[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] [Xen-devel] Re: [PATCH 3/5] x86/pvclock: add vsyscall implementation
On 10/06/2009 04:19 PM, Dan Magenheimer wrote: From: Jeremy Fitzhardinge [mailto:jeremy.fitzhardinge@xxxxxxxxxx] With this in place, I can do a gettimeofday in about 100ns on a 2.4GHz Q6600. I'm sure this could be tuned a bit more, but it is already much better than a syscall.To evaluate the goodness of this, we really need a full set of measurements for: a) cost of rdtsc (and rdtscp if different) b) cost of vsyscall+pvclock c) cost of rdtsc emulated d) cost of a hypercall that returns "hypervisor system time" On a E6850 (3Ghz but let's use cycles), I measured; a == 72 cycles c == 1080 cycles d == 780 cycles It may be partly apples and oranges, but it looks like a good guess for b on my machine is b == 240 cycles Two rdtscps should suffice (and I think they are much faster on modern machines). Not bad, but is there any additional context switch cost to support it? rdtscp requires an additional msr read/write on heavyweight host context switches. Should be negligible compared to the savings. From: Avi Kivity [mailto:avi@xxxxxxxxxx] Instead of using vgetcpu() and rdtsc() independently, you can use rdtscp to read both atomically. This removes the need for the preempt notifier.Xen does not currently expose rdtscp and so does not emulate (or context switch) TSC_AUX. Context switching TSC_AUX is certainly possible, but will likely be expensive. If the primary reason for vsyscall+pvclock is to maximize performance for gettimeofday/clock_gettime, this cost would need to be added to the mix. It will cost ~100 cycles on heavyweight host context switch (guest-to-guest). preempt notifiers are per-thread, not global, and will upset the cycle counters. I'd drop them and use rdtscp instead (and give up if the processor doesn't support it).Even if rdtscp is used, in the Intel processor lineup only the very latest (Nehalem) supports rdtscp, so "give up" doesn't seem like a very good option, at least in the near future. Why not? we still fall back to the guest kernel. By the time guest kernels with rdtscp support are in the field, these machines will be quiet old. -- error compiling committee.c: too many arguments to function _______________________________________________ Xen-devel mailing list Xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.xensource.com/xen-devel
|
Lists.xenproject.org is hosted with RackSpace, monitoring our |