*
 949	 * We're coming out of suspend, there's no concurrency yet; don't
 950	 * bother being nice about the RCU stuff, just write to both
 951	 * data fields.
 952	 */
 953
 954	this_cpu_write(cyc2ns.data[0].cyc2ns_offset, 0);
 955	this_cpu_write(cyc2ns.data[1].cyc2ns_offset, 0);
 956
 957	offset = cyc2ns_suspend - sched_clock();
 958
 959	for_each_possible_cpu(cpu) {
 960		per_cpu(cyc2ns.data[0].cyc2ns_offset, cpu) = offset;
 961		per_cpu(cyc2ns.data[1].cyc2ns_offset, cpu) = offset;
 962	}
 963
 964	local_irq_restore(flags);
 965}
 966
 967#ifdef CONFIG_CPU_FREQ
 968/*
 969 * Frequency scaling support. Adjust the TSC based timer when the CPU frequency
 970 * changes.
 971 *
 972 * NOTE: On SMP the situation is not fixable in general, so simply mark the TSC
 973 * as unstable and give up in those cases.
 
 974 *
 975 * Should fix up last_tsc too. Currently gettimeofday in the
 976 * first tick after the change will be slightly wrong.
 977 */
 978
 979static unsigned int  ref_freq;
 980static unsigned long loops_per_jiffy_ref;
 981static unsigned long tsc_khz_ref;
 982
 983static int time_cpufreq_notifier(struct notifier_block *nb, unsigned long val,
 984				void *data)
 985{
 986	struct cpufreq_freqs *freq = data;
 
 987
 988	if (num_online_cpus() > 1) {
 989		mark_tsc_unstable("cpufreq changes on SMP");
 990		return 0;
 991	}
 
