Abseil Common Libraries (C++) (grcp 依赖) https://abseil.io/
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// Copyright 2017 The Abseil Authors.
//
// Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
// you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
// You may obtain a copy of the License at
//
// https://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
//
// Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
// distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
// WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
// See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
// limitations under the License.
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#include "absl/time/clock.h"
#include "absl/base/attributes.h"
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#ifdef _WIN32
#include <windows.h>
#endif
#include <algorithm>
#include <atomic>
#include <cerrno>
#include <cstdint>
#include <ctime>
#include <limits>
#include "absl/base/internal/spinlock.h"
#include "absl/base/internal/unscaledcycleclock.h"
#include "absl/base/macros.h"
#include "absl/base/port.h"
#include "absl/base/thread_annotations.h"
namespace absl {
Time Now() {
// TODO(bww): Get a timespec instead so we don't have to divide.
int64_t n = absl::GetCurrentTimeNanos();
if (n >= 0) {
return time_internal::FromUnixDuration(
time_internal::MakeDuration(n / 1000000000, n % 1000000000 * 4));
}
return time_internal::FromUnixDuration(absl::Nanoseconds(n));
}
} // namespace absl
// Decide if we should use the fast GetCurrentTimeNanos() algorithm
// based on the cyclecounter, otherwise just get the time directly
// from the OS on every call. This can be chosen at compile-time via
// -DABSL_USE_CYCLECLOCK_FOR_GET_CURRENT_TIME_NANOS=[0|1]
#ifndef ABSL_USE_CYCLECLOCK_FOR_GET_CURRENT_TIME_NANOS
#if ABSL_USE_UNSCALED_CYCLECLOCK
#define ABSL_USE_CYCLECLOCK_FOR_GET_CURRENT_TIME_NANOS 1
#else
#define ABSL_USE_CYCLECLOCK_FOR_GET_CURRENT_TIME_NANOS 0
#endif
#endif
#if defined(__APPLE__) || defined(_WIN32)
#include "absl/time/internal/get_current_time_chrono.inc"
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#else
#include "absl/time/internal/get_current_time_posix.inc"
#endif
// Allows override by test.
#ifndef GET_CURRENT_TIME_NANOS_FROM_SYSTEM
#define GET_CURRENT_TIME_NANOS_FROM_SYSTEM() \
::absl::time_internal::GetCurrentTimeNanosFromSystem()
#endif
#if !ABSL_USE_CYCLECLOCK_FOR_GET_CURRENT_TIME_NANOS
namespace absl {
int64_t GetCurrentTimeNanos() {
return GET_CURRENT_TIME_NANOS_FROM_SYSTEM();
}
} // namespace absl
#else // Use the cyclecounter-based implementation below.
// Allows override by test.
#ifndef GET_CURRENT_TIME_NANOS_CYCLECLOCK_NOW
#define GET_CURRENT_TIME_NANOS_CYCLECLOCK_NOW() \
::absl::time_internal::UnscaledCycleClockWrapperForGetCurrentTime::Now()
#endif
// The following counters are used only by the test code.
static int64_t stats_initializations;
static int64_t stats_reinitializations;
static int64_t stats_calibrations;
static int64_t stats_slow_paths;
static int64_t stats_fast_slow_paths;
namespace absl {
namespace time_internal {
// This is a friend wrapper around UnscaledCycleClock::Now()
// (needed to access UnscaledCycleClock).
class UnscaledCycleClockWrapperForGetCurrentTime {
public:
static int64_t Now() { return base_internal::UnscaledCycleClock::Now(); }
};
} // namespace time_internal
// uint64_t is used in this module to provide an extra bit in multiplications
// Return the time in ns as told by the kernel interface. Place in *cycleclock
// the value of the cycleclock at about the time of the syscall.
// This call represents the time base that this module synchronizes to.
