From: Sean Christopherson <seanjc@google.com>
To: Paolo Bonzini <pbonzini@redhat.com>
Cc: David Matlack <dmatlack@google.com>, kvm@vger.kernel.org
Subject: Re: [PATCH v2] KVM: x86/mmu: Do not recover dirty-tracked NX Huge Pages
Date: Thu, 17 Nov 2022 16:39:41 +0000 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <Y3ZjzZdI6Ej6XwW4@google.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <d636e626-ae33-0119-545d-a0b60cbe0ff7@redhat.com>
On Thu, Nov 17, 2022, Paolo Bonzini wrote:
> On 11/7/22 22:21, Sean Christopherson wrote:
> >
> > Hmm, and the memslot heuristic doesn't address the recovery worker holding mmu_lock
> > for write. On a non-preemptible kernel, rwlock_needbreak() is always false, e.g.
> > the worker won't yield to vCPUs that are trying to handle non-fast page faults.
> > The worker should eventually reach steady state by unaccounting everything, but
> > that might take a while.
>
> I'm not sure what you mean here? The recovery worker will still decrease
> to_zap by 1 on every unaccounted NX hugepage, and go to sleep after it
> reaches 0.
Right, what I'm saying is that this approach is still sub-optimal because it does
all that work will holding mmu_lock for write.
> Also, David's test used a 10-second halving time for the recovery thread.
> With the 1 hour time the effect would Perhaps the 1 hour time used by
> default by KVM is overly conservative, but 1% over 10 seconds is certainly a
> lot larger an effect, than 1% over 1 hour.
It's not the CPU usage I'm thinking of, it's the unnecessary blockage of MMU
operations on other tasks/vCPUs. Given that this is related to dirty logging,
odds are very good that there will be a variety of operations in flight, e.g.
KVM_GET_DIRTY_LOG. If the recovery ratio is aggressive, and/or there are a lot
of pages to recover, the recovery thread could hold mmu_lock until a reched is
needed.
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2022-11-17 16:40 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 8+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2022-11-03 20:44 [PATCH v2] KVM: x86/mmu: Do not recover dirty-tracked NX Huge Pages David Matlack
2022-11-07 21:21 ` Sean Christopherson
2022-11-17 16:28 ` Paolo Bonzini
2022-11-17 16:39 ` Sean Christopherson [this message]
2022-11-17 16:57 ` Paolo Bonzini
2022-11-17 17:03 ` Sean Christopherson
2022-11-17 17:15 ` David Matlack
2022-11-17 19:07 ` Sean Christopherson
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