Re: Why HZ on i386 is 100 ?

From: Albert D. Cahalan (acahalan@cs.uml.edu)
Date: Tue Apr 23 2002 - 17:42:35 EST


Matti Aarnio writes:
> On Wed, Apr 17, 2002 at 02:01:42AM -0400, Robert Love wrote:
>> On Wed, 2002-04-17 at 01:34, Linus Torvalds wrote:

>>> No, it also makes it much easier to convert to/from the standard UNIX time
>>> formats (ie "struct timeval" and "struct timespec") without any surprises,
>>> because a jiffy is exactly representable in both if you have a HZ value
>>> of 100 or 100, but not if your HZ is 1024.
>>
>> Exactly - this was my issue. So what _was_ the rationale behind Alpha
>> picking 1024 (and others following)? More importantly, can we change to
>> 1000?
>
> Alpha processors don't have full division hardware, they have to
> iterate it one bit at the time. They do have a flash multiplier,
> and a barrel-shifter. Shifts take one pipeline cycle, like to
> addition and substraction. Multiply takes 6-12 depending on model,
> but division takes 64...

Division by 1000 is a UMULH followed by a right shift.
So maybe it costs you one cycle more than division by 1024 would.
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