1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 <2017> 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 | Index | 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 <2017> 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 |
<== Date ==> | <== Thread ==> |
---|
Subject: | Re: Default value to field SCAN |
From: | Michael Westfall <[email protected]> |
To: | Dirk Zimoch <[email protected]> |
Cc: | "[email protected] Talk" <[email protected]> |
Date: | Wed, 4 Jan 2017 13:03:08 -0300 |
On 04.01.2017 15:46, Michael Westfall wrote:
We have a Bancomm card that provides an 80Hz clock tick, so I see that
the 0.01 second scan rate, at least, is going to be a problem...
I'm not sure why this isn't a problem (or hasn't been noted) on our
legacy vxWorks systems... Need to do more investigation...
Can it be that on your legacy systems you used an older version of EPICS base (one that did not yet print these warnings) ?
BTW, I have written an addScan command line function that allows to add scan rates in the startup script (rather than modifying menuScan.dbd) and which tries to crank up the vxWorks clock rate to at least 4 time the scan rate and warns if that is not possible.
Dirk
Thanks.
On Wed, Jan 4, 2017 at 10:40 AM, Mark Rivers <[email protected]
<mailto:[email protected]du >> wrote:
> We see these warnings too with custom scan rates of 0.01 and 0.0125 seconds.
> The warnings are emitted even when no database is loaded, thus no records connected to these scan rates.
> We are using EPICS 3.14.12.4 with RTEMS 4.10.2 on MVME2700.
What is the system clock rate on this system? On vxWorks in the US
with the MVME2700 the default is 60 Hz. I believe the EPICS timers
will complete on the next clock tick. Since your scan rates are
less than 1/60 of a second then the actual scan time would range
from 0 to 16.6 ms?
Mark
________________________________ <mailto:tech-talk-bounces@aps.
From: [email protected]anl.gov >
[[email protected]
<mailto:tech-talk-bounces@aps.anl.gov >] on behalf of Michael
Westfall [[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>]
Sent: Wednesday, January 04, 2017 7:34 AM
Cc: [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> Talk
Subject: Re: Default value to field SCAN
Hi,
We see these warnings too with custom scan rates of 0.01 and 0.0125
seconds. The warnings are emitted even when no database is loaded,
thus no records connected to these scan rates.
We are using EPICS 3.14.12.4 with RTEMS 4.10.2 on MVME2700.
I was meaning to ask about this....
On Tue, Jan 3, 2017 at 4:55 PM, Andrew Johnson <[email protected]
<mailto:[email protected]><mailto:[email protected]
<mailto:[email protected]>>> wrote:
Hi Gabriel,
On 01/03/2017 12:58 PM, Gabriel de Souza Fedel wrote:
>>> I'm having problems with a set of records without SCAN field
that are
>>> consuming a lot of CPU, and receiving this messages:
>>>
>>> dbScan warning from '.2 second' scan thread:
>>> Scan processing averages 0,00 seconds (0,00 .. 0,02).
>>> Over-runs have now happened 283681 times in a row.
>>> To fix this, move some records to a slower scan rate.
>>>
>>> dbScan warning from '.5 second' scan thread:
>>> Scan processing averages 0,00 seconds (0,00 .. 0,03).
>>> Over-runs have now happened 290049 times in a row.
>>> To fix this, move some records to a slower scan rate.
>>>
>>> dbScan warning from '.1 second' scan thread:
>>> Scan processing averages 0,00 seconds (0,00 .. 0,03).
>>> Over-runs have now happened 278431 times in a row.
>>> To fix this, move some records to a slower scan rate.
>>>
>>> If i remove small choices from dbd file (.1, .2 and .5 seconds)
solves
>>> the problem. Apparently the records are being created with all SCAN
>>> values...some idea to solve this?
>>
>> These symptoms are very strange; as Mark Rivers suggested those
average
>> processing times should be larger than the nominal scan period.
Please
>> cd to your base/src/libCom/test directory and type 'make
runtests' and
>> report any test failures here. Also please try running the IOC
with the
>> LANG environment variable set to "C" instead of whatever it is
currently
>> set to in case that is causing the problem.
> First, setting LANG=C stop this messages....why?
Interesting, what is your normal value for LANG?
The IOC works out what scan periods to create by converting the menuScan
choice strings into a floating-point number using strtod(). It looks
like in your case the strtod() routine is not recognizing the '.'
character as the decimal separator (in the warning messages you showed
the printf() output uses ',' as the decimal separator which is what
suggested this to me) so for the sub-second periodic scan threads the
scan period is being set to 0, hence the above warnings. By setting LANG
to C you change the decimal separator that strtod() recognizes back to
'.' and now the IOC can correctly convert those fractional-second
periods into a non-zero value.
You could try editing the choice strings in your menuScan.dbd file to be
",1 second" ",2 second" and ",5 second" but that solution risks
incompatibility with any .db files that use the original strings in
their SCAN field values (especially for .db files that you may use from
support modules such as synApps or Asyn).
Can you find a slightly different locale setting for LANG (or maybe just
for the LC_NUMERIC variable) that will allow both ',' and '.' to be used
as decimal separators in your language? Since none of the European EPICS
users have complained about this I suspect there may be one, but this
isn't an area that I know very much about — have any other EPICS users
already resolved this kind of problem?
> Secondly, I ran the tests, and some errors happened (attached), but
> doesn't look to be anything related to that messages.
True, that failure probably just means that the test program wasn't able
to write to the Base directories — you can ignore this.
- Andrew
--
Arguing for surveillance because you have nothing to hide is no
different than making the claim, "I don't care about freedom of
speech because I have nothing to say." -- Edward Snowdon
--
Mike Westfall
Control Systems Software Engineer
[http://www.gemini.edu/images/GeminiLogo_4.5in_newSmall.png
<http://www.gemini.edu/images/GeminiLogo_4.5in_newSmall.png >]
--
Mike Westfall
Control Systems Software Engineer