// Ensures that *cycleclock does not step back by up to (1 << 16) from
// last_cycleclock, to discard small backward counter steps. (Larger steps are
// assumed to be complete resyncs, which shouldn't happen. If they do, a full
// reinitialization of the outer algorithm should occur.)
static int64_t GetCurrentTimeNanosFromKernel(uint64_t last_cycleclock,
uint64_t *cycleclock) {
// We try to read clock values at about the same time as the kernel clock.
// This value gets adjusted up or down as estimate of how long that should
// take, so we can reject attempts that take unusually long.
static std::atomic<uint64_t> approx_syscall_time_in_cycles{10 * 1000};
uint64_t local_approx_syscall_time_in_cycles = // local copy
approx_syscall_time_in_cycles.load(std::memory_order_relaxed);
int64_t current_time_nanos_from_system;
uint64_t before_cycles;
uint64_t after_cycles;
uint64_t elapsed_cycles;
int loops = 0;
do {
before_cycles = GET_CURRENT_TIME_NANOS_CYCLECLOCK_NOW();
current_time_nanos_from_system = GET_CURRENT_TIME_NANOS_FROM_SYSTEM();
after_cycles = GET_CURRENT_TIME_NANOS_CYCLECLOCK_NOW();
// elapsed_cycles is unsigned, so is large on overflow
elapsed_cycles = after_cycles - before_cycles;
if (elapsed_cycles >= local_approx_syscall_time_in_cycles &&
++loops == 20) { // clock changed frequencies? Back off.
loops = 0;
if (local_approx_syscall_time_in_cycles < 1000 * 1000) {
local_approx_syscall_time_in_cycles =
(local_approx_syscall_time_in_cycles + 1) << 1;
}
approx_syscall_time_in_cycles.store(
local_approx_syscall_time_in_cycles,
std::memory_order_relaxed);
}
} while (elapsed_cycles >= local_approx_syscall_time_in_cycles ||
last_cycleclock - after_cycles < (static_cast<uint64_t>(1) << 16));
// Number of times in a row we've seen a kernel time call take substantially
// less than approx_syscall_time_in_cycles.
static std::atomic<uint32_t> seen_smaller{ 0 };
// Adjust approx_syscall_time_in_cycles to be within a factor of 2
// of the typical time to execute one iteration of the loop above.
if ((local_approx_syscall_time_in_cycles >> 1) < elapsed_cycles) {
// measured time is no smaller than half current approximation
seen_smaller.store(0, std::memory_order_relaxed);
} else if (seen_smaller.fetch_add(1, std::memory_order_relaxed) >= 3) {
// smaller delays several times in a row; reduce approximation by 12.5%
const uint64_t new_approximation =
local_approx_syscall_time_in_cycles -
(local_approx_syscall_time_in_cycles >> 3);
approx_syscall_time_in_cycles.store(new_approximation,
std::memory_order_relaxed);
seen_smaller.store(0, std::memory_order_relaxed);
}
*cycleclock = after_cycles;
return current_time_nanos_from_system;
}
// ---------------------------------------------------------------------
// An implementation of reader-write locks that use no atomic ops in the read
// case. This is a generalization of Lamport's method for reading a multiword
// clock. Increment a word on each write acquisition, using the low-order bit
// as a spinlock; the word is the high word of the "clock". Readers read the
// high word, then all other data, then the high word again, and repeat the
// read if the reads of the high words yields different answers, or an odd
// value (either case suggests possible interference from a writer).
// Here we use a spinlock to ensure only one writer at a time, rather than
// spinning on the bottom bit of the word to benefit from SpinLock
// spin-delay tuning.
// Acquire seqlock (*seq) and return the value to be written to unlock.
static inline uint64_t SeqAcquire(std::atomic<uint64_t> *seq) {
uint64_t x = seq->fetch_add(1, std::memory_order_relaxed);
// We put a release fence between update to *seq and writes to shared data.
