[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [Xen-devel] Core parking feature enable
Jan Beulich wrote: >>>> On 29.02.12 at 13:41, "Liu, Jinsong" <jinsong.liu@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> Liu, Jinsong wrote: >>> Jan Beulich wrote: >>>>>>> On 17.02.12 at 18:48, "Liu, Jinsong" <jinsong.liu@xxxxxxxxx> >>>>>>> wrote: >>>>> Jan Beulich wrote: >>>>>>>>> On 17.02.12 at 09:54, "Liu, Jinsong" <jinsong.liu@xxxxxxxxx> >>>>>>>>> wrote: >>>>>>> Core parking is a power control feature and it can co-work with >>>>>>> NPTM to control system power budget through online/offline some >>>>>>> CPUs in the system. These patches implement core parking feature >>>>>>> for xen. They consist of 2 parts: dom0 patches and xen >>>>>>> hypervisor patches. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> At dom0 side, patches include >>>>>>> [Patch 1/3] intercept native pad (Processor Aggregator Device) >>>>>>> logic, providing a native interface for natvie platform and a >>>>>>> paravirt template for paravirt platform, so that os can >>>>>>> implicitly hook to proper ops accordingly; [Patch 2/3] redirect >>>>>>> paravirt template to Xen pv ops; [Patch 3/3] implement Xen pad >>>>>>> logic, and when getting pad device notification, it hypercalls >>>>>>> to Xen hypervisor for core parking. Due to the characteristic >>>>>>> of xen continue_hypercall_on_cpu, dom0 seperately send/get core >>>>>>> parking request/result; >>>>>>> >>>>>>> At Xen hypervisor side, patches include >>>>>>> [Patch 1/2] implement hypercall through which dom0 send core >>>>>>> parking request, and get core parking result; >>>>>>> [Patch 2/2] implement Xen core parking. Different core parking >>>>>>> sequence has different power/performance result, due to cpu >>>>>>> socket/core/thread topology. This patch provide power-first and >>>>>>> performance-first policies, users can choose core parking policy >>>>>>> on their own demand, considering power and performance tradeoff. >>>>>> >>>>>> Does this really need to be implemented in the hypervisor? All >>>>>> this boils down to is a wrapper around cpu_down() and cpu_up(), >>>>>> which have hypercall interfaces already. So I'd rather see this >>>>>> as being an extension to Dom0's pCPU management patches (which >>>>>> aren't upstream afaict)... >>>>>> >>>>>> Jan >>>>> >>>>> It's a design choice. Core parking is not only a wrapper around >>>>> cpu_down/up, it also involves policy algorithms which depend on >>>>> physical cpu topology and cpu_online/present_map, etc. Implement >>>>> core parking at dom0 side need expose all those information to >>>>> dom0, with potential issues (like coherence), while dom0 still >>>>> need do same work as hypervisor. Our idea is to keep dom0 as ACPI >>>>> parser, then hypercall and do rest things at hypervisor side. >>>> >>>> Actually, after some more thought, I don't even think this ought to >>>> be implemented in the Dom0 kernel, but in user space altogether. >>>> Afaict all information necessary is already being exposed. >>>> >>> >>> No, user space lack necessary information. If I didn't >>> misunderstand, it has some dom0-side dependencies not ready now, >>> like >>> 1. sysfs interface, and exposing xen pcpu topology and maps; >>> 2. intecept pad notify and call usermodehelper; >>> 3. a daemon to monitor/policy core parking (daemon enable when linux >>> run as pvops under xen (kernel acpi_pad disable now), daemon disable >>> when linux run under baremetal (kernel acpi_pad enable now)) >>> >>> Seems keep same approach as native kernel which handle acpi_pad in >>> kernel side (for us, in hypervisor side) is a reasonable choice. Per >>> my understanding core parking is a co-work part of NPTM, the whole >>> process is basically a remote controller-microengine-bios-kernel >>> process, not necessarily involve user action. >>> >> >> Any comments? > > No - I continue to disagree that this needs to be done outside of > user space (the fact that certain necessary kernel pieces aren't in > pv-ops is no excuse, nor is it that native does this in the kernel - > that would at most allow for implementing it in the kernel, but still > won't justify doing it in the hypervisor). > Jan, could you elaborate more your thoughts? like - the pros of user space approach (and cons, if it has); - the disadvantages of hypervisor approach; Thanks, Jinsong _______________________________________________ Xen-devel mailing list Xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.xen.org/xen-devel
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