[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [Xen-devel] [PATCH] Fix performance issue brought by TSC-sync logic
Keir Fraser wrote: On 23/02/2009 00:21, "Yang, Xiaowei" <xiaowei.yang@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:Recently we found one performance bug when doing network test with VTd assigned devices - in some extreme case, the network performance in HVM using new Linux kernel could be 1/20 of native. Root cause is one of our sync-tsc-under-deep-C-state patches brings extra kilo-TSC drift between pCPUs and let check-tsc-sync logic in HVM failed. The result is the kernel fails to use platform timer (HPET, PMtimer) for gettimeofday instead of TSC and brings very frequent costly IOport access VMExit - triple per one call. We provides below 2 patches to address the issue:Patch 1 looks reasonable. Patch number 2 I'm less keen on, since patch 1 should suffice? Also I think regular re-sync across CPUs is a good ideaanyway. Here is average of 100 cycles skew results on one core 2 quad machine: 1) TSC-sync: 1300 2) TSC-sync+tsc1.patch: 400 3) without TSC-sync: 200 (a.k.a sync at boot time only)We can see from 1) to 2), cycles skew improves a lot. However Linux kernel's logic to check TSC sync (check_tsc_warp) is very strict, so even with tsc1.patch, there are still chances to observe checking failed inside VM. For further improvement to reach the effect of 3), e.g. by taking care of cache consistance amongs CPUs, there will be more overhead. And considering the function is called per second, we are hesitating to do this. What's your idea?:) Thanks, xiaowei _______________________________________________ Xen-devel mailing list Xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.xensource.com/xen-devel
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