 992
 993	if (!ref_freq) {
 994		ref_freq = freq->old;
 995		loops_per_jiffy_ref = boot_cpu_data.loops_per_jiffy;
 996		tsc_khz_ref = tsc_khz;
 997	}
 998
 999	if ((val == CPUFREQ_PRECHANGE  && freq->old < freq->new) ||
1000	    (val == CPUFREQ_POSTCHANGE && freq->old > freq->new)) {
1001		boot_cpu_data.loops_per_jiffy =
1002			cpufreq_scale(loops_per_jiffy_ref, ref_freq, freq->new);
1003
1004		tsc_khz = cpufreq_scale(tsc_khz_ref, ref_freq, freq->new);
1005		if (!(freq->flags & CPUFREQ_CONST_LOOPS))
1006			mark_tsc_unstable("cpufreq changes");
1007
1008		set_cyc2ns_scale(tsc_khz, freq->policy->cpu, rdtsc());
1009	}
1010
1011	return 0;
1012}
1013
1014static struct notifier_block time_cpufreq_notifier_block = {
1015	.notifier_call  = time_cpufreq_notifier
1016};
1017
1018static int __init cpufreq_register_tsc_scaling(void)
1019{
1020	if (!boot_cpu_has(X86_FEATURE_TSC))
1021		return 0;
1022	if (boot_cpu_has(X86_FEATURE_CONSTANT_TSC))
1023		return 0;
1024	cpufreq_register_notifier(&time_cpufreq_notifier_block,
1025				CPUFREQ_TRANSITION_NOTIFIER);
1026	return 0;
1027}
1028
1029core_initcall(cpufreq_register_tsc_scaling);
1030
1031#endif /* CONFIG_CPU_FREQ */
1032
1033#define ART_CPUID_LEAF (0x15)
1034#define ART_MIN_DENOMINATOR (1)
1035
1036
1037/*
1038 * If ART is present detect the numerator:denominator to convert to TSC
1039 */
1040static void __init detect_art(void)
1041{
1042	unsigned int unused[2];
1043
1044	if (boot_cpu_data.cpuid_level < ART_CPUID_LEAF)
1045		return;
1046
1047	/*
1048	 * Don't enable ART in a VM, non-stop TSC and TSC_ADJUST required,
1049	 * and the TSC counter resets must not occur asynchronously.
1050	 */
1051	if (boot_cpu_has(X86_FEATURE_HYPERVISOR) ||
1052	    !boot_cpu_has(X86_FEATURE_NONSTOP_TSC) ||
1053	    !boot_cpu_has(X86_FEATURE_TSC_ADJUST) ||
1054	    tsc_async_resets)
1055		return;
1056
1057	cpuid(ART_CPUID_LEAF, &art_to_tsc_denominator,
1058	      &art_to_tsc_numerator, unused, unused+1);
1059
1060	if (art_to_tsc_denominator < ART_MIN_DENOMINATOR)
1061		return;
1062
1063	rdmsrl(MSR_IA32_TSC_ADJUST, art_to_tsc_offset);
1064
1065	/* Make this sticky over multiple CPU init calls */
1066	setup_force_cpu_cap(X86_FEATURE_ART);
1067}
1068
1069
1070/* clocksource code */
1071
1072static void tsc_resume(struct clocksource *cs)
1073{
1074	tsc_verify_tsc_adjust(true);
1075}
1076
1077/*
1078 * We used to compare the TSC to the cycle_last value in the clocksource
1079 * structure to avoid a nasty time-warp. This can be observed in a
1080 * very small window right after one CPU updated cycle_last under
1081 * xtime/vsyscall_gtod lock and the other CPU reads a TSC value which
1082 * is smaller than the cycle_last reference value due to a TSC which
1083 * is slightly behind. This delta is nowhere else observable, but in
1084 * that case it results in a forward time jump in the range of hours
1085 * due to the unsigned delta calculation of the time keeping core
1086 * code, which is necessary to support wrapping clocksources like pm
1087 * timer.
1088 *
1089 * This sanity check is now done in the core timekeeping code.
1090 * checking the result of read_tsc() - cycle_last for being negative.
1091 * That works because CLOCKSOURCE_MASK(64) does not mask out any bit.
1092 */
1093static u64 read_tsc(struct clocksource *cs)
1094{
1095	return (u64)rdtsc_ordered();
1096}
1097
1098static void tsc_cs_mark_unstable(struct clocksource *cs)
1099{
1100	if (tsc_unstable)
1101		return;
1102
1103	tsc_unstable = 1;
1104	if (using_native_sched_clock())
1105		clear_sched_clock_stable();
1106	disable_sched_clock_irqtime();
1107	pr_info("Marking TSC unstable due to clocksource watchdog\n");
1108}
1109
1110static void tsc_cs_tick_stable(struct clocksource *cs)
1111{
1112	if (tsc_unstable)
1113		return;
1114
1115	if (using_native_sched_clock())
1116		sched_clock_tick_stable();
1117}
1118
1119static int tsc_cs_enable(struct clocksource *cs)
1120{
1121	vclocks_set_used(VDSO_CLOCKMODE_TSC);
1122	return 0;
1123}
1124
1125/*
1126 * .mask MUST be CLOCKSOURCE_MASK(64). See comment above read_tsc()
1127 */
1128static struct clocksource clocksource_tsc_early = {
1129	.name			= "tsc-early",
1130	.rating			= 299,
1131	.uncertainty_margin	= 32 * NSEC_PER_MSEC,
1132	.read			= read_tsc,
1133	.mask			= CLOCKSOURCE_MASK(64),
1134	.flags			= CLOCK_SOURCE_IS_CONTINUOUS |
1135				  CLOCK_SOURCE_MUST_VERIFY,
1136	.vdso_clock_mode	= VDSO_CLOCKMODE_TSC,
1137	.enable			= tsc_cs_enable,
1138	.resume			= tsc_resume,
1139	.mark_unstable		= tsc_cs_mark_unstable,
1140	.tick_stable		= tsc_cs_tick_stable,
1141	.list			= LIST_HEAD_INIT(clocksource_tsc_early.list),
1142};
1143
1144/*
1145 * Must mark VALID_FOR_HRES early such that when we unregister tsc_early
1146 * this one will immediately take over. We will only register if TSC has
1147 * been found good.
1148 */
1149static struct clocksource clocksource_tsc = {
1150	.name			= "tsc",
1151	.rating			= 300,
1152	.read			= read_tsc,
1153	.mask			= CLOCKSOURCE_MASK(64),
1154	.flags			= CLOCK_SOURCE_IS_CONTINUOUS |
1155				  CLOCK_SOURCE_VALID_FOR_HRES |
1156				  CLOCK_SOURCE_MUST_VERIFY |
1157				  CLOCK_SOURCE_VERIFY_PERCPU,
1158	.vdso_clock_mode	= VDSO_CLOCKMODE_TSC,
1159	.enable			= tsc_cs_enable,
1160	.resume			= tsc_resume,
1161	.mark_unstable		= tsc_cs_mark_unstable,
1162	.tick_stable		= tsc_cs_tick_stable,
1163	.list			= LIST_HEAD_INIT(clocksource_tsc.list),
1164};
1165
1166void mark_tsc_unstable(char *reason)
1167{
1168	if (tsc_unstable)
1169		return;
1170
1171	tsc_unstable = 1;
1172	if (using_native_sched_clock())
1173		clear_sched_clock_stable();
1174	disable_sched_clock_irqtime();
1175	pr_info("Marking TSC unstable due to %s\n", reason);
1176
1177	clocksource_mark_unstable(&clocksource_tsc_early);
1178	clocksource_mark_unstable(&clocksource_tsc);
