[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] [Xen-devel] Re: [RFC PATCH 0/4] (Take 2): transcendent memory ("tmem") for Linux
On 07/12/2009 07:20 PM, Dan Magenheimer wrote: that information; but tmem is trying to go a step further by making the cooperation between the OS and hypervisor more explicit and directly beneficial to the OS.KVM definitely falls into the camp of trying to minimize modification to the guest.No argument there. Well, maybe one :-) Yes, but KVM also heavily encourages unmodified guests. Tmem is philosophically in favor of finding a balance between things that work well with no changes to any OS (and thus work just fine regardless of whether the OS is running in a virtual environment or not), and things that could work better if the OS is knowledgable that it is running in a virtual environment. CMM2 and tmem are not any different in this regard; both require OS modification, and both make information available to the hypervisor. In fact CMM2 is much more intrusive (but on the other hand provides much more information). For those that believe virtualization is a flash-in- the-pan, no modifications to the OS is the right answer. For those that believe it will be pervasive in the future, finding the right balance is a critical step in operating system evolution. You're arguing for CMM2 here IMO. Is it the tmem API or the precache/preswap API layered on top of it that is problematic? Both currently assume copying but perhaps the precache/preswap API could, with minor modifications, meet KVM's needs better? My take on this is that precache (predecache?) / preswap can be implemented even without tmem by using write-through backing for the virtual disk. For swap this is actually slight;y more efficient than tmem preswap, for preuncache slightly less efficient (since there will be some double caching). So I'm more interested in other use cases of tmem/CMM2.Well, first, tmem's very name means memory that is "beyond the range of normal perception". This is certainly not the first class of memory in use in data centers that can't be accounted at process granularity. I'm thinking disk array caches as the primary example. Also lots of tools that work great in a non-virtualized OS are worthless or misleading in a virtual environment. Right, the transient uses of tmem when applied to disk objects (swap/pagecache) are very similar to disk caches. Which is why you can get a very similar effect when caching your virtual disks; this can be done without any guest modification. -- I have a truly marvellous patch that fixes the bug which this signature is too narrow to contain. _______________________________________________ Xen-devel mailing list Xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.xensource.com/xen-devel
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