From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 From: "Denis V. Lunev" Subject: Re: Wierd hack to sound/pci/intel8x0.c Date: Sun, 6 Nov 2011 20:50:24 +0400 Message-ID: <4EB6BAD0.1080606@parallels.com> References: <4EB69EDA.5000901@redhat.com> <4EB6B285.9050509@parallels.com> <4EB6B66E.4050408@redhat.com> Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="UTF-8"; format=flowed Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Cc: Konstantin Ozerkov , "Denis V. Lunev" , Takashi Iwai , Linus Torvalds , , KVM list , qemu-devel To: Avi Kivity Return-path: Received: from relay.parallels.com ([195.214.232.42]:34298 "EHLO relay.parallels.com" rhost-flags-OK-OK-OK-OK) by vger.kernel.org with ESMTP id S1753413Ab1KFQu3 (ORCPT ); Sun, 6 Nov 2011 11:50:29 -0500 In-Reply-To: <4EB6B66E.4050408@redhat.com> Sender: kvm-owner@vger.kernel.org List-ID: On 11/6/11 8:31 PM, Avi Kivity wrote: > On 11/06/2011 06:15 PM, Denis V. Lunev wrote: >> On 11/6/11 6:51 PM, Avi Kivity wrote: >>> The recently merged 228cf79376f1 ("ALSA: intel8x0: Improve performance >>> in virtual environment") is hacky and somewhat wrong. >>> >>> First, the detection code >>> >>> + if (inside_vm< 0) { >>> + /* detect KVM and Parallels virtual environments */ >>> + inside_vm = kvm_para_available(); >>> +#if defined(__i386__) || defined(__x86_64__) >>> + inside_vm = inside_vm || >>> boot_cpu_has(X86_FEATURE_HYPERVISOR); >>> +#endif >>> + } >>> + >>> >>> is incorrect. It detects that you're running in a guest, but that >>> doesn't imply that the device you're accessing is emulated. It may be a >>> host device assigned to the guest; presumably the optimization you apply >>> doesn't work for real devices. >>> >>> Second, the optimization itself looks fishy: >>> >>> spin_lock(&chip->reg_lock); >>> do { >>> civ = igetbyte(chip, ichdev->reg_offset + >>> ICH_REG_OFF_CIV); >>> ptr1 = igetword(chip, ichdev->reg_offset + >>> ichdev->roff_picb); >>> position = ichdev->position; >>> if (ptr1 == 0) { >>> udelay(10); >>> continue; >>> } >>> - if (civ == igetbyte(chip, ichdev->reg_offset + >>> ICH_REG_OFF_CIV)&& >>> - ptr1 == igetword(chip, ichdev->reg_offset + >>> ichdev->roff_picb)) >>> + if (civ != igetbyte(chip, ichdev->reg_offset + >>> ICH_REG_OFF_CIV)) >>> + continue; >>> + if (chip->inside_vm) >>> + break; >>> + if (ptr1 == igetword(chip, ichdev->reg_offset + >>> ichdev->roff_picb)) >>> break; >>> } while (timeout--); >>> >>> >>> Why is the emulated device timing out? Can't the emulation be fixed to >>> behave like real hardware? >>> >>> Last, please copy kvm@vger.kernel.org on such issues. >>> >> The problem is that emulation can not be fixed. >> >> How this is working for real hardware? You get data from real sound >> card register. >> The scheduling is off at the moment thus you can not be re-scheduled. >> >> In the virtual environment the situation is different. Any IO >> emulation is expensive. >> The processor is switched from guest to hypervisor and further to >> emulation process >> takes a lot of time. This time is enough to obtain different value on >> next register read. >> That's why this code is really timed out. Please also note that host >> scheduler also >> plays his games and could schedule out VCPU thread. >> > Note on kvm this is rare, since the guest thread and the emulator thread > are the same. It is the same for Parallels too, but it can be scheduled out anyway. The most important part here is context switches cost, which is actually high and enough to result in different PICB value. >> The problem could be potentially fixed reducing precision of PICB >> emulation, >> but this results in lower sound quality. >> >> This kludge has been written this way in order not to break legacy >> card for which we >> do not have an access. The code reading PICB/CIV registers second time >> was added >> to fix issues on unknown for now platform and it looks not possible >> how to find/test >> against this platform now. We have checked Windows drivers written by >> Intel/AMD >> (32/64 bit) and MacOS ones. There is no second reading of CIV/PICB >> inside. We >> hope that this is relay needed only for some rare hadware devices. >> > Ok, so if I understand correctly, this loop is a hack for broken > hardware, and this patch basically unhacks it back, assuming that the > emulated (or assigned) hardware is not broken. > >> The only thing we can is to improve detection code. Suggestions are >> welcome. > I think it's fine to assume that you're not assigning a 2004 era sound > card to a guest. So I think the code is fine as it is, and can only > suggest to add a comment explaining the mess. > > Thanks for explaining. > no prob Regard, Den