1179}
1180
1181EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(mark_tsc_unstable);
1182
1183static void __init tsc_disable_clocksource_watchdog(void)
1184{
1185	clocksource_tsc_early.flags &= ~CLOCK_SOURCE_MUST_VERIFY;
1186	clocksource_tsc.flags &= ~CLOCK_SOURCE_MUST_VERIFY;
1187}
1188
1189static void __init check_system_tsc_reliable(void)
1190{
1191#if defined(CONFIG_MGEODEGX1) || defined(CONFIG_MGEODE_LX) || defined(CONFIG_X86_GENERIC)
1192	if (is_geode_lx()) {
1193		/* RTSC counts during suspend */
1194#define RTSC_SUSP 0x100
1195		unsigned long res_low, res_high;
1196
1197		rdmsr_safe(MSR_GEODE_BUSCONT_CONF0, &res_low, &res_high);
1198		/* Geode_LX - the OLPC CPU has a very reliable TSC */
1199		if (res_low & RTSC_SUSP)
1200			tsc_clocksource_reliable = 1;
1201	}
1202#endif
1203	if (boot_cpu_has(X86_FEATURE_TSC_RELIABLE))
1204		tsc_clocksource_reliable = 1;
1205
1206	/*
1207	 * Disable the clocksource watchdog when the system has:
1208	 *  - TSC running at constant frequency
1209	 *  - TSC which does not stop in C-States
1210	 *  - the TSC_ADJUST register which allows to detect even minimal
1211	 *    modifications
1212	 *  - not more than two sockets. As the number of sockets cannot be
1213	 *    evaluated at the early boot stage where this has to be
1214	 *    invoked, check the number of online memory nodes as a
1215	 *    fallback solution which is an reasonable estimate.
1216	 */
1217	if (boot_cpu_has(X86_FEATURE_CONSTANT_TSC) &&
1218	    boot_cpu_has(X86_FEATURE_NONSTOP_TSC) &&
1219	    boot_cpu_has(X86_FEATURE_TSC_ADJUST) &&
1220	    nr_online_nodes <= 2)
1221		tsc_disable_clocksource_watchdog();
1222}
1223
1224/*
1225 * Make an educated guess if the TSC is trustworthy and synchronized
1226 * over all CPUs.
1227 */
1228int unsynchronized_tsc(void)
1229{
1230	if (!boot_cpu_has(X86_FEATURE_TSC) || tsc_unstable)
1231		return 1;
1232
1233#ifdef CONFIG_SMP
1234	if (apic_is_clustered_box())
1235		return 1;
1236#endif
1237
1238	if (boot_cpu_has(X86_FEATURE_CONSTANT_TSC))
1239		return 0;
1240
1241	if (tsc_clocksource_reliable)
1242		return 0;
1243	/*
1244	 * Intel systems are normally all synchronized.
1245	 * Exceptions must mark TSC as unstable:
1246	 */
1247	if (boot_cpu_data.x86_vendor != X86_VENDOR_INTEL) {
1248		/* assume multi socket systems are not synchronized: */
1249		if (num_possible_cpus() > 1)
1250			return 1;
1251	}
1252
1253	return 0;
1254}
1255
1256/*
1257 * Convert ART to TSC given numerator/denominator found in detect_art()
1258 */
1259struct system_counterval_t convert_art_to_tsc(u64 art)
1260{
1261	u64 tmp, res, rem;
1262
1263	rem = do_div(art, art_to_tsc_denominator);
1264
1265	res = art * art_to_tsc_numerator;
1266	tmp = rem * art_to_tsc_numerator;
1267
1268	do_div(tmp, art_to_tsc_denominator);
1269	res += tmp + art_to_tsc_offset;
1270
1271	return (struct system_counterval_t) {.cs = art_related_clocksource,
1272			.cycles = res};
1273}
1274EXPORT_SYMBOL(convert_art_to_tsc);
1275
1276/**
1277 * convert_art_ns_to_tsc() - Convert ART in nanoseconds to TSC.
1278 * @art_ns: ART (Always Running Timer) in unit of nanoseconds
1279 *
1280 * PTM requires all timestamps to be in units of nanoseconds. When user
1281 * software requests a cross-timestamp, this function converts system timestamp
1282 * to TSC.
1283 *
1284 * This is valid when CPU feature flag X86_FEATURE_TSC_KNOWN_FREQ is set
1285 * indicating the tsc_khz is derived from CPUID[15H]. Drivers should check
1286 * that this flag is set before conversion to TSC is attempted.
1287 *
1288 * Return:
1289 * struct system_counterval_t - system counter value with the pointer to the
1290 *	corresponding clocksource
1291 *	@cycles:	System counter value
1292 *	@cs:		Clocksource corresponding to system counter value. Used
1293 *			by timekeeping code to verify comparability of two cycle
1294 *			values.
1295 */
1296
1297struct system_counterval_t convert_art_ns_to_tsc(u64 art_ns)
1298{
1299	u64 tmp, res, rem;
1300
1301	rem = do_div(art_ns, USEC_PER_SEC);
1302
1303	res = art_ns * tsc_khz;
1304	tmp = rem * tsc_khz;
1305
1306	do_div(tmp, USEC_PER_SEC);
1307	res += tmp;
1308
1309	return (struct system_counterval_t) { .cs = art_related_clocksource,
1310					      .cycles = res};
1311}
1312EXPORT_SYMBOL(convert_art_ns_to_tsc);
1313
1314
1315static void tsc_refine_calibration_work(struct work_struct *work);
1316static DECLARE_DELAYED_WORK(tsc_irqwork, tsc_refine_calibration_work);
1317/**
1318 * tsc_refine_calibration_work - Further refine tsc freq calibration
1319 * @work - ignored.
1320 *
1321 * This functions uses delayed work over a period of a
1322 * second to further refine the TSC freq value. Since this is
1323 * timer based, instead of loop based, we don't block the boot
1324 * process while this longer calibration is done.
1325 *
1326 * If there are any calibration anomalies (too many SMIs, etc),
1327 * or the refined calibration is off by 1% of the fast early
1328 * calibration, we throw out the new calibration and use the
1329 * early calibration.
1330 */
1331static void tsc_refine_calibration_work(struct work_struct *work)
1332{
1333	static u64 tsc_start = ULLONG_MAX, ref_start;
1334	static int hpet;
1335	u64 tsc_stop, ref_stop, delta;
1336	unsigned long freq;
1337	int cpu;
1338
1339	/* Don't bother refining TSC on unstable systems */
1340	if (tsc_unstable)
1341		goto unreg;
1342
1343	/*
1344	 * Since the work is started early in boot, we may be
1345	 * delayed the first time we expire. So set the workqueue
1346	 * again once we know timers are working.
1347	 */
1348	if (tsc_start == ULLONG_MAX) {
1349restart:
1350		/*
1351		 * Only set hpet once, to avoid mixing hardware
1352		 * if the hpet becomes enabled later.
1353		 */
1354		hpet = is_hpet_enabled();
 
