* which -cpu to use
@ 2009-02-26 0:48 Piavlo
2009-02-26 9:31 ` Alexander Graf
0 siblings, 1 reply; 8+ messages in thread
From: Piavlo @ 2009-02-26 0:48 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: kvm
Hi,
I'm new to KVM and have some questions regarding kvm cpu emulation,
hope you can answer them.
I have a kvm node with Dual-Core AMD Opteron(tm) Processor 2218 processors.
1)I was wondering choosing what cpu emulation for VM would give best
performance?
I get the following options
# kvm -cpu ?
x86 qemu64
x86 phenom
x86 core2duo
x86 qemu32
x86 coreduo
x86 486
x86 pentium
x86 pentium2
x86 pentium3
x86 athlon
x86 n270
#
I was thinking one of qemu64/phenom/athlon .
Does It matter what 64bit cpu emulation i choose?
What would be chosen if I omit the -cpu option?
2) I want to optimize/recompile a gentoo VM system packages for the
chosen cpu - if that matters.
Does rebuilding the VM packages to fine tuned for the emulated cpu give
any advantages?
3) Do I have to boot a VM kernel with guest viritio drivers, to get a
not emulated real cpu access - like I have in Xen?
Thanks a lot.
Alex
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 8+ messages in thread
* Re: which -cpu to use
2009-02-26 0:48 which -cpu to use Piavlo
@ 2009-02-26 9:31 ` Alexander Graf
2009-02-26 11:07 ` Piavlo
0 siblings, 1 reply; 8+ messages in thread
From: Alexander Graf @ 2009-02-26 9:31 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Piavlo; +Cc: kvm
On 26.02.2009, at 01:48, Piavlo wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I'm new to KVM and have some questions regarding kvm cpu emulation,
> hope you can answer them.
>
> I have a kvm node with Dual-Core AMD Opteron(tm) Processor 2218
> processors.
>
> 1)I was wondering choosing what cpu emulation for VM would give
> best performance?
>
> I get the following options
> # kvm -cpu ?
> x86 qemu64
> x86 phenom
> x86 core2duo
> x86 qemu32
> x86 coreduo
> x86 486
> x86 pentium
> x86 pentium2
> x86 pentium3
> x86 athlon
> x86 n270
> #
>
> I was thinking one of qemu64/phenom/athlon .
> Does It matter what 64bit cpu emulation i choose?
> What would be chosen if I omit the -cpu option?
If you omit -cpu it chooses the "qemu64" model, which is the best
choice for most cases. Don't choose anything else if you don't have
any specific reason to do so.
> 2) I want to optimize/recompile a gentoo VM system packages for the
> chosen cpu - if that matters.
> Does rebuilding the VM packages to fine tuned for the emulated cpu
> give any advantages?
I don't think features like SSE3 matter that much in a normal
environment. You won't get too much more benefit from choosing a
different CPU type.
> 3) Do I have to boot a VM kernel with guest viritio drivers, to get
> a not emulated real cpu access - like I have in Xen?
virtio drivers have nothing to do with CPU. They are about devices
like network and block. If you want to have PV drivers for those, you
need to have a kernel that supports virtio (incl. virtio_pci) and
specify that you want to use virtio on the qemu command line as
options to -net or -drive.
Alex
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 8+ messages in thread
* Re: which -cpu to use
2009-02-26 9:31 ` Alexander Graf
@ 2009-02-26 11:07 ` Piavlo
2009-02-26 12:07 ` Alexander Graf
2009-02-26 12:16 ` Javier Guerra Giraldez
0 siblings, 2 replies; 8+ messages in thread
From: Piavlo @ 2009-02-26 11:07 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: kvm
Alexander Graf wrote:
>> 2) I want to optimize/recompile a gentoo VM system packages for the
>> chosen cpu - if that matters.
>> Does rebuilding the VM packages to fine tuned for the emulated cpu
>> give any advantages?
>
> I don't think features like SSE3 matter that much in a normal environment.
I just wanted to rebuild the guest with following basic CGLAGS
"-march=opteron -O2 -pipe" (no sse3 and like features) tuned for my
hardware node cpu.
