[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] RE: [Xen-devel] RE: Saving/Restoring IA32_TSC_AUX MSR
> > Yes, it does. If there were a reasonable way for an > > application to check "am I running on a VM for which > > each vcpu has been pinned?" this might be a reasonable > > constraint as, if the app isn't, it could fail or at least > > log a message. But if the app will randomly fail > > (or perform horribly) depending on whether the > > underlying VM is pinned or not (which might even > > change across a migration or if a sysadmin is > > "tuning" his data center), I don't think > > enterprise customers would appreciate that. > > Dan, > If later guest NUMA is implemented, both APP and > Hypervisor/Guest are NUMA awared. APP could get benefit > From the information of node/processor which is got from > RDTSCP. But how to implement guest NUMA is another story, > either we can use pin, or something other creative idea. Right. A guest NUMA implementation could use: 1) rdtscp+tsc_aux, which is very fast but unreliable (unless the app can be certain the guest is permanently pinned), or 2) some other yet-to-be-designed mechanism, likely involving system calls and/or hypercalls, which is slower but can be designed to be always reliable In my experience in the enterprise world, "slow but reliable" is always better than "fast but unreliable", except possibly in well-understood constrained situations. So I am suggesting we do not implement (1) by NOT enabling rdtscp-bit-in-cpuid and instead concentrate on (2). I guess for the special cases where unreliable is acceptable, (1) could be an option, but I don't think it should be turned on by default. Dan _______________________________________________ Xen-devel mailing list Xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.xensource.com/xen-devel
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