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Re: CVS commit: src/sys/kern
oops - reverted faster than I could reply .... (revert ok with me)
But for the sake of other information (significant digits, changing
timecounters) see below:
John Hawkinson wrote:
Frank and Ben both point out the sysctl:
Ben Harris <bjh21%NetBSD.org@localhost> wrote on Sun, 6 Aug 2006
at 11:42:27 +0100 in
<Pine.LNX.4.61.0608061135490.15656%soup.linux.pwf.cam.ac.uk@localhost>:
I was a bit uncertain about this, but if you want all the digits you can
always ask sysctl:
fastnet:~$ sysctl kern.timecounter.choice
kern.timecounter.choice = iomd_timer0(q=100, f=2000000 Hz) clockinterrupt(q=0,
f=100 Hz) dummy(q=-1000000, f=1000000 Hz)
Unfortunately, this does not allow you to perform an after-the-fact
analysis of changes without advance preparation or additional
instrumentation. (I don't maintain that this is a likely sort of thing
to do,
For the sake of useful numbers we actually should have around 5-6
significant digits as
frequency errors are measure in PPM and ntp will cope with only +-500PPM.
So if humanize number give us much less (haven't checked) we have s
significant
loss of information wrt/ synchronisation effects.
or that most change timecounters often enough for it to matter
[or do they?],
Each time a time counter is changes the oscillator parameters are very
likely to change
significantly (-> ntpd needs to figure out the new drift value - that
can take some time).
So it is possible to cause harm to time keeping when frequently changing
timecounters.
but I am annoyed at the loss of flexibility for no
apparent material gain.)
In a similar way, we approximate disk capacities when printing them at
boot time, and assume that anyone who needs the precise number of sectors
will use disklabel.
I don't think this is a fair comparison at all:
#1 Most users know their disk capacities already.
#2 Disk capacities don't have the potential to vary
unexpectedly.
#3 Disk capacity is a number directly usable by most users, and
for which the low-order bits are insignificant. Most users
could care less about clock frequency, and some may find the
low-order bits of utility.
Anyhow, regardless, I don't think this deserves
13 messages to this list. :(
... and I was so happy that we managed most of the transition without
serious bike shedding :-)
Some other reasons to go back:
i) Gratuitous difference from FreeBSD
valid for me.
ii) Cosmetic changes should not hamper flexibility. It's hard to
predict exactly when you will find a number useful (which is
why we add so much instrumentation to software!).
5-6 significant digits should be the minimum to preserve information, IMHO.
iii) I think it sets a bad precedent to go around humanizing
numbers without a lot of care and thought.
Thanks.
--jhawk
Regards,
Frank
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