In Xen then i use guest linux VM both in fully virtualized mode and
paravirtual mode I see in guest's /proc/cpuinfo the same
naitive cpu model as in hardware node (while of course some feature
flags like svm,sse3 are missing) - but I can build the guests
with cpu native gcc -march support anyway. While seeing emulated cpu
model in /proc/cpuinfo
model name : QEMU Virtual CPU version 0.9.1
is confusing and i'm not sure if i can use -march=opteron here?
> You won't get too much more benefit from choosing a different CPU type.
>> 3) Do I have to boot a VM kernel with guest viritio drivers, to get a
>> not emulated real cpu access - like I have in Xen?
>
> virtio drivers have nothing to do with CPU.
Yes I mistakenly used the term "viritio drivers" instead of
"paravirtual guest support". So what I wanted to ask is if I build a
guest kernel with paravitual support
will it make the native hardware cpu features available inside the guest
like in Xen kernel? Or paravirtual support is for device drivers only
and has no impact on CPU handling like in Xen?
I thought that KVM (as Xen) is a bare metal hypervisor with regards to
giving access native access to the CPU which have svm or vmx support,
and not just CPU emulation.
I'm confused here - can someone shed some light on my ignorance on the
matter?
Thanks
Alex
> They are about devices like network and block. If you want to have PV
> drivers for those, you need to have a kernel that supports virtio
> (incl. virtio_pci) and specify that you want to use virtio on the qemu
> command line as options to -net or -drive.
>
> Alex
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 8+ messages in thread
* Re: which -cpu to use
2009-02-26 11:07 ` Piavlo
@ 2009-02-26 12:07 ` Alexander Graf
2009-02-26 12:16 ` Javier Guerra Giraldez
1 sibling, 0 replies; 8+ messages in thread
From: Alexander Graf @ 2009-02-26 12:07 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Piavlo; +Cc: kvm
On 26.02.2009, at 12:07, Piavlo wrote:
> Alexander Graf wrote:
>>> 2) I want to optimize/recompile a gentoo VM system packages for the
>>> chosen cpu - if that matters.
>>> Does rebuilding the VM packages to fine tuned for the emulated cpu
>>> give any advantages?
>>
>> I don't think features like SSE3 matter that much in a normal
>> environment.
> I just wanted to rebuild the guest with following basic CGLAGS
> "-march=opteron -O2 -pipe" (no sse3 and like features) tuned for my
> hardware node cpu.
> In Xen then i use guest linux VM both in fully virtualized mode and
> paravirtual mode I see in guest's /proc/cpuinfo the same
> naitive cpu model as in hardware node (while of course some feature
> flags like svm,sse3 are missing) - but I can build the guests
> with cpu native gcc -march support anyway. While seeing emulated cpu
> model in /proc/cpuinfo
> model name : QEMU Virtual CPU version 0.9.1
> is confusing and i'm not sure if i can use -march=opteron here?
You can still use all the optimizations you want. -cpu only modifies
the CPUID flags exposed to the guest, not the features supported by
the CPU. So if your CPU supports say SSE3 and you can't find "pni" in /
proc/cpuinfo in the guest, it still works.
>
>> You won't get too much more benefit from choosing a different CPU
>> type.
>>> 3) Do I have to boot a VM kernel with guest viritio drivers, to
>>> get a
>>> not emulated real cpu access - like I have in Xen?
>>
>> virtio drivers have nothing to do with CPU.
> Yes I mistakenly used the term "viritio drivers" instead of
> "paravirtual guest support". So what I wanted to ask is if I build a
> guest kernel with paravitual support
> will it make the native hardware cpu features available inside the
> guest
> like in Xen kernel? Or paravirtual support is for device drivers only
> and has no impact on CPU handling like in Xen?
> I thought that KVM (as Xen) is a bare metal hypervisor with regards to
> giving access native access to the CPU which have svm or vmx
> support,
> and not just CPU emulation.
> I'm confused here - can someone shed some light on my ignorance on the
> matter?
The features are there, you just don't see them in /proc/cpuinfo.
Paravirt support is completely unrelated to that.
Alex
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 8+ messages in thread
* Re: which -cpu to use
2009-02-26 11:07 ` Piavlo
2009-02-26 12:07 ` Alexander Graf
@ 2009-02-26 12:16 ` Javier Guerra Giraldez
2009-02-26 12:57 ` Piavlo
2009-02-27 7:50 ` paolo pedaletti
1 sibling, 2 replies; 8+ messages in thread
From: Javier Guerra Giraldez @ 2009-02-26 12:16 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Piavlo; +Cc: kvm
Piavlo wrote:
> Alexander Graf wrote:
> > virtio drivers have nothing to do with CPU.
