$Id: README,v 1.2 2001/08/10 19:23:11 vipin Exp $ This is the README file for the JitterTest (and friends) program. This program is used to measure what the jitter of a real time task would be under "standard" Linux. More particularly, what is the effect of running a real time task under Linux with background JFFS file system activity. The jitter is measured in milli seconds (ms) from the expected time of arrival of a signal from a periodic timer (set by the task) to when the task actually gets the signal. This jitter is then stored in a file specified (or the default output file "jitter.dat"). The data may also be sent out to the console by writing to /dev/console (See help options. This is highly desirable specially if you have redirected your console to the serial port and are storing it as a minicom log on another computer for later analysis using some tools provided here). This is particularly useful if you have a serial console and are outputting "interesting" info from inside some kernel task or driver. (or something as simple as a "df" program running periodically and redirecting o/p to the console). One "interesting" thing that I have measured is the effect of FLASH chip erases on the jitter of a real time task. One can do that by putting a printk at the beginning of the flash erase routine in the MTD flash chip driver. Now you will get jitter data interspersed with flash sector erase events. Other printk's can also be placed at suspected jitter causing locations in the system. EXECUTING THE PROGRAM "JitterTest" You may specify a file to be read by the program every time it wakes up (every cycle). This file is created and filled with some junk data. The purpose of this is to test the jitter of the program if it were reading from- say a JFFS (Journaling Flash File System) file system. By specifying the complete paths of the read and write (o/p) files you can test the jitter a POSIX type real time task will experience under Linux, under various conditions. These can be as follows: 1. O/P file on ram file system, no i/p file. In this case you would presumably generate other "typical" background activity for your system and examine the worst case jitter experienced by a task that is neither reading nor writing to a file system. Other cases could be: 2. O/P to ram fs, I/P from JFFS (type) fs: This is specially useful to test the proper operation of erase suspend type of operation in JFFS file systems (with an MTD layer that supports it). In this test you would generate some background write/erase type activity that would generate chip erases. Since this program is reading from the same file system, you contrast the latencies with those obtained with writes going to the same fs. 3. Both read and writes to (or just write to) JFFS file system: Here you would test for latencies experienced by a program if it were writing (and optionally also reading) from a JFFS fs. Grabing a kernel profile: This program can also conditionally grab a kernel profile. Specify --grab_kprofile on the cmd line as well as a "threshold" parameter (see help options by -?). Any jitter greater than this "threshold" will cause the program to read the /proc/profile file and dump it in a local file with increasing file numbers. It will also output the filename at that time to the console file specified. This will allow you to corelate later in time the various profiles with data in your console file and what was going on at that time. These profile files may then be later examined by running them through ksymoops. Make sure you specify "profile=2" on the kernel command line when you boot the kernel if you want to use this functionality. Signalling the JFFS[2] GC task: You can also force this program to send a SIGSTOP/SIGCONT to the JFFS (or JFFS2) gc task by specifing --siggc on the cmd line. This will let you investigate the effect of forcing the gc task to wake up and do its thing when you are not writing to the fs and to force it to sleep when you want to write to the fs. These are just various tools to investigate the possibility of achieving minimal read/write latency when using JFFS[2]. You need to manually do a "ps aux" and look up the PID of the gc thread and provide it to the program. EXECUTING THE PROGRAM "plotJittervsFill" This program is a post processing tool that will extract the jitter times as printed by the JitterTest program in its console log file as well as the data printed by the "df" command. This "df" data happens to be in the console log because you will run the shell file fillJffs2.sh on a console when you are doing your jitter test. This shell script copies a specified file to another specified file every programmable seconds. It also does a "df" and redirects output to /dev/console where it is mixed with the output from JitterTest. All this console data is stored on another computer, as all this data is being outputted to the serial port as you have redirected the console to the serial port (that is the only guaranteed way to not loose any console log or printk data). You can then run this saved console log through this program and it will output a very nice text file with the %fill in one col and corrosponding jitter values in the second. gnuplot then does a beautifull plot of this resulting file showing you graphically the jitters encountered at different fill % of your JFFS[2] fs. OTHER COMMENTS: Use the "-w BYTES" cmd line parameter to simulate your test case. Not everyone has the same requirements. Someone may want to measure the jitter of JFFS2 with 500 bytes being written every 500ms. Others may want to measure the system performance writing 2048 bytes every 5 seconds. RUNNING MULTIPLE INSTANCES: Things get real interesting when you run multiple instances of this program *at the same time*. You could have one version running as a real time task (by specifing the priority with the -p cmd line parameter), not interacting with any fs or at the very least not reading and writing to JFFS[2]. At the same time you could have another version running as a regular task (by not specifing any priority) but reading and writing to JFFS[2]. This way you can easily measure the blocking performance of the real time task while another non-real time task interacts with JFFS[2] in the back ground. You get the idea. WATCH OUT! Be particularly careful of running this program as a real time task AND writing to JFFS[2]. Any blocks will cause your whole system to block till any garbage collect initiated by writes by this task complete. I have measured these blocks to be of the order of 40-50 seconds on a reasonably powerful 32 bit embedded system.