[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [Xen-devel] Ongoing/future speculative mitigation work
On 25/10/18 18:58, Tamas K Lengyel wrote: > On Thu, Oct 25, 2018 at 11:43 AM Andrew Cooper > <andrew.cooper3@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> On 25/10/18 18:35, Tamas K Lengyel wrote: >>> On Thu, Oct 25, 2018 at 11:02 AM George Dunlap <george.dunlap@xxxxxxxxxx> >>> wrote: >>>> On 10/25/2018 05:55 PM, Andrew Cooper wrote: >>>>> On 24/10/18 16:24, Tamas K Lengyel wrote: >>>>>>> A solution to this issue was proposed, whereby Xen synchronises siblings >>>>>>> on vmexit/entry, so we are never executing code in two different >>>>>>> privilege levels. Getting this working would make it safe to continue >>>>>>> using hyperthreading even in the presence of L1TF. Obviously, its going >>>>>>> to come in perf hit, but compared to disabling hyperthreading, all its >>>>>>> got to do is beat a 60% perf hit to make it the preferable option for >>>>>>> making your system L1TF-proof. >>>>>> Could you shed some light what tests were done where that 60% >>>>>> performance hit was observed? We have performed intensive stress-tests >>>>>> to confirm this but according to our findings turning off >>>>>> hyper-threading is actually improving performance on all machines we >>>>>> tested thus far. >>>>> Aggregate inter and intra host disk and network throughput, which is a >>>>> reasonable approximation of a load of webserver VM's on a single >>>>> physical server. Small packet IO was hit worst, as it has a very high >>>>> vcpu context switch rate between dom0 and domU. Disabling HT means you >>>>> have half the number of logical cores to schedule on, which doubles the >>>>> mean time to next timeslice. >>>>> >>>>> In principle, for a fully optimised workload, HT gets you ~30% extra due >>>>> to increased utilisation of the pipeline functional units. Some >>>>> resources are statically partitioned, while some are competitively >>>>> shared, and its now been well proven that actions on one thread can have >>>>> a large effect on others. >>>>> >>>>> Two arbitrary vcpus are not an optimised workload. If the perf >>>>> improvement you get from not competing in the pipeline is greater than >>>>> the perf loss from Xen's reduced capability to schedule, then disabling >>>>> HT would be an improvement. I can certainly believe that this might be >>>>> the case for Qubes style workloads where you are probably not very >>>>> overprovisioned, and you probably don't have long running IO and CPU >>>>> bound tasks in the VMs. >>>> As another data point, I think it was MSCI who said they always disabled >>>> hyperthreading, because they also found that their workloads ran slower >>>> with HT than without. Presumably they were doing massive number >>>> crunching, such that each thread was waiting on the ALU a significant >>>> portion of the time anyway; at which point the superscalar scheduling >>>> and/or reduction in cache efficiency would have brought performance from >>>> "no benefit" down to "negative benefit". >>>> >>> Thanks for the insights. Indeed, we are primarily concerned with >>> performance of Qubes-style workloads which may range from >>> no-oversubscription to heavily oversubscribed. It's not a workload we >>> can predict or optimize before-hand, so we are looking for a default >>> that would be 1) safe and 2) performant in the most general case >>> possible. >> So long as you've got the XSA-273 patches, you should be able to park >> and re-reactivate hyperthreads using `xen-hptool cpu-{online,offline} $CPU`. >> >> You should be able to effectively change hyperthreading configuration at >> runtime. It's not quite the same as changing it in the BIOS, but from a >> competition of pipeline resources, it should be good enough. >> > Thanks, indeed that is a handy tool to have. We often can't disable > hyperthreading in the BIOS anyway because most BIOS' don't allow you > to do that when TXT is used. Hmm - that's an odd restriction. I don't immediately see why such a restriction would be necessary. > That said, with this tool we still > require some way to determine when to do parking/reactivation of > hyperthreads. We could certainly park hyperthreads when we see the > system is being oversubscribed in terms of number of vCPUs being > active, but for real optimization we would have to understand the > workloads running within the VMs if I understand correctly? TBH, I'd perhaps start with an admin control which lets them switch between the two modes, and some instructions on how/why they might want to try switching. Trying to second-guess the best HT setting automatically is most likely going to be a lost cause. It will be system specific as to whether the same workload is better with or without HT. ~Andrew _______________________________________________ Xen-devel mailing list Xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.xenproject.org/mailman/listinfo/xen-devel
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