On 03/29/2014 01:47 AM, Zhanghailiang wrote:
> Hi,
> I found when Guest is idle, VDSO pvclock may increase host consumption.
> We can calcutate as follow, Correct me if I am wrong.
>       (Host)250 * update_pvclock_gtod = 1500 * gettimeofday(Guest)
> In Host, VDSO pvclock introduce a notifier chain, pvclock_gtod_chain in 
> timekeeping.c. It consume nearly 900 cycles per call. So in consideration of 
> 250 Hz, it may consume 225,000 cycles per second, even no VM is created.
> In Guest, gettimeofday consumes 220 cycles per call with VDSO pvclock. If the 
> no-kvmclock-vsyscall is configured, gettimeofday consumes 370 cycles per 
> call. The feature decrease 150 cycles consumption per call. 
> When call gettimeofday 1500 times,it decrease 225,000 cycles,equal to the 
> host consumption.
> Both Host and Guest is linux-3.13.6.
> So, whether the host cpu consumption is a problem?

Does pvclock serve any real purpose on systems with fully-functional
TSCs?  The x86 guest implementation is awful, so it's about 2x slower
than TSC.  It could be improved a lot, but I'm not sure I understand why
it exists in the first place.

I certainly understand the goal of keeping the guest CLOCK_REALTIME is
sync with the host, but pvclock seems like overkill for that.

--Andy

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