@@ -110,18 +110,6 @@ static int64_t cpu_get_clock(void)
}
}
-static int64_t qemu_icount_delta(void)
-{
- if (use_icount == 1) {
- /* When not using an adaptive execution frequency
- we tend to get badly out of sync with real time,
- so just delay for a reasonable amount of time. */
- return 0;
- } else {
- return cpu_get_icount() - cpu_get_clock();
- }
-}
-
/* enable cpu_get_ticks() */
void cpu_enable_ticks(void)
{
@@ -618,6 +606,7 @@ static int64_t cpu_clock_last_read;
int qemu_calculate_timeout(void)
{
+ int64_t cur_time, cur_icount;
int64_t delta;
/* When using icount, vm_clock timers are handled outside of the alarm
@@ -628,10 +617,17 @@ int qemu_calculate_timeout(void)
return 5000;
}
- delta = qemu_icount_delta();
- if (delta > 0) {
+ cur_time = cpu_get_clock();
+ cur_icount = cpu_get_icount();
+ if (cur_icount > cur_time) {
/* Virtual time is ahead of real time, wait for it to sync. Time
- spent waiting for I/O will not be counted. */
+ spent waiting for I/O will not be counted. Be careful to avoid
+ overflow. */
+ if (cur_icount > cur_time + INT32_MAX) {
+ delta = INT32_MAX;
+ } else {
+ delta = cur_icount - cur_time;
+ }
cpu_clock_last_read = -1;
} else {
/* Wait until the next virtual time event, and account the wait
In order to improve accuracy with -icount N, we inline qemu_icount_delta into qemu_calculate_timeout. This way, we can still avoid that virtual time gets too far ahead of real time when using low speeds. Signed-off-by: Paolo Bonzini <pbonzini@redhat.com> --- qemu-timer.c | 26 +++++++++++--------------- 1 files changed, 11 insertions(+), 15 deletions(-)