-
David du Colombier authored
If you pass ns = 100,000 to this function, timediv will return ms = 0. tsemacquire in /sys/src/9/port/sysproc.c will return immediately when ms == 0 and the semaphore cannot be acquired immediately - it doesn't sleep - so notetsleep will spin, chewing cpu and repeatedly reading the time, until the 100us have passed. Thanks to the time reads it won't take too many iterations, but whatever we are waiting for does not get a chance to run. Eventually the notetsleep spin loop returns and we end up in the stoptheworld spin loop - actually a sleep loop but we're not doing a good job of sleeping. After 100ms or so of this, the kernel says enough and schedules a different thread. That thread manages to do whatever we're waiting for, and the spinning in the other thread stops. If tsemacquire had actually slept, this would have happened much quicker. Many thanks to Russ Cox for help debugging. LGTM=rsc R=rsc CC=golang-codereviews https://golang.org/cl/86210043
5a513061