>
> Yes I mistakenly used the term "viritio drivers" instead of
> "paravirtual guest support". So what I wanted to ask is if I build a
> guest kernel with paravitual support
> will it make the native hardware cpu features available inside the guest
> like in Xen kernel? Or paravirtual support is for device drivers only
> and has no impact on CPU handling like in Xen?
> I thought that KVM (as Xen) is a bare metal hypervisor with regards to
> giving access native access to the CPU which have svm or vmx support,
> and not just CPU emulation.
> I'm confused here - can someone shed some light on my ignorance on the
> matter?
you're mixing several buzzwords:
- paravirtual/fully virtualized guest: this refers as to how the guest runs in
terms of the lowest level of hardware, mainly about accessing CPU's ring0, the
most privileged mode of execution. paravirtualized guests can't access ring0,
so can't do some very low level CPU operations. for this, the guest is
modified to use some hypervisor calls instead of CPU operations. since the
guest OS has to be modified, usually the VM system doesn't bother fully
emulating IO hardware either. Xen works in either mode, KVM only works in
'fully virtualized' mode, using HVM capabilities.
- paravirtualized drivers: usually paravirtualized guests (which KVM doesn't
do) also have some special IO channels, which are faster than emulating every
detail of an existing piece of hardware. but even if you're fully emulating a
CPU, there's nothing preventing you from creating special device drivers that
know how to access the Hypervisor communication channels to do any IO needed.
the advantage is that these drivers are easy to integrate into an oterwise-
unmodified OS. that makes it possible to use PV drivers on windows guests,
gaining most (if not all) performance advantages of PV guests without access
to the guest OS's source code.
- virtio: is the IO interface presented to the guest for communicating with
the emulator. at least KVM uses it, but i think Xen's interface is similar.
there are several virtio clients in current Linux kernels, so if you select
virtio network, and block device when launching KVM, a Linux guest gets a big
speedup. also available if you install the PV drivers on windows guests (for
network, block drivers aren't available yet).
- CPU type: this is only how the CPU identifies itself to the guest, and what
capabilities it advertises. AFAIK, it doesn't mean any software emulation (á
la qemu), or maybe only a few non-performance-sensitive. it's useful mainly
to facilitate guest migration between different hosts. if the guest OS sees
the same CPU as the host, it might see it changing, and since all modern OSs
check the CPU type at bootup to activate different optimised code, changing it
while running would make it crash. advertising only the features common to
all hosts lets it stay constant no matter how you move the guest around.
originally Xen supported migration only between identical hosts, but there's
some special features to allow this on some cases. i don't know how complete
they're currently.
hope that clears the waters a bit.
--
Javier
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 8+ messages in thread
* Re: which -cpu to use
2009-02-26 12:16 ` Javier Guerra Giraldez
@ 2009-02-26 12:57 ` Piavlo
2009-02-26 15:22 ` Javier Guerra
2009-02-27 7:50 ` paolo pedaletti
1 sibling, 1 reply; 8+ messages in thread
From: Piavlo @ 2009-02-26 12:57 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Javier Guerra Giraldez; +Cc: kvm
Hi Javier,
thanks for the explanations - they make things much clear to me.
Still I have one more misunderstanding - please see below.
Javier Guerra Giraldez wrote:
> you're mixing several buzzwords:
>
> - paravirtual/fully virtualized guest: this refers as to how the guest runs in
> terms of the lowest level of hardware, mainly about accessing CPU's ring0, the
> most privileged mode of execution. paravirtualized guests can't access ring0,
> so can't do some very low level CPU operations. for this, the guest is
> modified to use some hypervisor calls instead of CPU operations. since the
> guest OS has to be modified, usually the VM system doesn't bother fully
> emulating IO hardware either. Xen works in either mode, KVM only works in
> 'fully virtualized' mode, using HVM capabilities.
>
> - paravirtualized drivers: usually paravirtualized guests (which KVM doesn't
> do) also have some special IO channels, which are faster than emulating every
> detail of an existing piece of hardware. but even if you're fully emulating a
> CPU, there's nothing preventing you from creating special device drivers that
> know how to access the Hypervisor communication channels to do any IO needed.
