[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [Xen-devel] Fwd: Re: Xen 4.3 / 4.4 - concurrent APIs, VGA Passthru
Hello again Well so far I can now tell, I tested it on WinXP x64 quite a lot - most things are working. Including AAA games like Witcher 2, I didnt try a very memory consuming game yet. But I dont really think that I have the same bug you are refering to - in WinXP x64 the /PATCHTPR boot flag did help greatly, it really boosted the performance to near native. I dont think I encountered any memory usage, used like applications consuming the first 4GB of the DomU. Im trying to figure what to do for Windows 7, its working good too - even with VGA Passthrough, but its almost always consuming 33%-80% CPU usage for no reason... I also stumpled upon the issue that if you reboot a VGA Passthru DomU then that the GFX adapter looses performance (which was explained somewhere in the docs already). Atm. all this is done with Xen 4.4 - Im not sure why I would go back to Xen 4.3, Xen is improving greatly over each version I think, that older versions have more (unfixed) issues is quite logical. I just wonder what I can do for Win7 performance wise so that I can test things like Borderlands 2 you referred to... or any other high memory usage application. regards, Georg Am 29.07.2014 14:22, schrieb Gordan Bobic: > On 2014-07-29 12:52, Georg Bege wrote: >> Am 29.07.2014 12:38, schrieb Gordan Bobic: >>> On 2014-07-29 08:39, Georg Bege wrote: >>>> Am 29.07.2014 09:10, schrieb Gordan Bobic: >>>>> On 07/29/2014 02:12 AM, Georg Bege wrote: > >>>>>> no with Xen 4.3 its not working to me, in Win XP64 I get kinda >>>>>> abstract >>>>>> distortions in the screen, >>>>> >>>>> That sounds suspiciously like the IOMEM memory stomp I see with my >>>>> motherboard. >>>>> >>>>>> not much later then I get a kernel panic on Dom0 regarding IRQ16 >>>>>> (like >>>>>> sth IRC16: no body cared.. oops) the kernel gets damaged by it and >>>>>> then >>>>>> the whole machine works like in slow-motion (everything X11, >>>>>> moving of >>>>>> the mouse etc.) all I can do then is hard reboot... >>>>> >>>>> I have seen the interrupt issue before but _only_ when I xl destroy >>>>> the domUs. It never happened on a clean shutdown/reboot of domUs. The >>>>> interrupt you mention - does it happen to be the IRQ used by your USB >>>>> controller? >>>> Im not sure but the IRQ 16 is used by: >>>> 16: 2065542 0 0 0 0 >>>> 0 0 0 xen-pirq-ioapic-level ehci_hcd:usb1, >>>> snd_emu10k1, nouveau >>> >>> ehci_hcd:usb1 sounds like USB. >>> >>> If you look at lspci -vvv, look for "IRQ 16". It should match. >>> >> Yes you're right, it is - however Im quite suprised how many devices >> share that same Interrupt. >> >> Interrupt: pin A routed to IRQ 16: >> >> 00:1a.0 USB controller: Intel Corporation C600/X79 series chipset USB2 >> Enhanced Host Controller #2 (rev 05) (prog-if 20 [EHCI]) >> 02:00.0 USB controller: NEC Corporation uPD720200 USB 3.0 Host >> Controller (rev 04) (prog-if 30 [XHCI]) >> 03:00.0 VGA compatible controller: NVIDIA Corporation GF100GL [Quadro >> 5000] (rev a3) (prog-if 00 [VGA controller]) >> 04:00.0 VGA compatible controller: NVIDIA Corporation GT218 [GeForce >> 210] (rev a2) (prog-if 00 [VGA controller]) >> 05:00.0 Serial Attached SCSI controller: LSI Logic / Symbios Logic >> SAS2008 PCI-Express Fusion-MPT SAS-2 [Falcon] (rev 03) >> 0a:00.0 Multimedia audio controller: Creative Labs SB Live! EMU10k1 >> (rev 04) >> >> Is this normal? > > It sounds a bit high, but it's not implausible. > > On my machine this shows: > for irq in `lspci -vvv | grep IRQ | sed -e 's/.*IRQ //' | sort -un`; do > echo -n "IRQ $irq: "; > lspci -vvv | grep IRQ | sed -e 's/.*IRQ //' | grep "^$irq$" | wc -l; > done > > IRQ 16: 1 > IRQ 18: 3 > IRQ 19: 2 > IRQ 21: 1 > IRQ 22: 1 > IRQ 23: 2 > IRQ 24: 2 > IRQ 29: 1 > IRQ 36: 1 > IRQ 37: 1 > IRQ 38: 1 > IRQ 39: 1 > IRQ 40: 1 > IRQ 212: 1 > IRQ 213: 1 > IRQ 214: 1 > IRQ 215: 1 > > So IRQ 18 is used by 3 devices, all of which are on the > ICH10 SB chip (2x USB, 1x SMBus). > > What surprises me slightly more is the devices that are > sharing IRQs on your system. It almost looks like at least 4 > PCIe slots are sharing the same interrupt, which is somewhat > unusual. > >> I've to check out the other stuff, I'll reply again once I did that - >> but might take till tomorrow. > > Please do. I'd be interested to hear if you are in fact > hitting the same bug as me, as it is rather obscure and > unusual. > > Gordan _______________________________________________ Xen-devel mailing list Xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.xen.org/xen-devel
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