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Re: [Xen-devel] [PATCH v10 09/25] x86: refactor psr: L3 CAT: set value: implement framework.



>>> On 13.04.17 at 12:49, <yi.y.sun@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> On 17-04-13 03:41:44, Jan Beulich wrote:
>> >>> On 13.04.17 at 10:11, <yi.y.sun@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>> > On 17-04-12 06:42:01, Jan Beulich wrote:
>> >> >>> On 12.04.17 at 14:23, <yi.y.sun@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>> >> > On 17-04-12 03:09:56, Jan Beulich wrote:
>> >> >> >>> On 12.04.17 at 07:53, <yi.y.sun@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>> >> >> > On 17-04-11 09:01:53, Jan Beulich wrote:
>> >> >> >> >>> On 01.04.17 at 15:53, <yi.y.sun@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>> >> >> >> Furthermore I'm not at all convinced this is appropriate to do in 
>> >> >> >> the
>> >> >> >> context of a CPU_UP_CANCELED / CPU_DEAD notification: If you
>> >> >> >> have a few thousand VMs, the loop above may take a while.
>> >> >> >> 
>> >> >> > Hmm, that may be a potential issue. I have two proposals below. 
>> >> >> > Could you
>> >> >> > please help to check which one you prefer? Or provide another 
>> >> >> > solution?
>> >> >> > 
>> >> >> > 1. Start a tasklet in free_socket_resources() to restore 
>> >> > 'psr_cos_ids[socket]'
>> >> >> >    of all domains. The action is protected by 'ref_lock' to avoid 
>> >> > confliction
>> >> >> >    in 'psr_set_val'. We can reduce 'info->cos_ref[cos]' in tasklet 
>> >> >> > or 
> memset
>> >> >> >    the array to 0 in free_socket_resources().
>> >> >> > 
>> >> >> > 2. Move 'psr_cos_ids[]' from 'domain' to 'psr_socket_info' and 
>> >> >> > change 
> index
>> >> >> >    from 'socket' to 'domain_id'. So we keep all domains' COS IDs per 
> socket
>> >> >> >    and can memset the array to 0 when socket is offline. But here is 
>> >> >> > an 
>> >> > issue
>> >> >> >    that we do not know how many members this array should have. I 
>> >> >> > cannot 
>> >> > find
>> >> >> >    a macro something like 'DOMAIN_MAX_NUMBER'. So, I prefer to use 
>> >> > reallocation
>> >> >> >    in 'psr_alloc_cos' if the newly created domain's id is bigger 
>> >> >> > than 
>> >> > current
>> >> >> >    array number.
>> >> >> 
>> >> >> The number of domains is limited by the special DOMID_* values.
>> >> >> However, allocating an array with 32k entries doesn't sound very
>> >> >> reasonable.
>> >> > 
>> >> > I think 32K entries should be the extreme case. I can allocate e.g. 100 
> entries
>> >> > when the first domain is created. If a new domain's id exceeds 100, 
> reallocate
>> >> > another 100 entries. The total number of entries allocated should be 
>> >> > less 
> than
>> >> > 32K. This is a functional requirement which cannot be avoided. How do 
>> >> > you 
>> >> > think?
>> >> 
>> >> So how many entries would your array have once I start the 32,000th
>> >> domain (having at any one time at most a single one running, besides
>> >> Dom0)?
>> >> 
>> > In such case, we have to keep a 32K array because the domain_id is the 
> index to
>> > access the array. But this array is per socket so the whole memory used 
> should
>> > not be too much.
>> 
>> We carefully avoid any runtime allocations of order > 0, so if you
>> were to set up such an array, you'd need to use vmalloc()/vzalloc().
>> But I continue to be unconvinced that we want such a large array
>> in the first place.
>> 
>> > After considering this issue more, I think the original codes might not be
>> > so unacceptable. Per my knowledge, Intel Xeon Phi chip can support at most
>> > 288 CPUs. So, I think the domains running at same time in reality may not 
> be
>> > so many (no efficient resources). If this hypothesis is right, a loop to 
> write
>> > 'psr_cos_ids[socket]' of every domain to 0 may not take much time. If I am
>> > wrong, please correct me. Thanks!
>> 
>> What relationship does the number of CPUs have to the number of
>> domains on a host? There could be thousands with just a few dozen
>> CPUs, provided none or very few of them have high demands on
>> CPU resources. Additionally please never forget that system sizes
>> basically only ever grow. Plus we wouldn't want a latent issue here
>> in case we ever end up needing to widen domain IDs beyond 16 bits.
>> 
> How about a per socket array like this:
> uint32_t domain_switch[1024];
> 
> Every bit represents a domain id. Then, we can handle this case as below:
> 1. In 'psr_cpu_init()', clear the array to be 0. I think this place is enough 
> to
>    cover socket offline case. We do not need to clear it in 
> 'free_socket_resources'.
> 
> 2. In 'psr_ctxt_switch_to()', test_and_set_bit(domain_id, domain_switch) to 
> set
>    the bit to 1 according to domain_id. If the old value is 0 and the 
>    'psr_cos_ids[socket]' is not 0, restore 'psr_cos_ids[socket]' to be 0.
> 
> 3. In 'psr_set_val()', test_and_set_bit(domain_id, domain_switch) to set the 
> bit
>    to 1 too. Then, update 'psr_cos_ids[socket]' according to find/pick flow.
> 
> Then, we only use 4KB for one socket.

This looks to come closer to something I'd consider acceptable, but
I may not understand your intentions in full yet: For one, there's
nowhere you clear the bit (other than presumably during socket
cleanup). And then I don't understand the test_and_ parts of the
constructs above, i.e. you don't clarify what the return values
would be used/needed for.

Jan

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