// Thus all stores to shared data are effectively release operations and
// update to *seq above cannot be re-ordered past any of them. Note that
// this barrier is not for the fetch_add above. A release barrier for the
// fetch_add would be before it, not after.
std::atomic_thread_fence(std::memory_order_release);
return x + 2; // original word plus 2
}
// Release seqlock (*seq) by writing x to it---a value previously returned by
// SeqAcquire.
static inline void SeqRelease(std::atomic<uint64_t> *seq, uint64_t x) {
// The unlock store to *seq must have release ordering so that all
// updates to shared data must finish before this store.
seq->store(x, std::memory_order_release); // release lock for readers
}
// ---------------------------------------------------------------------
// "nsscaled" is unit of time equal to a (2**kScale)th of a nanosecond.
enum { kScale = 30 };
// The minimum interval between samples of the time base.
// We pick enough time to amortize the cost of the sample,
// to get a reasonably accurate cycle counter rate reading,
// and not so much that calculations will overflow 64-bits.
static const uint64_t kMinNSBetweenSamples = 2000 << 20;
// We require that kMinNSBetweenSamples shifted by kScale
// have at least a bit left over for 64-bit calculations.
static_assert(((kMinNSBetweenSamples << (kScale + 1)) >> (kScale + 1)) ==
kMinNSBetweenSamples,
"cannot represent kMaxBetweenSamplesNSScaled");
// A reader-writer lock protecting the static locations below.
// See SeqAcquire() and SeqRelease() above.
static absl::base_internal::SpinLock lock(
absl::base_internal::kLinkerInitialized);
static std::atomic<uint64_t> seq(0);
// data from a sample of the kernel's time value
struct TimeSampleAtomic {
std::atomic<uint64_t> raw_ns; // raw kernel time
std::atomic<uint64_t> base_ns; // our estimate of time
std::atomic<uint64_t> base_cycles; // cycle counter reading
std::atomic<uint64_t> nsscaled_per_cycle; // cycle period
// cycles before we'll sample again (a scaled reciprocal of the period,
// to avoid a division on the fast path).
std::atomic<uint64_t> min_cycles_per_sample;
};
// Same again, but with non-atomic types
struct TimeSample {
uint64_t raw_ns; // raw kernel time
uint64_t base_ns; // our estimate of time
uint64_t base_cycles; // cycle counter reading
uint64_t nsscaled_per_cycle; // cycle period
uint64_t min_cycles_per_sample; // approx cycles before next sample
};
static struct TimeSampleAtomic last_sample; // the last sample; under seq
static int64_t GetCurrentTimeNanosSlowPath() ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_COLD;
// Read the contents of *atomic into *sample.
// Each field is read atomically, but to maintain atomicity between fields,
// the access must be done under a lock.
static void ReadTimeSampleAtomic(const struct TimeSampleAtomic *atomic,
struct TimeSample *sample) {
sample->base_ns = atomic->base_ns.load(std::memory_order_relaxed);
sample->base_cycles = atomic->base_cycles.load(std::memory_order_relaxed);
sample->nsscaled_per_cycle =
atomic->nsscaled_per_cycle.load(std::memory_order_relaxed);
sample->min_cycles_per_sample =
atomic->min_cycles_per_sample.load(std::memory_order_relaxed);
sample->raw_ns = atomic->raw_ns.load(std::memory_order_relaxed);
}
// Public routine.
// Algorithm: We wish to compute real time from a cycle counter. In normal
// operation, we construct a piecewise linear approximation to the kernel time
// source, using the cycle counter value. The start of each line segment is at
// the same point as the end of the last, but may have a different slope (that
// is, a different idea of the cycle counter frequency). Every couple of
// seconds, the kernel time source is sampled and compared with the current
// approximation. A new slope is chosen that, if followed for another couple
// of seconds, will correct the error at the current position. The information
// for a sample is in the "last_sample" struct. The linear approximation is
// estimated_time = last_sample.base_ns +
// last_sample.ns_per_cycle * (counter_reading - last_sample.base_cycles)
// (ns_per_cycle is actually stored in different units and scaled, to avoid
// overflow). The base_ns of the next linear approximation is the
// estimated_time using the last approximation; the base_cycles is the cycle
// counter value at that time; the ns_per_cycle is the number of ns per cycle
// measured since the last sample, but adjusted so that most of the difference
// between the estimated_time and the kernel time will be corrected by the
// estimated time to the next sample. In normal operation, this algorithm
// relies on:
// - the cycle counter and kernel time rates not changing a lot in a few
// seconds.
