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authorPatrik Nyblom <[email protected]>2013-08-29 10:08:18 +0200
committerPatrik Nyblom <[email protected]>2013-08-29 10:08:18 +0200
commit676e6fe82571a666300f6ad2017d74f7bc1fe0e8 (patch)
treead83390e4dae912d8447f76a2fea99f555a3c7e8 /erts/doc/src
parent24a141833ad33ff889b07dce83e4f046a9a0a775 (diff)
parenta6df426d6daff0ab20c0a81ac834befd69322452 (diff)
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Merge branch 'pan/time_correction_doc'
* pan/time_correction_doc: Add time correction doc in users guide OTP-11277
Diffstat (limited to 'erts/doc/src')
-rw-r--r--erts/doc/src/Makefile1
-rw-r--r--erts/doc/src/part.xml1
-rw-r--r--erts/doc/src/time_correction.xml274
3 files changed, 276 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/erts/doc/src/Makefile b/erts/doc/src/Makefile
index 89d7c85a86..d4c6fe67d2 100644
--- a/erts/doc/src/Makefile
+++ b/erts/doc/src/Makefile
@@ -78,6 +78,7 @@ XML_CHAPTER_FILES = \
erl_ext_dist.xml \
erl_dist_protocol.xml \
communication.xml \
+ time_correction.xml \
notes.xml \
notes_history.xml
diff --git a/erts/doc/src/part.xml b/erts/doc/src/part.xml
index fb720e05f3..7b17b5b551 100644
--- a/erts/doc/src/part.xml
+++ b/erts/doc/src/part.xml
@@ -32,6 +32,7 @@
<p>The Erlang Runtime System Application <em>ERTS</em>.</p>
</description>
<xi:include href="communication.xml"/>
+ <xi:include href="time_correction.xml"/>
<xi:include href="match_spec.xml"/>
<xi:include href="crash_dump.xml"/>
<xi:include href="alt_dist.xml"/>
diff --git a/erts/doc/src/time_correction.xml b/erts/doc/src/time_correction.xml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..d52cc7f3e2
--- /dev/null
+++ b/erts/doc/src/time_correction.xml
@@ -0,0 +1,274 @@
+<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf8" ?>
+<!DOCTYPE chapter SYSTEM "chapter.dtd">
+
+<chapter>
+ <header>
+ <copyright>
+ <year>1999</year><year>2013</year>
+ <holder>Ericsson AB. All Rights Reserved.</holder>
+ </copyright>
+ <legalnotice>
+ The contents of this file are subject to the Erlang Public License,
+ Version 1.1, (the "License"); you may not use this file except in
+ compliance with the License. You should have received a copy of the
+ Erlang Public License along with this software. If not, it can be
+ retrieved online at http://www.erlang.org/.
+
+ Software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS"
+ basis, WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See
+ the License for the specific language governing rights and limitations
+ under the License.
+
+ </legalnotice>
+
+ <title>Time and time correction in Erlang</title>
+ <prepared>Patrik Nyblom</prepared>
+ <responsible></responsible>
+ <docno></docno>
+ <approved></approved>
+ <checked></checked>
+ <date>2013-08-28</date>
+ <rev>PA1</rev>
+ <file>time_correction.xml</file>
+ </header>
+ <p>Time is vital to an Erlang program and, more importantly, <em>correct</em>
+ time is vital to an Erlang program. As Erlang is a language with
+ soft real time properties and we have the possibility to express
+ time in our programs, the Virtual Machine and the language has to be
+ very careful about what is considered a correct point in time and in
+ how time functions behave.</p>
+
+ <p>In the beginning, Erlang was constructed assuming that the wall
+ clock time in the system showed a monotonic time moving forward at
+ exactly the same pace as the definition of time. That more or less
+ meant that an atomic clock (or better) was expected to be attached
+ to your hardware and that the hardware was then expected to be
+ locked away from any human (or unearthly) tinkering for all
+ eternity. While this might be a compelling thought, it's simply
+ never the case.</p>
+
+ <p>A "normal" modern computer can not keep time. Not on itself and
+ not unless you actually have a chip level atomic clock wired to
+ it. Time, as perceived by your computer, will normally need to be
+ corrected. Hence the NTP protocol that together with the ntpd
+ process will do it's best to keep your computers time in sync with
+ the "real" time in the universe. Between NTP corrections, usually a
+ less potent time-keeper than an atomic clock is used.</p>
+
+ <p>But NTP is not fail safe. The NTP server can be unavailable, the
+ ntp.conf can be wrongly configured or your computer may from time to
+ time be disconnected from the internet. Furthermore you can have a
+ user (or even system administrator) on your system that thinks the
+ right way to handle daylight saving time is to adjust the clock one
+ hour two times a year (a tip, that is not the right way to do
+ it...). To further complicate things, this user fetched your
+ software from the internet and has never ever thought about what's
+ the correct time as perceived by a computer. The user simply does
+ not care about keeping the wall clock in sync with the rest of the
+ universe. The user expects your program to have omnipotent knowledge
+ about the time.</p>
+
+ <p>Most programmers also expect time to be reliable, at least until
+ they realize that the wall clock time on their workstation is of by
