Aurelien Jarno wrote:
Hi,

As announced by Ralf Baechle, dyntick is now available on MIPS. I gave a
try on QEMU/MIPS, and unfortunately it doesn't work correctly.

In some cases the kernel schedules an event very near in the future, which means the timer is scheduled a few cycles only from its current
value. Unfortunately under QEMU, the timer runs too fast compared to the
speed at which instructions are execution.

Sounds like a kernel bug. Can't there conceivably exist real hardware (or a real timeout) that exhibits the same timing?

Especially today with variable clock frequencies, I don't see how the kernel can rely on exact timing.

--
Any sufficiently difficult bug is indistinguishable from a feature.



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