// - the client calling into the code often compared to a couple of seconds, so
// the time to the next correction can be estimated.
// Any time ns_per_cycle is not known, a major error is detected, or the
// assumption about frequent calls is violated, the implementation returns the
// kernel time. It records sufficient data that a linear approximation can
// resume a little later.
int64_t GetCurrentTimeNanos() {
// read the data from the "last_sample" struct (but don't need raw_ns yet)
// The reads of "seq" and test of the values emulate a reader lock.
uint64_t base_ns;
uint64_t base_cycles;
uint64_t nsscaled_per_cycle;
uint64_t min_cycles_per_sample;
uint64_t seq_read0;
uint64_t seq_read1;
// If we have enough information to interpolate, the value returned will be
// derived from this cycleclock-derived time estimate. On some platforms
// (POWER) the function to retrieve this value has enough complexity to
// contribute to register pressure - reading it early before initializing
// the other pieces of the calculation minimizes spill/restore instructions,
// minimizing icache cost.
uint64_t now_cycles = GET_CURRENT_TIME_NANOS_CYCLECLOCK_NOW();
// Acquire pairs with the barrier in SeqRelease - if this load sees that
// store, the shared-data reads necessarily see that SeqRelease's updates
// to the same shared data.
seq_read0 = seq.load(std::memory_order_acquire);
base_ns = last_sample.base_ns.load(std::memory_order_relaxed);
base_cycles = last_sample.base_cycles.load(std::memory_order_relaxed);
nsscaled_per_cycle =
last_sample.nsscaled_per_cycle.load(std::memory_order_relaxed);
min_cycles_per_sample =
last_sample.min_cycles_per_sample.load(std::memory_order_relaxed);
// This acquire fence pairs with the release fence in SeqAcquire. Since it
// is sequenced between reads of shared data and seq_read1, the reads of
// shared data are effectively acquiring.
std::atomic_thread_fence(std::memory_order_acquire);
// The shared-data reads are effectively acquire ordered, and the
// shared-data writes are effectively release ordered. Therefore if our
// shared-data reads see any of a particular update's shared-data writes,
// seq_read1 is guaranteed to see that update's SeqAcquire.
seq_read1 = seq.load(std::memory_order_relaxed);
// Fast path. Return if min_cycles_per_sample has not yet elapsed since the
// last sample, and we read a consistent sample. The fast path activates
// only when min_cycles_per_sample is non-zero, which happens when we get an
// estimate for the cycle time. The predicate will fail if now_cycles <
// base_cycles, or if some other thread is in the slow path.
//
// Since we now read now_cycles before base_ns, it is possible for now_cycles
// to be less than base_cycles (if we were interrupted between those loads and
// last_sample was updated). This is harmless, because delta_cycles will wrap
// and report a time much much bigger than min_cycles_per_sample. In that case
// we will take the slow path.
uint64_t delta_cycles = now_cycles - base_cycles;
if (seq_read0 == seq_read1 && (seq_read0 & 1) == 0 &&
delta_cycles < min_cycles_per_sample) {
return base_ns + ((delta_cycles * nsscaled_per_cycle) >> kScale);
}
return GetCurrentTimeNanosSlowPath();
}
// Return (a << kScale)/b.
