[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [Xen-ia64-devel] metaphysical mode
Hi Dan and all Our members can do daily(or 2-3 times a week) regression tests for the latest IPF/Xen snapshot. I'm thinking of running ltp/lmbench/xm-test etc on Dom0/DomU and reporting the result to the community. At the start it will be half-manual/half-automated, but we'll make it fully-automated later. If this kind of regression test is helpful, I'd happy to do that. >A good automated regression test suite would be a big contribution >to the community but will be time-consuming. I would like to see >someone else in the community drive this. > Thanks, Yoshi Oguchi --- Magenheimer, Dan (HP Labs Fort Collins) wrote: >> > I am still in favor of testing multiple VHPT solutions. >> > However, I don't think there are any functionality >> > reasons why a per-VP VHPT is necessary, it is just >> > a performance issue, correct? >> Mmm, Not quit that. >> What Anthony doing is to enable functionality ("collision >> chain and soft >> TLB) >> I believe you'd like to see this is enabled, right ? :-) >> The current VHPT implementation still need to enable a lot of >> functionality >> to support SMP guest. If you look at what is done in vcpu.c now, >> all the ptc_l/ptc_g/ptr are not done yet. even itc need a lot >> of effort >> when collision chain is enabled. Don't you want to see the VHPT >> implementation to be ready for SMP support? >> >> We need to plan more than what is doing now, right? > >There is definitely some missing virtual memory functionality >that will be necessary to implement before SMP guests will >work at all (e.g. purge instructions); implementing something >that is a no-op today won't cause regressions. And I do believe >that collision chains and some alternate VHPT solutions may show >a significant performance impact on some large system >benchmarks. However neither SMP guest nor large benchmark >performance will be relevant if we cannot even run a domU >long enough to run large benchmarks or even simple tests. >Also, I don't think there are any large system benchmarks >that will run without networking. > >Basic block I/O and multiple domains were implemented five >months ago and domU is not any more stable than it was then. >The community needs to work together to make this happen and, yes, >I think this is higher priority than VHPT performance enhancements >or fixes to theoretical bugs. > >> > Right now we do not have a very good regression test >> > process. Even if we did have one, domU is not yet >> > stable enough to run it. >> >> Agree, we'd better to define a better regression test process so that >> people can follow. Can u drive this? > >I already spend a huge percentage of my time -- both HP's time and >my personal time -- on "tax", meaning things that are necessary >to be done for the sake of the Xen/ia64 community, but are not fun >for me, are unrewarding, and not part of my job description. > >A good automated regression test suite would be a big contribution >to the community but will be time-consuming. I would like to see >someone else in the community drive this. > >> BTW, following paragraph is copied from your previous email >> sent in Sep >> 2nd. >> Certainly, blocking upstream 1-2 days for domU is OK, but we >> still need >> to forward >> progress in parallel, right? Especially different people in the >> community may have >> different focus. >> >> "I haven't yet merged in the changes that you and Kevin >> have been posting so I'm sure tip wouldn't work. Now >> that I've gotten through all the maintenance work, >> I will apply the patch to xen... even if it is incomplete, >> it won't be any worse than what is there now." > >I'm not sure what the point of the quote is. > >I am not blocking forward progress. I am just trying to ensure >that the core tree that *everybody* uses does not have regressions >due to one person's pet project. A good regression test suite is >necessary to ensure this. And without a functioning stable >domU, we cannot have a good regression test suite. > >> > Some in the community have been angry with me for committing >> > changes that have not been fully tested and cause regressions. >> > Once you can say "this new code has passed the full regression >> > suite", it will be much easier for me to commit a change. >> >> Agree, so I would like to suggest all the patches want to >> check into hg >> should >> be posted in the mailing list first so that people can >> provide feedback, >> >> does that make sense? > >It definitely makes sense to post to the mailing list first. >But studying a patch is not a substitute for exercising it >and ensuring there are no regressions. > >Dan > >_______________________________________________ >Xen-ia64-devel mailing list >Xen-ia64-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx >http://lists.xensource.com/xen-ia64-devel _______________________________________________ Xen-ia64-devel mailing list Xen-ia64-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.xensource.com/xen-ia64-devel
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