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xen.8005
58cf9277-x86-time-dont-use-vTSC-if-host-guest-f...
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File 58cf9277-x86-time-dont-use-vTSC-if-host-guest-freqs-match.patch of Package xen.8005
References: bsc#1026236 # Commit 4fc380ac0077ecd6b0e0013ca7ca977cb7361662 # Date 2017-03-20 09:27:35 +0100 # Author Boris Ostrovsky <boris.ostrovsky@oracle.com> # Committer Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com> x86/time: don't use virtual TSC if host and guest frequencies are equal Commit 82713ec8d2 ("x86: use native RDTSC(P) execution when guest and host frequencies are the same") left out optimization for PV guests when host and guest run at the same frequency. For such a case we should be able not to use virtual TSC regardless of whether we are runing before or after a migration (i.e. regardless of incarnation value). Suggested-by: Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com> Signed-off-by: Boris Ostrovsky <boris.ostrovsky@oracle.com> [jb: retain parts of the original comment] Reviewed-by: Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com> # Commit 9614f0246688d1e4cee4d6bec47894b6e289c721 # Date 2017-03-30 15:12:25 +0200 # Author Boris Ostrovsky <boris.ostrovsky@oracle.com> # Committer Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com> docs: update xen-tscmode.pod.7 to reflect default TSC mode changes A number of changes have been made to how we determine whether TSC is emulated (e.g. commit 4fc380ac0077 ("x86/time: don't use virtual TSC if host and guest frequencies are equal")). Update the man page to reflect those changes Suggested-by: Olaf Hering <olaf@aepfle.de> Signed-off-by: Boris Ostrovsky <boris.ostrovsky@oracle.com> Acked-by: Wei Liu <wei.liu2@citrix.com> --- a/docs/misc/tscmode.txt +++ b/docs/misc/tscmode.txt @@ -168,12 +168,12 @@ The default mode (tsc_mode==0) checks TS hardware on which the virtual machine is launched. If it is TSC-safe, rdtsc will execute at hardware speed; if it is not, rdtsc will be emulated. Once a virtual machine is save/restored or migrated, -however, there are two possibilities: For a paravirtualized (PV) domain, -TSC will always be emulated. For a fully-virtualized (HVM) domain, -TSC remains native IF the source physical machine and target physical machine -have the same TSC frequency; else TSC is emulated. Note that, though -emulated, the "apparent" TSC frequency will be the TSC frequency -of the initial physical machine, even after migration. +however, there are two possibilities: TSC remains native IF the source +physical machine and target physical machine have the same TSC frequency +(or, for HVM/PVH guests, if TSC scaling support is available); else TSC +is emulated. Note that, though emulated, the "apparent" TSC frequency +will be the TSC frequency of the initial physical machine, even after +migration. For environments where both TSC-safeness AND highest performance even across migration is a requirement, application code can be specially --- a/xen/arch/x86/time.c +++ b/xen/arch/x86/time.c @@ -1999,16 +1999,17 @@ void tsc_set_info(struct domain *d, d->arch.vtsc_offset = get_s_time() - elapsed_nsec; d->arch.tsc_khz = gtsc_khz ? gtsc_khz : cpu_khz; set_time_scale(&d->arch.vtsc_to_ns, d->arch.tsc_khz * 1000 ); + /* - * Use native TSC if the host has safe TSC and: - * HVM/PVH: host and guest frequencies are the same (either - * "naturally" or via TSC scaling) - * PV: guest has not migrated yet (and thus arch.tsc_khz == cpu_khz) + * Use native TSC if the host has safe TSC and host and guest + * frequencies are the same (either "naturally" or - for HVM/PVH - + * via TSC scaling). + * When a guest is created, gtsc_khz is passed in as zero, making + * d->arch.tsc_khz == cpu_khz. Thus no need to check incarnation. */ if ( host_tsc_is_safe() && - ((has_hvm_container_domain(d) && - (d->arch.tsc_khz == cpu_khz || cpu_has_tsc_ratio)) || - incarnation == 0) ) + (d->arch.tsc_khz == cpu_khz || + (has_hvm_container_domain(d) && cpu_has_tsc_ratio)) ) d->arch.vtsc = 0; else d->arch.ns_to_vtsc = scale_reciprocal(d->arch.vtsc_to_ns);
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