// Zero is returned if b==0. Scaling is performed internally to
// preserve precision without overflow.
static uint64_t SafeDivideAndScale(uint64_t a, uint64_t b) {
// Find maximum safe_shift so that
// 0 <= safe_shift <= kScale and (a << safe_shift) does not overflow.
int safe_shift = kScale;
while (((a << safe_shift) >> safe_shift) != a) {
safe_shift--;
}
uint64_t scaled_b = b >> (kScale - safe_shift);
uint64_t quotient = 0;
if (scaled_b != 0) {
quotient = (a << safe_shift) / scaled_b;
}
return quotient;
}
static uint64_t UpdateLastSample(
uint64_t now_cycles, uint64_t now_ns, uint64_t delta_cycles,
const struct TimeSample *sample) ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_COLD;
// The slow path of GetCurrentTimeNanos(). This is taken while gathering
// initial samples, when enough time has elapsed since the last sample, and if
// any other thread is writing to last_sample.
//
// Manually mark this 'noinline' to minimize stack frame size of the fast
// path. Without this, sometimes a compiler may inline this big block of code
Export of internal Abseil changes. -- 5804cc13b413412988248835459b90cd15ec43d9 by Abseil Team <absl-team@google.com>: Mark raw_hash_set::clear() with the ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_REINITIALIZES attribute. This prevents false positives in the clang-tidy check bugprone-use-after-move; it allows reset() to be called on a moved-from raw_hash_set without any warnings, and the raw_hash_set will thereafter be regarded as initialized again. PiperOrigin-RevId: 230717196 -- ff5961a5600ae19b69a9cba6912126cdf2858f38 by CJ Johnson <johnsoncj@google.com>: Swaps DisableIfIntegral<> for EnableIfInputIterator<> for Iterator member functions of InlinedVector PiperOrigin-RevId: 230559521 -- 3f9754ccbeecbd40f235c6f2465279e045ff51d9 by Derek Mauro <dmauro@google.com>: Import GitHub PR 254 https://github.com/abseil/abseil-cpp/pull/254 Fixes warnings from -Wclass-memaccess (base_internal::ThreadIdentity? with no trivial copy-assignment). PiperOrigin-RevId: 230536048 -- 8af03a654ce9a4a7f55384bc7eb1ed64878ac2ec by Chris Kennelly <ckennelly@google.com>: absl: cap SpinLock backoff to 4ms The current backoff logic has 3 problems: 1. It can produce too high values (up to 256ms), which can negatively affect tail latency. The value was chosen long time ago and now it's a good idea to reconsider it. 2. It does not have low bound, so on any iteration it can produce a very small value that will lead to unnecessary cpu consumption. 3. It does not increase low bound with the number of iterations. So if the SpinLock is actually somehow locked for a very prolonged time, a waiter can still wake periodically. Rework the logic to solve these problems. Add lower bound of 128us, no code should rely on absence of episodic delays in this range as they can occur everywhere. Lower upper bound to 4ms. A thread sleeping for 4ms does not consume significant cpu time (see below). Grow lower bound with the number of iterations. This is cpu consumption of a process doing usleep(x) in a loop (sampled with ps): 64us -> 4.0% 128us -> 2.7% 256us -> 3.5% 512us -> 2.8% 1024us -> 1.6% 2048us -> 0.6% 4096us -> 0.3% 8192us -> 0.0% Few millisecond sleeps do not consume significant time. PiperOrigin-RevId: 230534015 -- 37ebba92289ca556cb2412cd8b3cb4c1ead3def7 by Samuel Benzaquen <sbenza@google.com>: Add override and dispose hooks to the hashtable sampler. PiperOrigin-RevId: 230353438 -- 89c8f90175233ce9964eb3412df04e8a3cff0c0f by Andy Getzendanner <durandal@google.com>: Fix a comment typo. PiperOrigin-RevId: 229986838 GitOrigin-RevId: 5804cc13b413412988248835459b90cd15ec43d9 Change-Id: Iedb5e2cc9c0b924635c1c87b537780ab6b5b899f
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// into the fast path. That causes lots of register spills and reloads that
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// are unnecessary unless the slow path is taken.
