[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [Xen-devel] [PATCH 01/10] xen/arm: vpl011: Add pl011 uart emulation in Xen
Hi Stefano, >> > Regarding the optimization you introduced in this patch, delaying write >> > notifications until we receive a notification from xenconsoled, how many >> > notifications from xen to xenconsoled does it actually save? xenconsoled >> > is going to send a notification for every read: we might end up sending >> > the same number of notifications, only delayed. >> > >> > >> In the PV console design, the events from the guest are sent to >> xenconsole for every chunk of data. Since in the pl011 emulation, the >> data comes in bytes only, it would generate lot of events to >> xenconsole. To reduce the flurry of events, this optimisation was >> added. >> >> Xenconsole sends an event in the following conditions: >> >> 1. There is data available for Xen to process >> 2. It has finished processing the data and Xen can send more data >> >> In the 2nd case, xenconsole will keep reading the data from the ring >> buffer until it goes empty. At that point, it would send an event to >> Xen. Between sending of this event and processing of this event by >> Xen, there could be more data added for the xenconsole to process. >> While handling an event, the Xen will check for that condition and if >> there is data to be processed by xenconsole, it would send an event. >> >> Also sending delayed events helps with the rate limit check in >> xenconsole. If there are too many events, they maybe masked by >> xenconsole. I could test whether this rate limit check is really >> getting hit with and without this optimisation. > > I understand the idea behind, my question is whether this approach was > actually verified by any scientific measurements. Did you run a test > to count how many notifications were skipped thanks to this > optimization? If so, what was the scenario? How many notifications were > saved? If you didn't run a test, I suggest you do :-) > Today I did some instrumentation and count the number of events sent by Xen to xenconsole and how many are really processed by xenconsole. I could not see any difference in the number of events processed by xenconsole with or without the optimization. The total number of events processed by xenconsole were about 500 for the complete guest booting till the login prompt (for both optimised and non-optimised case). Although Xen calls notify_via_xen_event_channel() far more number of times (about 12000 times until the guest loging prompt comes) without the optimisation, it does not translate into sending those many events to xenconsole though. With the optmization it just reduces the number of times notify_via_xen_event_channel() is called which is about 500 times. I believe the reason could be that if the event is still pending with xenconsole when the next event comes via notify_via_xen_event_channel() then all such events would be coalesced and delivered to xenconsole as a single event. So the optimization does not help with saving any processing on xenconsole though it saves the overhead of calling notify_via_xen_event_channel() very frequently in Xen. Regards, Bhupinder _______________________________________________ Xen-devel mailing list Xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.xen.org/xen-devel
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