1355		tsc_start = tsc_read_refs(&ref_start, hpet);
1356		schedule_delayed_work(&tsc_irqwork, HZ);
1357		return;
1358	}
1359
1360	tsc_stop = tsc_read_refs(&ref_stop, hpet);
1361
1362	/* hpet or pmtimer available ? */
1363	if (ref_start == ref_stop)
1364		goto out;
1365
1366	/* Check, whether the sampling was disturbed */
1367	if (tsc_stop == ULLONG_MAX)
1368		goto restart;
1369
1370	delta = tsc_stop - tsc_start;
1371	delta *= 1000000LL;
1372	if (hpet)
1373		freq = calc_hpet_ref(delta, ref_start, ref_stop);
1374	else
1375		freq = calc_pmtimer_ref(delta, ref_start, ref_stop);
1376
1377	/* Make sure we're within 1% */
1378	if (abs(tsc_khz - freq) > tsc_khz/100)
1379		goto out;
1380
1381	tsc_khz = freq;
1382	pr_info("Refined TSC clocksource calibration: %lu.%03lu MHz\n",
1383		(unsigned long)tsc_khz / 1000,
1384		(unsigned long)tsc_khz % 1000);
1385
1386	/* Inform the TSC deadline clockevent devices about the recalibration */
1387	lapic_update_tsc_freq();
1388
1389	/* Update the sched_clock() rate to match the clocksource one */
1390	for_each_possible_cpu(cpu)
1391		set_cyc2ns_scale(tsc_khz, cpu, tsc_stop);
1392
1393out:
1394	if (tsc_unstable)
1395		goto unreg;
1396
1397	if (boot_cpu_has(X86_FEATURE_ART))
1398		art_related_clocksource = &clocksource_tsc;
1399	clocksource_register_khz(&clocksource_tsc, tsc_khz);
1400unreg:
1401	clocksource_unregister(&clocksource_tsc_early);
1402}
1403
1404
1405static int __init init_tsc_clocksource(void)
1406{
1407	if (!boot_cpu_has(X86_FEATURE_TSC) || !tsc_khz)
1408		return 0;
1409
1410	if (tsc_unstable)
1411		goto unreg;
1412
 