//
// TODO(absl-team): Remove this attribute when our compiler is smart enough
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// to do the right thing.
ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_NOINLINE
static int64_t GetCurrentTimeNanosSlowPath() LOCKS_EXCLUDED(lock) {
// Serialize access to slow-path. Fast-path readers are not blocked yet, and
// code below must not modify last_sample until the seqlock is acquired.
lock.Lock();
// Sample the kernel time base. This is the definition of
// "now" if we take the slow path.
static uint64_t last_now_cycles; // protected by lock
uint64_t now_cycles;
uint64_t now_ns = GetCurrentTimeNanosFromKernel(last_now_cycles, &now_cycles);
last_now_cycles = now_cycles;
uint64_t estimated_base_ns;
// ----------
// Read the "last_sample" values again; this time holding the write lock.
struct TimeSample sample;
ReadTimeSampleAtomic(&last_sample, &sample);
// ----------
// Try running the fast path again; another thread may have updated the
// sample between our run of the fast path and the sample we just read.
uint64_t delta_cycles = now_cycles - sample.base_cycles;
if (delta_cycles < sample.min_cycles_per_sample) {
// Another thread updated the sample. This path does not take the seqlock
// so that blocked readers can make progress without blocking new readers.
estimated_base_ns = sample.base_ns +
((delta_cycles * sample.nsscaled_per_cycle) >> kScale);
stats_fast_slow_paths++;
} else {
estimated_base_ns =
UpdateLastSample(now_cycles, now_ns, delta_cycles, &sample);
}
lock.Unlock();
return estimated_base_ns;
}
// Main part of the algorithm. Locks out readers, updates the approximation
// using the new sample from the kernel, and stores the result in last_sample
// for readers. Returns the new estimated time.
static uint64_t UpdateLastSample(uint64_t now_cycles, uint64_t now_ns,
uint64_t delta_cycles,
const struct TimeSample *sample)
EXCLUSIVE_LOCKS_REQUIRED(lock) {
uint64_t estimated_base_ns = now_ns;
uint64_t lock_value = SeqAcquire(&seq); // acquire seqlock to block readers
// The 5s in the next if-statement limits the time for which we will trust
// the cycle counter and our last sample to give a reasonable result.
// Errors in the rate of the source clock can be multiplied by the ratio
// between this limit and kMinNSBetweenSamples.
if (sample->raw_ns == 0 || // no recent sample, or clock went backwards
sample->raw_ns + static_cast<uint64_t>(5) * 1000 * 1000 * 1000 < now_ns ||
now_ns < sample->raw_ns || now_cycles < sample->base_cycles) {
// record this sample, and forget any previously known slope.
last_sample.raw_ns.store(now_ns, std::memory_order_relaxed);
last_sample.base_ns.store(estimated_base_ns, std::memory_order_relaxed);
last_sample.base_cycles.store(now_cycles, std::memory_order_relaxed);
last_sample.nsscaled_per_cycle.store(0, std::memory_order_relaxed);
last_sample.min_cycles_per_sample.store(0, std::memory_order_relaxed);
stats_initializations++;
} else if (sample->raw_ns + 500 * 1000 * 1000 < now_ns &&
sample->base_cycles + 100 < now_cycles) {
// Enough time has passed to compute the cycle time.
if (sample->nsscaled_per_cycle != 0) { // Have a cycle time estimate.
// Compute time from counter reading, but avoiding overflow
// delta_cycles may be larger than on the fast path.
uint64_t estimated_scaled_ns;
int s = -1;
do {
s++;
estimated_scaled_ns = (delta_cycles >> s) * sample->nsscaled_per_cycle;
} while (estimated_scaled_ns / sample->nsscaled_per_cycle !=
(delta_cycles >> s));
estimated_base_ns = sample->base_ns +
(estimated_scaled_ns >> (kScale - s));
}
// Compute the assumed cycle time kMinNSBetweenSamples ns into the future
// assuming the cycle counter rate stays the same as the last interval.
uint64_t ns = now_ns - sample->raw_ns;
uint64_t measured_nsscaled_per_cycle = SafeDivideAndScale(ns, delta_cycles);
uint64_t assumed_next_sample_delta_cycles =
SafeDivideAndScale(kMinNSBetweenSamples, measured_nsscaled_per_cycle);
int64_t diff_ns = now_ns - estimated_base_ns; // estimate low by this much
// We want to set nsscaled_per_cycle so that our estimate of the ns time
// at the assumed cycle time is the assumed ns time.