> the advantage is that these drivers are easy to integrate into an oterwise-
> unmodified OS.
What is still unclear to me is that's the actual difference between PV
drivers implementation in paravirtual
linux guest and PV dirvers in HVM linux guest? AFAIK in xen guest the PV
front-end drivers are quite simple, and in KVM guest
to use PV drivers the guest linux needs to be compiled with paravirtual
guest and viritio drivers support. So in both cases the OS is modified -
but there is the actual difference?
Thanks
Alex
> that makes it possible to use PV drivers on windows guests,
> gaining most (if not all) performance advantages of PV guests without access
> to the guest OS's source code.
>
> - virtio: is the IO interface presented to the guest for communicating with
> the emulator. at least KVM uses it, but i think Xen's interface is similar.
> there are several virtio clients in current Linux kernels, so if you select
> virtio network, and block device when launching KVM, a Linux guest gets a big
> speedup. also available if you install the PV drivers on windows guests (for
> network, block drivers aren't available yet).
>
> - CPU type: this is only how the CPU identifies itself to the guest, and what
> capabilities it advertises. AFAIK, it doesn't mean any software emulation (á
> la qemu), or maybe only a few non-performance-sensitive. it's useful mainly
> to facilitate guest migration between different hosts. if the guest OS sees
> the same CPU as the host, it might see it changing, and since all modern OSs
> check the CPU type at bootup to activate different optimised code, changing it
> while running would make it crash. advertising only the features common to
> all hosts lets it stay constant no matter how you move the guest around.
> originally Xen supported migration only between identical hosts, but there's
> some special features to allow this on some cases. i don't know how complete
> they're currently.
>
> hope that clears the waters a bit.
>
>
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 8+ messages in thread
* Re: which -cpu to use
2009-02-26 12:57 ` Piavlo
@ 2009-02-26 15:22 ` Javier Guerra
0 siblings, 0 replies; 8+ messages in thread
From: Javier Guerra @ 2009-02-26 15:22 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Piavlo; +Cc: kvm
On Thu, Feb 26, 2009 at 7:57 AM, Piavlo <piavka@cs.bgu.ac.il> wrote:
> What is still unclear to me is that's the actual difference between PV
> drivers implementation in paravirtual
> linux guest and PV dirvers in HVM linux guest? AFAIK in xen guest the PV
> front-end drivers are quite simple, and in KVM guest
> to use PV drivers the guest linux needs to be compiled with paravirtual
> guest and viritio drivers support. So in both cases the OS is modified -
> but there is the actual difference?
first of all, using paravirtual drivers isn't considered 'core' OS
modification. usually they're compiled in the Linux kernel, but could
be loaded as modules. and in Windows case, they're always loaded
modules. PV guests OTOH, is a very (very) inner-core modification
(but a conceptually simple one, the requirements used to be documented
in a single HTML for early Xen systems)
now, in KVM (and possibly HVM Xen) the virtio drivers are presented
via a special PCI device, while on fully PV guests, there's some
function calls that can be used to communicate with the hypervisor.
so, there might be some very low-level differences, but above that,
they should be the same. as for performance, i really don't think it
makes any perceptible difference.
--
Javier
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 8+ messages in thread
* Re: which -cpu to use
2009-02-26 12:16 ` Javier Guerra Giraldez
2009-02-26 12:57 ` Piavlo
@ 2009-02-27 7:50 ` paolo pedaletti
1 sibling, 0 replies; 8+ messages in thread
From: paolo pedaletti @ 2009-02-27 7:50 UTC (permalink / raw)
Cc: kvm
Ciao Javier Guerra Giraldez,
> you're mixing several buzzwords:
thank you for this clear explanation.
--
Paolo Pedaletti
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 8+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2009-02-27 7:57 UTC | newest]
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2009-02-26 0:48 which -cpu to use Piavlo
2009-02-26 9:31 ` Alexander Graf
2009-02-26 11:07 ` Piavlo
2009-02-26 12:07 ` Alexander Graf
2009-02-26 12:16 ` Javier Guerra Giraldez
2009-02-26 12:57 ` Piavlo
2009-02-26 15:22 ` Javier Guerra
2009-02-27 7:50 ` paolo pedaletti
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