 
 
1413	if (boot_cpu_has(X86_FEATURE_NONSTOP_TSC_S3))
1414		clocksource_tsc.flags |= CLOCK_SOURCE_SUSPEND_NONSTOP;
1415
1416	/*
1417	 * When TSC frequency is known (retrieved via MSR or CPUID), we skip
1418	 * the refined calibration and directly register it as a clocksource.
1419	 */
1420	if (boot_cpu_has(X86_FEATURE_TSC_KNOWN_FREQ)) {
1421		if (boot_cpu_has(X86_FEATURE_ART))
1422			art_related_clocksource = &clocksource_tsc;
1423		clocksource_register_khz(&clocksource_tsc, tsc_khz);
1424unreg:
1425		clocksource_unregister(&clocksource_tsc_early);
1426		return 0;
1427	}
1428
1429	schedule_delayed_work(&tsc_irqwork, 0);
1430	return 0;
1431}
1432/*
1433 * We use device_initcall here, to ensure we run after the hpet
1434 * is fully initialized, which may occur at fs_initcall time.
1435 */
1436device_initcall(init_tsc_clocksource);
1437
1438static bool __init determine_cpu_tsc_frequencies(bool early)
1439{
1440	/* Make sure that cpu and tsc are not already calibrated */
1441	WARN_ON(cpu_khz || tsc_khz);
 
 
1442
1443	if (early) {
1444		cpu_khz = x86_platform.calibrate_cpu();
1445		if (tsc_early_khz)
1446			tsc_khz = tsc_early_khz;
1447		else
1448			tsc_khz = x86_platform.calibrate_tsc();
1449	} else {
1450		/* We should not be here with non-native cpu calibration */
1451		WARN_ON(x86_platform.calibrate_cpu != native_calibrate_cpu);
1452		cpu_khz = pit_hpet_ptimer_calibrate_cpu();
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
1453	}
1454
 
 
 
1455	/*
1456	 * Trust non-zero tsc_khz as authoritative,
1457	 * and use it to sanity check cpu_khz,
1458	 * which will be off if system timer is off.
1459	 */
1460	if (tsc_khz == 0)
1461		tsc_khz = cpu_khz;
1462	else if (abs(cpu_khz - tsc_khz) * 10 > tsc_khz)
1463		cpu_khz = tsc_khz;
1464
1465	if (tsc_khz == 0)
1466		return false;
 