// That is, we want to set nsscaled_per_cycle so:
// kMinNSBetweenSamples + diff_ns ==
// (assumed_next_sample_delta_cycles * nsscaled_per_cycle) >> kScale
// But we wish to damp oscillations, so instead correct only most
// of our current error, by solving:
// kMinNSBetweenSamples + diff_ns - (diff_ns / 16) ==
// (assumed_next_sample_delta_cycles * nsscaled_per_cycle) >> kScale
ns = kMinNSBetweenSamples + diff_ns - (diff_ns / 16);
uint64_t new_nsscaled_per_cycle =
SafeDivideAndScale(ns, assumed_next_sample_delta_cycles);
if (new_nsscaled_per_cycle != 0 &&
diff_ns < 100 * 1000 * 1000 && -diff_ns < 100 * 1000 * 1000) {
// record the cycle time measurement
last_sample.nsscaled_per_cycle.store(
new_nsscaled_per_cycle, std::memory_order_relaxed);
uint64_t new_min_cycles_per_sample =
SafeDivideAndScale(kMinNSBetweenSamples, new_nsscaled_per_cycle);
last_sample.min_cycles_per_sample.store(
new_min_cycles_per_sample, std::memory_order_relaxed);
stats_calibrations++;
} else { // something went wrong; forget the slope
last_sample.nsscaled_per_cycle.store(0, std::memory_order_relaxed);
last_sample.min_cycles_per_sample.store(0, std::memory_order_relaxed);
estimated_base_ns = now_ns;
stats_reinitializations++;
}
last_sample.raw_ns.store(now_ns, std::memory_order_relaxed);
last_sample.base_ns.store(estimated_base_ns, std::memory_order_relaxed);
last_sample.base_cycles.store(now_cycles, std::memory_order_relaxed);
} else {
// have a sample, but no slope; waiting for enough time for a calibration
stats_slow_paths++;
}
SeqRelease(&seq, lock_value); // release the readers
return estimated_base_ns;
}
} // namespace absl
#endif // ABSL_USE_CYCLECLOCK_FOR_GET_CURRENT_TIME_NANOS
namespace absl {
namespace {
// Returns the maximum duration that SleepOnce() can sleep for.
constexpr absl::Duration MaxSleep() {
#ifdef _WIN32
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// Windows Sleep() takes unsigned long argument in milliseconds.
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return absl::Milliseconds(
std::numeric_limits<unsigned long>::max()); // NOLINT(runtime/int)
#else
return absl::Seconds(std::numeric_limits<time_t>::max());
#endif
}
// Sleeps for the given duration.
// REQUIRES: to_sleep <= MaxSleep().
void SleepOnce(absl::Duration to_sleep) {
#ifdef _WIN32
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Sleep(to_sleep / absl::Milliseconds(1));
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#else
struct timespec sleep_time = absl::ToTimespec(to_sleep);
while (nanosleep(&sleep_time, &sleep_time) != 0 && errno == EINTR) {
// Ignore signals and wait for the full interval to elapse.
}
#endif
}
} // namespace
} // namespace absl
extern "C" {
ABSL_ATTRIBUTE_WEAK void AbslInternalSleepFor(absl::Duration duration) {
while (duration > absl::ZeroDuration()) {
absl::Duration to_sleep = std::min(duration, absl::MaxSleep());
absl::SleepOnce(to_sleep);
duration -= to_sleep;
}
}
} // extern "C"