[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [Xen-devel] [RFC] XI Shadow Page Table Mechanism
Ben Thomas wrote: This post contains the design document for what is currently known as the "XI Shadow Mechanism". This is a design for shadow page table code for fully virtualized HVM domains running on a 64-bit Xen hypervisor. This work was undertaken to address a number of goals. These are enumerated in the document and include: - ability to run fully virtualized 32, 32PAE and 64 bit guest domains concurrently on a 64-bit hypervisor This isn't supported currently? Since an HVM must go through 16 bit, 32 bit, and 64 bit mode to boot up, how can we start more than one guest at a time currently if this doesn't already work? - support live migration of fully virtualized domains Sweet. What about the current shadow page code limited this? - provide good performance and robustness This design has been implemented and is currently being tested. It has been supporting the variety of memory models as noted above, and using widely used Windows and Linux distributions (SuSe, RedHat and others). At a point in the near future, a patch will be available. This design center is the x86-64 architecture. It is not our intent to completely replace all shadow page management, and we've attempted to limit the scope of change. A preliminary version of this design concept has undergone brief review with some members of the Xen community. We hope that this is of value to the Xen community and welcome your feedback and comments. Can't really comment as it's not quotable. Some questions that immediately come to mind are: - how do you deal with large pages within the hypervisor? do you coalesce or just hope there is contiguous pages available? - what is the performance benefit in saving the shadow pages for each domain? there's clearly a memory trade-off here so understanding the performance gain seems important. - OOM can be dealt with in the existing code by just invalidating existing mappings to free up pages. what advantages do your approach have to this? (i realize we don't do this today but in theory, we could). Interesting stuff. I'm eager to see the code. Regards, Anthony Liguori Thanks, -b ------------------------------------------------------------------------ _______________________________________________ Xen-devel mailing list Xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.xensource.com/xen-devel _______________________________________________ Xen-devel mailing list Xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.xensource.com/xen-devel
|
![]() |
Lists.xenproject.org is hosted with RackSpace, monitoring our |