 
 
1467
1468	pr_info("Detected %lu.%03lu MHz processor\n",
1469		(unsigned long)cpu_khz / KHZ,
1470		(unsigned long)cpu_khz % KHZ);
1471
1472	if (cpu_khz != tsc_khz) {
1473		pr_info("Detected %lu.%03lu MHz TSC",
1474			(unsigned long)tsc_khz / KHZ,
1475			(unsigned long)tsc_khz % KHZ);
1476	}
1477	return true;
1478}
1479
1480static unsigned long __init get_loops_per_jiffy(void)
1481{
1482	u64 lpj = (u64)tsc_khz * KHZ;
1483
1484	do_div(lpj, HZ);
1485	return lpj;
1486}
1487
1488static void __init tsc_enable_sched_clock(void)
1489{
1490	loops_per_jiffy = get_loops_per_jiffy();
1491	use_tsc_delay();
1492
1493	/* Sanitize TSC ADJUST before cyc2ns gets initialized */
1494	tsc_store_and_check_tsc_adjust(true);
1495	cyc2ns_init_boot_cpu();
1496	static_branch_enable(&__use_tsc);
1497}
1498
1499void __init tsc_early_init(void)
1500{
1501	if (!boot_cpu_has(X86_FEATURE_TSC))
1502		return;
1503	/* Don't change UV TSC multi-chassis synchronization */
1504	if (is_early_uv_system())
1505		return;
1506	if (!determine_cpu_tsc_frequencies(true))
1507		return;
1508	tsc_enable_sched_clock();
1509}
1510
1511void __init tsc_init(void)
1512{
1513	/*
1514	 * native_calibrate_cpu_early can only calibrate using methods that are
1515	 * available early in boot.
 
 
1516	 */
1517	if (x86_platform.calibrate_cpu == native_calibrate_cpu_early)
1518		x86_platform.calibrate_cpu = native_calibrate_cpu;
 
 
 
1519
1520	if (!boot_cpu_has(X86_FEATURE_TSC)) {
1521		setup_clear_cpu_cap(X86_FEATURE_TSC_DEADLINE_TIMER);
1522		return;
1523	}
1524
1525	if (!tsc_khz) {
1526		/* We failed to determine frequencies earlier, try again */
1527		if (!determine_cpu_tsc_frequencies(false)) {
1528			mark_tsc_unstable("could not calculate TSC khz");
1529			setup_clear_cpu_cap(X86_FEATURE_TSC_DEADLINE_TIMER);
1530			return;
1531		}
1532		tsc_enable_sched_clock();
1533	}
1534
1535	cyc2ns_init_secondary_cpus();
 
1536
1537	if (!no_sched_irq_time)
1538		enable_sched_clock_irqtime();
1539
1540	lpj_fine = get_loops_per_jiffy();
 
 
 
 
1541
1542	check_system_tsc_reliable();
1543
1544	if (unsynchronized_tsc()) {
1545		mark_tsc_unstable("TSCs unsynchronized");
1546		return;
1547	}
1548
1549	if (tsc_clocksource_reliable || no_tsc_watchdog)
1550		tsc_disable_clocksource_watchdog();
1551
1552	clocksource_register_khz(&clocksource_tsc_early, tsc_khz);
1553	detect_art();
1554}
1555
1556#ifdef CONFIG_SMP
1557/*
1558 * If we have a constant TSC and are using the TSC for the delay loop,
1559 * we can skip clock calibration if another cpu in the same socket has already
1560 * been calibrated. This assumes that CONSTANT_TSC applies to all
1561 * cpus in the socket - this should be a safe assumption.
1562 */
1563unsigned long calibrate_delay_is_known(void)
1564{
1565	int sibling, cpu = smp_processor_id();
1566	int constant_tsc = cpu_has(&cpu_data(cpu), X86_FEATURE_CONSTANT_TSC);
1567	const struct cpumask *mask = topology_core_cpumask(cpu);
1568
1569	if (!constant_tsc || !mask)
1570		return 0;
1571
1572	sibling = cpumask_any_but(mask, cpu);
1573	if (sibling < nr_cpu_ids)
1574		return cpu_data(sibling).loops_per_jiffy;
1575	return 0;
1576}
1577#endif