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Re: [Xen-devel] [PATCH] Don't track all memory when enabling log dirty to track vram



On 02/17/2014 10:18 AM, Jan Beulich wrote:
On 13.02.14 at 17:20, Tim Deegan <tim@xxxxxxx> wrote:
At 15:55 +0000 on 13 Feb (1392303343), Jan Beulich wrote:
On 13.02.14 at 16:46, George Dunlap <george.dunlap@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On 02/12/2014 12:53 AM, Zhang, Yang Z wrote:
George Dunlap wrote on 2014-02-11:
I think I got a bit distracted with the "A isn't really so bad" thing.
Actually, if the overhead of not sharing tables isn't very high, then
B isn't such a bad option.  In fact, B is what I expected Yang to
submit when he originally described the problem.
Actually, the first solution came to my mind is B. Then I realized that
even
chose B, we still cannot track the memory updating from DMA(even with A/D
bit, it still a problem). Also, considering the current usage case of log
dirty in Xen(only vram tracking has problem), I though A is better.:
Hypervisor only need to track the vram change. If a malicious guest try to
DMA to vram range, it only crashed himself (This should be reasonable).
I was going to say, from a release perspective, B is probably the
safest option for now.  But on the other hand, if we've been testing
sharing all this time, maybe switching back over to non-sharing whole-hog has
the higher risk?
Another problem with B is that current VT-d large paging supporting relies
on
the sharing EPT and VT-d page table. This means if we choose B, then we need
to re-enable VT-d large page. This would be a huge performance impaction for
Xen 4.4 on using VT-d solution.

OK -- if that's the case, then it definitely tips the balance back to
A.  Unless Tim or Jan disagrees, can one of you two check it in?

Don't rush your judgement; but it would be nice to have this in before
RC4, which would mean checking it in today preferrably, or early
tomorrow at the latest.
That would be Tim then, as he would have to approve of it anyway.
Done.
Actually I'm afraid there are two problems with this patch:

For one, is enabling "global" log dirty mode still going to work
after VRAM-only mode already got enabled? I ask because the
paging_mode_log_dirty() check which paging_log_dirty_enable()
does first thing suggests otherwise to me (i.e. the now
conditional setting of all p2m entries to p2m_ram_logdirty would
seem to never get executed). IOW I would think that we're now
lacking a control operation allowing the transition from dirty VRAM
tracking mode to full log dirty mode.

Hmm, yes, doing a code inspection, that would appear to be the case. This probably wouldn't be caught by osstest, because (as I understand it) we never attach to the display, so dirty vram tracking is probably never enabled.

And second, I have been fighting with finding both conditions
and (eventually) the root cause of a severe performance
regression (compared to 4.3.x) I'm observing on an EPT+IOMMU
system. This became _much_ worse after adding in the patch here
(while in fact I had hoped it might help with the originally observed
degradation): X startup fails due to timing out, and booting the
guest now takes about 20 minutes). I didn't find the root cause of
this yet, but meanwhile I know that
- the same isn't observable on SVM
- there's no problem when forcing the domain to use shadow
   mode
- there's no need for any device to actually be assigned to the
   guest
- the regression is very likely purely graphics related (based on
   the observation that when running something that regularly but
   not heavily updates the screen with X up, the guest consumes a
   full CPU's worth of processing power, yet when that updating
   doesn't happen, CPU consumption goes down, and it goes further
   down when shutting down X altogether - at least as log as the
   patch here doesn't get involved).
This I'm observing on a Westmere box (and I didn't notice it earlier
because that's one of those where due to a chipset erratum the
IOMMU gets turned off by default), so it's possible that this can't
be seen on more modern hardware. I'll hopefully find time today to
check this on the one newer (Sandy Bridge) box I have.

So you're saying that the slowdown happens if you have EPT+IOMMU, but *not* if you have EPT alone (IOMMU disabled), or shadow + IOMMU?

I have an issue I haven't had time to look into where windows installs are sometimes terribly slow on my Nehalem box; but it seems to be only with qemu-xen, not qemu-traditional. I haven't tried with shadow.

 -George

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