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Re: [Xen-devel] credit scheduler error rates as reported by HP and UCSD


  • To: ncmike@xxxxxxxxxx
  • From: "Diwaker Gupta" <diwaker.lists@xxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Thu, 12 Apr 2007 09:09:14 -0700
  • Cc: Ian Pratt <m+Ian.Pratt@xxxxxxxxxxxx>, Emmanuel Ackaouy <ackaouy@xxxxxxxxx>, xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx, lucy.cherkasova@xxxxxx
  • Delivery-date: Thu, 12 Apr 2007 09:08:02 -0700
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Questions: how does ALERT measure actual cpu allocation? Using Xenmon?
How does the ALERT exersize the domain? The paper didn't mention the
actual system calls and hypercalls the domains are making when running
ALERT.

yes, we use XenMon. We also have xentop output for correlation and validation.

I think the paper describes the workloads we use. When the VMs are
running webservers, we use httperf to generate the workload. The iperf
benchmark uses the iperf bandwidth measurement tools and I believe the
VMs run as iperf servers. For disk I/O, we just use a regular dd
command to read a file into /dev/null.

I'm not sure how one would accurately generate the set of system calls
and hypercalls generated by a given workload. And how would you use
this information if you had it?

Diwaker
--
Web/Blog/Gallery: http://floatingsun.net/blog

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