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Re: [Xen-devel] lock in vhpet



> -----Original Message-----
> From: Keir Fraser [mailto:keir.xen@xxxxxxxxx]
> Sent: Wednesday, April 18, 2012 3:13 PM
> To: Zhang, Yang Z; xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> Subject: Re: lock in vhpet
> 
> On 18/04/2012 01:52, "Zhang, Yang Z" <yang.z.zhang@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> 
> >> It depends. Where an access is an apparently-atomic memory-mapped
> >> access, but implemented as a sequence of operations in the
> >> hypervisor, the hypervisor might need to maintain atomicity through 
> >> locking.
> >
> > But if there already has lock inside guest for those access, and there
> > have no other code patch(like timer callback function) in hypervisor
> > to access the shared data, then we don't need to use lock in hypersivor.
> 
> If there is a memory-mapped register access which is atomic on bare metal,
> the guest may not bother with locking. We have to maintain that apparent
> atomicity ourselves by implementing serialisation in the hypervisor.
> 
> >>> I don't know whether all those locks are necessary, but at least the
> >>> lock for vhpet, especially the reading lock, is not required.
> >>
> >> This is definitely not true, for example locking is required around
> >> calls to create_periodic_time(), to serialise them. So in general the
> >> locking I added, even in vhpet.c is required. If you have a specific
> >> hot path you are looking to optimise, and especially if you have
> >> numbers to back that up, then we can consider specific localised
> >> optimisations to avoid locking where we can reason it is not needed.
> > As I mentioned, if the guest can ensure there only one CPU to access
> > the hpet at same time, this means the access itself already is serialized.
> > Yes.Win8 is booting very slowly w/ more than 16 VCPUs. And this is due
> > to the big lock in reading hpet. Also, the xentrace data shows lots of
> > vmexit which mainly from PAUSE instruction from other cpus. So I think
> > if guest already uses lock to protect the hpet access, why hypervisor do the
> same thing too?
> 
> If the HPET accesses are atomic on bare metal, we have to maintain that, even
> if some guests have extra locking themselves. Also, in some cases Xen needs
> locking to correctly maintain its own internal state regardless of what an
> (untrusted) guest might do. So we cannot just get rid of the vhpet lock
> everywhere. It's definitely not correct to do so. Optimising the hpet read 
> path
> however, sounds okay. I agree the lock may not be needed on that specific
> path.

You are right.
For this case, since the main access of hpet is to read the main counter, so I 
think the rwlock is a better choice. 

yang


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