+ a minute. Then they simply set it to the correct time, maybe or
+ maybe not in a smooth way. Most probably not in a smooth way.</p>
+
+ <p>The amount of problems that arise when you expect the wall clock
+ time on the system to always be correct may be immense. Therefore Erlang
+ introduced the "corrected estimate of time", or the "time
+ correction" many years ago. The time correction relies on the fact
+ that most operating systems have some kind of monotonic clock,
+ either a real time extension or some built in "tick counter" that is
+ independent of the wall clock settings. This counter may have
+ microsecond resolution or much less, but generally it has a drift
+ that is not to be ignored.</p>
+
+ <p>So we have this monotonic ticking and we have the wall clock
+ time. Two unreliable times that together can give us an estimate of
+ an actual wall clock time that does not jump around and that
+ monotonically moves forward. If the tick counter has a high
+ resolution, this is fairly easy to do, if the counter has a low
+ resolution, it's more expensive, but still doable down to
+ frequencies of 50-60 Hz (of the tick counter).</p>
+
+ <p>So the corrected time is the nearest approximation of an atomic
+ clock that is available on the computer. We want it to have the
+ following properties:</p>
+ <taglist>
+ <tag>Monotonic</tag>
+ <item>The clock should not move backwards</item>
+ <tag>Intervals should be near the truth</tag>
+ <item>We want the actual time (as measured by an atomic clock or
+ an astronomer) that passes between two time stamps, T1 and T2, to be as
+ near to T2 - T1 as possible.</item>
+ <tag>Tight coupling to the wall clock</tag>
+ <item>We want a timer that is to be fired when the wall clock
+ reaches a time in the future, to fire as near to that point in
+ time as possible</item>
+ </taglist>
+ <p>To meet all the criteria, we have to utilize both times in such a
+ way that Erlangs "corrected time" moves slightly slower or slightly
+ faster than the wall clock to get in sync with it. The word
+ "slightly" means a maximum of 1% difference to the wall clock time,
+ meaning that a sudden change in the wall clock of one minute, takes
+ 100 minutes to fix, by letting all "corrected time" move 1% slower
+ or faster.</p>
+
+ <p>Needless to say, correcting for a faulty handling of daylight
+ saving time may be disturbing to a user comparing wall clock
+ time to for example calendar:now_to_local_time(erlang:now()). But
+ calendar:now_to_local_time/1 is not supposed to be used for presenting wall
+ clock time to the user.</p>
+
+ <p>Time correction is not perfect, but it saves you from the havoc
+ of clocks jumping around, which would make timers in your program
+ fire far to late or far to early and could bring your whole system
+ to it's knees (or worse) just because someone detected a small error
+ in the wall clock time of the server where your program runs. So
+ while it might be confusing, it is still a really good feature of
+ Erlang and you should not throw it away using time functions which
+ may give you higher benchmark results, not unless you really know
+ what you're doing.</p>
+
+ <section>
+ <title>What does time correction mean in my system?</title>
+ <p>Time correction means that Erlang estimates a time from current
+ and previous settings of the wall clock, and it uses a fairly
+ exact tick counter to detect when the wall clock time has jumped
+ for some reason, slowly adjusting to the new value.</p>
+
+ <p>In practice, this means that the difference between two calls
+ to time corrected functions, like erlang:now(), might differ up to
+ one percent from the corresponding calls to non time corrected
+ functions (like os:timestamp()). Furthermore, if comparing
+ calendar:local_time/0 to calendar:now_to_local_time(erlang:now()),
+ you might temporarily see a difference, depending on how well kept your
+ system is.</p>
+
+ <p>It is important to understand that it is (to the program)
+ always unknown if it is the wall clock time that moves in the
+ wrong pace or the Erlang corrected time. The only way to determine
+ that, is to have an external source of universally correct time. If
+ some such source is available, the wall clock time can be kept
+ nearly perfect at all times, and no significant difference will be
+ detected between erlang:now/0's pace and the wall clock's.</p>
+
+ <p>Still, the time correction will mean that your system keeps
+ it's real time characteristics very well, even when the wall clock
+ is unreliable.</p>
+ </section>
+ <section>
+ <title>Where does Erlang use corrected time?</title>
+ <p>For all functionality where real time characteristics are
+ desirable, time correction is used. This basically means:</p>
+ <taglist>
+ <tag>erlang:now/0</tag>
+ <item>The infamous erlang:now/0 function uses time correction so
+ that differences between two "now-timestamps" will correspond to
+ other timeouts in the system. erlang:now/0 also holds other
+ properties, discussed later.</item>
+ <tag>receive ... after</tag>
