diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'include/linux/timex.h')
-rw-r--r-- | include/linux/timex.h | 42 |
1 files changed, 31 insertions, 11 deletions
diff --git a/include/linux/timex.h b/include/linux/timex.h index aa3475fcff64..0daf9611ef4f 100644 --- a/include/linux/timex.h +++ b/include/linux/timex.h | |||
@@ -170,17 +170,37 @@ struct timex { | |||
170 | #include <asm/timex.h> | 170 | #include <asm/timex.h> |
171 | 171 | ||
172 | /* | 172 | /* |
173 | * SHIFT_KG and SHIFT_KF establish the damping of the PLL and are chosen | 173 | * SHIFT_PLL is used as a dampening factor to define how much we |
174 | * for a slightly underdamped convergence characteristic. SHIFT_KH | 174 | * adjust the frequency correction for a given offset in PLL mode. |
175 | * establishes the damping of the FLL and is chosen by wisdom and black | 175 | * It also used in dampening the offset correction, to define how |
176 | * art. | 176 | * much of the current value in time_offset we correct for each |
177 | * second. Changing this value changes the stiffness of the ntp | ||
178 | * adjustment code. A lower value makes it more flexible, reducing | ||
179 | * NTP convergence time. A higher value makes it stiffer, increasing | ||
180 | * convergence time, but making the clock more stable. | ||
177 | * | 181 | * |
178 | * MAXTC establishes the maximum time constant of the PLL. With the | 182 | * In David Mills' nanokenrel reference implmentation SHIFT_PLL is 4. |
179 | * SHIFT_KG and SHIFT_KF values given and a time constant range from | 183 | * However this seems to increase convergence time much too long. |
180 | * zero to MAXTC, the PLL will converge in 15 minutes to 16 hours, | 184 | * |
181 | * respectively. | 185 | * https://lists.ntp.org/pipermail/hackers/2008-January/003487.html |
186 | * | ||
187 | * In the above mailing list discussion, it seems the value of 4 | ||
188 | * was appropriate for other Unix systems with HZ=100, and that | ||
189 | * SHIFT_PLL should be decreased as HZ increases. However, Linux's | ||
190 | * clock steering implementation is HZ independent. | ||
191 | * | ||
192 | * Through experimentation, a SHIFT_PLL value of 2 was found to allow | ||
193 | * for fast convergence (very similar to the NTPv3 code used prior to | ||
194 | * v2.6.19), with good clock stability. | ||
195 | * | ||
196 | * | ||
197 | * SHIFT_FLL is used as a dampening factor to define how much we | ||
198 | * adjust the frequency correction for a given offset in FLL mode. | ||
199 | * In David Mills' nanokenrel reference implmentation SHIFT_PLL is 2. | ||
200 | * | ||
201 | * MAXTC establishes the maximum time constant of the PLL. | ||
182 | */ | 202 | */ |
183 | #define SHIFT_PLL 4 /* PLL frequency factor (shift) */ | 203 | #define SHIFT_PLL 2 /* PLL frequency factor (shift) */ |
184 | #define SHIFT_FLL 2 /* FLL frequency factor (shift) */ | 204 | #define SHIFT_FLL 2 /* FLL frequency factor (shift) */ |
185 | #define MAXTC 10 /* maximum time constant (shift) */ | 205 | #define MAXTC 10 /* maximum time constant (shift) */ |
186 | 206 | ||
@@ -192,10 +212,10 @@ struct timex { | |||
192 | #define SHIFT_USEC 16 /* frequency offset scale (shift) */ | 212 | #define SHIFT_USEC 16 /* frequency offset scale (shift) */ |
193 | #define PPM_SCALE ((s64)NSEC_PER_USEC << (NTP_SCALE_SHIFT - SHIFT_USEC)) | 213 | #define PPM_SCALE ((s64)NSEC_PER_USEC << (NTP_SCALE_SHIFT - SHIFT_USEC)) |
194 | #define PPM_SCALE_INV_SHIFT 19 | 214 | #define PPM_SCALE_INV_SHIFT 19 |
195 | #define PPM_SCALE_INV ((1ll << (PPM_SCALE_INV_SHIFT + NTP_SCALE_SHIFT)) / \ | 215 | #define PPM_SCALE_INV ((1LL << (PPM_SCALE_INV_SHIFT + NTP_SCALE_SHIFT)) / \ |
196 | PPM_SCALE + 1) | 216 | PPM_SCALE + 1) |
197 | 217 | ||
198 | #define MAXPHASE 500000000l /* max phase error (ns) */ | 218 | #define MAXPHASE 500000000L /* max phase error (ns) */ |
199 | #define MAXFREQ 500000 /* max frequency error (ns/s) */ | 219 | #define MAXFREQ 500000 /* max frequency error (ns/s) */ |
200 | #define MAXFREQ_SCALED ((s64)MAXFREQ << NTP_SCALE_SHIFT) | 220 | #define MAXFREQ_SCALED ((s64)MAXFREQ << NTP_SCALE_SHIFT) |
201 | #define MINSEC 256 /* min interval between updates (s) */ | 221 | #define MINSEC 256 /* min interval between updates (s) */ |