On 2019-05-15 1:43 p.m., Marcelo Tosatti wrote:
On Wed, May 15, 2019 at 11:42:56AM -0700, Ankur Arora wrote:
On 5/14/19 6:50 AM, Marcelo Tosatti wrote:
On Mon, May 13, 2019 at 05:20:37PM +0800, Wanpeng Li wrote:
On Wed, 8 May 2019 at 02:57, Marcelo Tosatti <mtosa...@redhat.com> wrote:
Certain workloads perform poorly on KVM compared to baremetal
due to baremetal's ability to perform mwait on NEED_RESCHED
bit of task flags (therefore skipping the IPI).
KVM supports expose mwait to the guest, if it can solve this?
Regards,
Wanpeng Li
Unfortunately mwait in guest is not feasible (uncompatible with multiple
guests). Checking whether a paravirt solution is possible.
Hi Ankur,
Hi Marcelo,
I was also looking at making MWAIT available to guests in a safe manner:
whether through emulation or a PV-MWAIT. My (unsolicited) thoughts
What use-case are you interested in?
Currently Oracle does not make MWAIT available to guests in cloud
environments. My interest is 1) allow guests to avoid the IPI and
2) allow the waiting to be in deeper C-states so that other cores
could get the benefit of turbo-boost etc.
We basically want to handle this sequence:
monitor(monitor_address);
if (*monitor_address == base_value)
mwaitx(max_delay);
Emulation seems problematic because, AFAICS this would happen:
guest hypervisor
===== ====
monitor(monitor_address);
vmexit ===> monitor(monitor_address)
if (*monitor_address == base_value)
mwait();
vmexit ====> mwait()
There's a context switch back to the guest in this sequence which seems
problematic. Both the AMD and Intel specs list system calls and
far calls as events which would lead to the MWAIT being woken up:
"Voluntary transitions due to fast system call and far calls
(occurring prior to issuing MWAIT but after setting the monitor)".
We could do this instead:
guest hypervisor
===== ====
monitor(monitor_address);
vmexit ===> cache monitor_address
if (*monitor_address == base_value)
mwait();
vmexit ====> monitor(monitor_address)
mwait()
But, this would miss the "if (*monitor_address == base_value)" check in
the host which is problematic if *monitor_address changed simultaneously
when monitor was executed.
(Similar problem if we cache both the monitor_address and
*monitor_address.)
So, AFAICS, the only thing that would work is the guest offloading the
whole PV-MWAIT operation.
AFAICS, that could be a paravirt operation which needs three parameters:
(monitor_address, base_value, max_delay.)
This would allow the guest to offload this whole operation to
the host:
monitor(monitor_address);
if (*monitor_address == base_value)
mwaitx(max_delay);
I'm guessing you are thinking on similar lines?
Sort of: only trying to avoid the IPI to wake a remote vCPU.
Problem is that MWAIT works only on a contiguous range
of bits in memory (512 bits max on current CPUs).
So if you execute mwait on the host on behalf of the guest,
the region of memory monitored must include both host
and guest bits.
Yeah, an MWAITv would have come pretty handy here ;).
My idea of PV-MWAIT didn't include waiting on behalf of the host. I
was thinking of waiting in the host but exclusively on behalf of the
guest, until the guest is woken up or when it's time-quanta expires.
Waiting on behalf of both the guest and the host would clearly be better.
If we can do mwait for both the guest and host (say they share a 512
bit region), then the host will need some protection from the guest.
Maybe the waking guest-thread could just do a hypercall to wake up
the remote vCPU? Or maybe it could poke the monitored region,
but that is handled as a special page-fault?
The hypercall-to-wake would also allow us to move guest-threads across
CPUs. That said, I'm not sure how expensive either of these would be.
Assuming host/guest can share a monitored region safely, the host's
idle could monitor some region other than its &thread_info->flags.
Maybe we could setup a mwait notifier with a percpu waiting area which
could be registered by idle, guests etc.
Though on second thoughts, if the remote thread will do a
hypercall/page-fault then the handling could just as easily be: mark
the guest's remote thread runnable and set the resched bit.
High level semantics: If the CPU doesn't have any runnable threads, then
we actually do this version of PV-MWAIT -- arming a timer if necessary
so we only sleep until the time-slice expires or the MWAIT max_delay does.
That would kill the sched_wake_idle_without_ipi optimization for the
host.
Yeah, I was thinking in terms of the MWAIT being exclusively on behalf
of the guest so in a sense the guest was still scheduled just waiting.
Ankur
If the CPU has any runnable threads then this could still finish its
time-quanta or we could just do a schedule-out.
So the semantics guaranteed to the host would be that PV-MWAIT
returns after >= max_delay OR with the *monitor_address changed.
Ankur