+ <item>Timeouts on receive uses time correction to determine a
+ stable timeout interval.</item>
+ <tag>The timer module</tag>
+ <item>As the timer module uses other built in functions which
+ deliver corrected time, the timer module itself works with
+ corrected time.</item>
+ <tag>erlang:start_timer/3 and erlang:send_after/3</tag>
+ <item>The timer BIF's work with corrected time, so that they
+ will not fire prematurely or too late due to changes in the wall
+ clock time.</item>
+ </taglist>
+
+ <p>All other functionality in the system where erlang:now/0 or any
+ other time corrected functionality is used, will of course
+ automatically benefit from it, as long as it's not "optimized" to
+ use some other time stamp function (like os:timestamp/0).</p>
+
+ <p>Modules like calendar and functions like erlang:localtime/0 use
+ the wall clock time as it is currently set on the system. They
+ will not use corrected time. However, if you use a now-value and
+ convert it to local time, you will get a corrected local time
+ value, which may or may not be what you want. Typically older code
+ tend to use erlang:now/0 as a wall clock time, which is usually
+ correct (at least when testing), but might surprise you when
+ compared to other times in the system.</p>
+ </section>
+ <section>
+ <title>What is erlang:now/0 really?</title>
+ <p>erlang:now/0 is a function designed to serve multiple purposes
+ (or a multi-headed beast if you're a VM designer). It is expected
+ to hold the following properties:</p>
+ <taglist>
+ <tag>Monotonic</tag>
+ <item>erlang:now() never jumps backwards - it always moves
+ forward</item>
+ <tag>Interval correct</tag>
+ <item>The interval between two erlang:now() calls is expected to
+ correspond to the correct time in real life (as defined by an
+ atomic clock, or better)</item>
+ <tag>Absolute correctness</tag>
+ <item>The erlang:now/0 value should be possible to convert to an
+ absolute and correct date-time, corresponding to the real world
+ date and time (the wall clock)</item>
+ <tag>System correspondence</tag>
+ <item>The erlang:now/0 value converted to a date-time is
+ expected to correspond to times given by other programs on the
+ system (or by functions like os:timestamp/0)</item>
+ <tag>Unique</tag>
+ <item>No two calls to erlang:now on one Erlang node should
+ return the same value</item>
+ </taglist>
+ <p>All these requirements are possible to uphold at the same
+ time if (and only if):</p>
+ <taglist>
+ <tag>The wall clock time of the system is perfect</tag>
+ <item>The system (Operating System) time needs to be perfectly
+ in sync with the actual time as defined by an atomic clock or
+ a better time source. A good installation using NTP, and that is
+ up to date before Erlang starts, will have properties that for
+ most users and programs will be near indistinguishable from the
+ perfect time. Note that any larger corrections to the time done
+ by hand, or after Erlang has started, will partly (or
+ temporarily) invalidate some of the properties, as the time is
+ no longer perfect.</item>
+ <tag>Less than one call per microsecond to erlang:now/0 is
+ done</tag>
+ <item>This means that at <em>any</em> microsecond interval in
+ time, there can be no more than one call to erlang:now/0 in the
+ system. However, for the system not to loose it's properties
+ completely, it's enough that it on average is no more than one
+ call per microsecond (in one Erlang node).</item>
+ </taglist>
+ <p>The uniqueness property of erlang:now/0 is the most limiting
+ property. It means that erlang:now() maintains a global state and
+ that there is a hard-to-check property of the system that needs to
+ be maintained. For most applications this is still not a problem,
+ but a future system might very well manage to violate the
+ frequency limit on the calls globally. The uniqueness property is
+ also quite useless, as there are globally unique references that
+ provide a much better unique value to programs. However the
+ property will need to be maintained unless a really subtle
+ backward compatibility issue is to be introduced.</p>
+ </section>
+ <section>
+ <title>Should I use erlang:now/0 or os:timestamp/0</title>
+ <p>The simple answer is to use erlang:now/0 for everything where
+ you want to keep real time characteristics, but use os:timestamp
+ for things like logs, user communication and debugging (typically
+ timer:ts uses os:timestamp, as it is a test tool, not a real world
+ application API). The benefit of using os:timestamp/0 is that it's
+ faster and does not involve any global state (unless the operating
+ system has one). The downside is that it will be vulnerable to wall
+ clock time changes.</p>
+ </section>
+ <section>
+ <title>Turning off time correction</title>
+ <p>If, for some reason, time correction causes trouble and you are
+ absolutely confident that the wall clock on the system is nearly
+ perfect, you can turn off time correction completely by giving the
+ <c>+c</c> option to <c>erl</c>. The probability for this being a
+ good idea, is very low.</p>
+ </section>
+</chapter>
+