#include #include #include #include #include "fio.h" #include "smalloc.h" struct timeval *fio_tv = NULL; int fio_gtod_offload = 0; int fio_gtod_cpu = -1; static pthread_t gtod_thread; void fio_gtod_init(void) { fio_tv = smalloc(sizeof(struct timeval)); if (!fio_tv) log_err("fio: smalloc pool exhausted\n"); } static void fio_gtod_update(void) { if (fio_tv) gettimeofday(fio_tv, NULL); } static void *gtod_thread_main(void *data) { struct fio_mutex *mutex = data; fio_mutex_up(mutex); /* * As long as we have jobs around, update the clock. It would be nice * to have some way of NOT hammering that CPU with gettimeofday(), * but I'm not sure what to use outside of a simple CPU nop to relax * it - we don't want to lose precision. */ while (threads) { fio_gtod_update(); nop; } return NULL; } int fio_start_gtod_thread(void) { struct fio_mutex *mutex; pthread_attr_t attr; int ret; mutex = fio_mutex_init(FIO_MUTEX_LOCKED); if (!mutex) return 1; pthread_attr_init(&attr); pthread_attr_setstacksize(&attr, PTHREAD_STACK_MIN); ret = pthread_create(>od_thread, &attr, gtod_thread_main, NULL); pthread_attr_destroy(&attr); if (ret) { log_err("Can't create gtod thread: %s\n", strerror(ret)); goto err; } ret = pthread_detach(gtod_thread); if (ret) { log_err("Can't detatch gtod thread: %s\n", strerror(ret)); goto err; } dprint(FD_MUTEX, "wait on startup_mutex\n"); fio_mutex_down(mutex); dprint(FD_MUTEX, "done waiting on startup_mutex\n"); err: fio_mutex_remove(mutex); return ret; }