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From: | Warner Losh |
Subject: | Re: Issue with time going backwards on OSX |
Date: | Tue, 28 Sep 2021 08:54:38 -0600 |
Hello,
I posted this on qemu-discuss, but it doesn't seem like anybody else has seen this issue. I figured I'd try here to see if anybody had any thoughts.
I'm using qemu-system-aarch64 v5.2 on OSX 11.6. While reading cntvct_el0, I've seen the ticks count go backwards. I dug into the qemu source a bit, and this register is eventually backed by a call to clock_gettime(CLOCK_MONOTONIC), which should not go backwards. This code seems to be the same on master as the branch I'm on.
Before I started delving into debugging qemu, I wanted to verify that this wasn't an OS issue. I wrote a simple test that read CLOCK_MONOTONIC every 100ms, compared the values to make sure they always increased, and let it run overnight. Lo and behold, I saw time go backwards. I ran a concurrent test with CLOCK_MONOTONIC_RAW, and I did not see time go backwards. Successive reads of the CLOCK_MONOTONIC after it jumped backwards tracked the new time, so the jump wasn't a spurious error. When I ran this test on a Fedora 34 PC, I never saw time go backwards.
Someone suggested as a test disabling networking so the NTP daemon couldn't mess with the clock, but that's not something I can do IRL. In any case, my understanding is that CLOCK_MONOTONIC should never go backwards and that any adjustments are made by temporarily slowing down or speeding up the tick rate. I'm going to pursue what I believe to be the underlying issue separately, but my qemu questions are these:
- Has anybody else seen this or other timer registers go backwards under these or other conditions? I only see the behavior on OSX 11.6, but I'm a small sample size.
- Would it make sense to use CLOCK_MONOTONIC_RAW (if available) instead of CLOCK_MONOTONIC in qemu? My issue aside, CLOCK_MONOTONIC_RAW feels closer to giving the guest direct access to a hardware clock. e.g., if I wanted to write my own NTP time adjustment daemon, I'd prefer to have an unadjusted clock. The code already checks to see if CLOCK_MONOTONIC is available, and, if not, it reverts to a simple gettimeofday(). It was easy to add another check to init_get_clock() to add a case checking for the availability of CLOCK_MONOTONIC_RAW. I've tested this myself, but I wanted to see if there was upstream interest in this and/or if there were reasons to prefer the current implementation.
Thanks, and best regards,
Joe
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