[RFC] generic MIPS RTC driver

Jun Sun jsun at mvista.com
Fri Nov 16 04:41:13 EST 2001


Richard Zidlicky wrote:
>
> On Tue, Nov 13, 2001 at 09:58:45AM -0800, Jun Sun wrote:
> > Richard Zidlicky wrote:
> >
> > > Btw the interrupt need not to be hardware, for the Q40 I test
> > > a rtc register once per jiffie and generate a "soft interrupt".
> > > It could be done generic at least for m68k.
> > >
> >
> > I have written an experiemntal ptimer driver to do just this and potential
> > more.  Such a device is useful for real-time programming (e.g., when you try
> > to implement a periodic user task).
> >
> > See http://linux.junsun.net/realtime-linux/preemption-test
> >
> > The driver is architecture independent (i.e., linux-common code)
> >
> > Due to the different programming needs behind periodic timers (or user-level
> > timer) and RTC operations, my vote for future work is to leave them as two
> > separate drivers.  To me, RTC is really just to read/write RTC clock.
>
> RTC_UIE is needed (or at least very useful) to set the clock, so it belongs
> into a rtc driver if it can be implemented. General purpose timers are
> different story, btw what is wrong with setitimer that you have chosen
> to implement an additional driver for it?

Easy of implmentation and more features.

Here is the pseudo code to do a real-time periodic task with /dev/ptimer:

void periodic_task(void)
{
	fd=open("/dev/ptimer", O_RDONLY);
	ioctl(fd, PTIMER_SET_PERIOD, PERIOD);
	ioctl(fd, PTIMER_SET_PHASE, PHASE);

	/* become realtime process */
	start_realtime();

	for(;;) {
		/* read won't return until next instance release point */
		read(fd, &count, sizeof(count));

		/* do the job */
		...
	}
}

Anybody who has used setitimer() would konw this is even simpler than the
setup of itimer, let alone with itimer you still need to deal with SIGALRM
signals plus some multi-thread signal handling considerations.

On the feature side, ptimer offers the exact control of phase.  For example,
you can have two tasks with period of 100ms, with one starting *exactly* at
time t and the other starting *exactly* at t+50 ms later.

Some unimplemented features allow you to control the behavior when missing
deadlines.

Jun

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