On Mon, Jul 06, 2020 at 09:24:24PM +0300, Sergey Organov wrote: > Vladimir Oltean <olte...@gmail.com> writes: > > > Hi Sergey, > > > > On Mon, Jul 06, 2020 at 05:26:14PM +0300, Sergey Organov wrote: > >> Initializing with 0 makes it much easier to identify time stamps from > >> otherwise uninitialized clock. > >> > >> Initialization of PTP clock with current kernel time makes little sense as > >> PTP time scale differs from UTC time scale that kernel time represents. > >> It only leads to confusion when no actual PTP initialization happens, as > >> these time scales differ in a small integer number of seconds (37 at the > >> time of writing.) > >> > >> Signed-off-by: Sergey Organov <sorga...@gmail.com> > >> --- > > > > Reading your patch, I got reminded of my own attempt of making an > > identical change to the ptp_qoriq driver: > > > > https://www.spinics.net/lists/netdev/msg601625.html > > > > Could we have some sort of kernel-wide convention, I wonder (even though > > it might be too late for that)? After your patch, I can see equal > > amounts of confusion of users expecting some boot-time output of > > $(phc_ctl /dev/ptp0 get) as it used to be, and now getting something > > else. > > > > There's no correct answer, I'm afraid. > > IMHO, the correct answer would be keep non-initialized clock at 0. No > ticking. >
What do you mean 'no ticking', and what do you mean by 'non-initialized clock' exactly? I don't know if the fec driver is special in any way, do you mean that multiple runs of $(phc_ctl /dev/ptp0 get) from user space all return 0? That is not at all what is to be expected, I think. The PHC is always ticking. Its time is increasing. What would be that initialization procedure that makes it tick, and who is doing it (and when)? > > Whatever the default value of the clock may be, it's bound to be > > confusing for some reason, _if_ the reason why you're investigating it > > in the first place is a driver bug. Also, I don't really see how your > > change to use Jan 1st 1970 makes it any less confusing. > > When I print the clocks in application, I see seconds and milliseconds > part since epoch. With this patch seconds count from 0, that simply > match uptime. Easy to tell from any other (malfunctioning) clock. > It doesn't really match uptime (CLOCK_MONOTONIC). Instead, it is just initialized with zero. If you have fec built as module and you insmod it after a few days of uptime, it will not track CLOCK_MONOTONIC at all. Not to say that there's anything wrong with initializing it with 0. It's just that I don't see why it would be objectively better. > Here is the description of confusion and improvement. I spent half a day > not realizing that I sometimes get timestamps from the wrong PTP clock. There is a suite of tests in tools/testing/selftests/ptp/ which is useful in debugging problems like this. Alternatively, you can write to each individual clock using $(phc_ctl /dev/ptpN set 0) and check your timestamps again. If the timestamps don't nudge, it's clear that the timestamps you're getting are not from the PHC you've written to. Much simpler. > Part of the problem is that kernel time at startup, when it is used for > initialization of the PTP clock, is in fact somewhat random, and it > could be off by a few seconds. Yes, the kernel time at startup is exactly random (not traceable to any clock reference). And so is the PHC. > Now, when in application I get time stamp > that is almost right, and then another one that is, say, 9 seconds off, > what should I think? Right, that I drive PTP clock wrongly. > > Now, when one of those timestamps is almost 0, I see immediately I got > time from wrong PTP clock, rather than wrong time from correct PTP > clock. > There are 2 points to be made here: 1. There are simpler ways to debug your issue than to leave a patch in the kernel, like the "phc_ctl set 0" I mentioned above. This can be considered a debugging patch which is also going to have consequences for the other users of the driver, if applied. We need to consider whether the change in behavior is useful in general. 2. There are boards out there which don't have any battery-backed RTC, so CLOCK_REALTIME could be ticking in Jan 1970 already, and therefore the PHC would be initialized with a time in 1970. Or your GM might be configured to be ticking in Jan 1970 (there are some applications that only require the network to be synchronized, but not for the time to be traceable to TAI). How does your change make a difference to eliminate confusion there, when all of your clocks are going to be in 1970? It doesn't make a net difference. Bottom line, a clock initialized with 0 doesn't mean it's special in any way. You _could_ make that change in your debugging environment, and it _could_ be useful to your debugging, but if it's not universally useful, I wouldn't try to patch the kernel with this change. Please note that, although my comments appear to be in disagreement with your idea, they are in fact not at all. It's just that, if there's a a particular answer to "what time to initialize a PHC with" that is more favourable than the rest (even though the question itself is a bit irrelevant overall), then that answer ought to be enforced kernel-wide, I think. > Thanks, > -- Sergey Cheers, -Vladimir