qemu-devel.nongnu.org archive mirror
 help / color / mirror / Atom feed
From: "Michael S. Tsirkin" <mst@redhat.com>
To: Paul Brook <paul@codesourcery.com>
Cc: Isaku Yamahata <yamahata@valinux.co.jp>, qemu-devel@nongnu.org
Subject: Re: [Qemu-devel] Re: [PATCH 0/4] pci: interrupt status/interrupt disable support
Date: Thu, 26 Nov 2009 15:34:09 +0200	[thread overview]
Message-ID: <20091126133409.GB31817@redhat.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <200911261321.39347.paul@codesourcery.com>

On Thu, Nov 26, 2009 at 01:21:39PM +0000, Paul Brook wrote:
> >> It's really not that much of a fast path. Unless you're doing something
> >> particularly obscure then even under heavy load you're unlikely to exceed
> >> a few kHz.
> >
> >I think with kvm, heavy disk stressing benchmark can get higher.
> 
> I'd still expect this to be the least of your problems. 
> 
> If nothing else you've at least one host signal delivery and/or thread context 
> switch in there.

iotread which does the signalling might be running in parallel
with the guest CPU.

> Not to mention the overhead to forwarding the interrupt to 
> the guest CPU.

This is often mitigated as KVM knows to inject the interrupt
on the next vmexit.

> > > Compared to the average PIC implementation, and the overhead of the
> > > actual CPU interrupt, I find it hard to believe that looping over
> > > precisely 4 entries has any real performance hit.
> > 
> > I don't think it is major, but I definitely have seen, in the past,
> > that extra branches and memory accesses have small but measureable effect
> > when taken in interrupt handler routines in drivers, and same should
> > apply here.
> > 
> > OTOH keeping the sum around is trivial.
> 
> Not entirely. You now have two different bits of information that you have to 
> keep consistent.

This is inherent in pci spec definition: interrupt status
bit in config space duplicates interrupt state.

> Unless you can show that this is performance critical code I strongly 
> recommend keeping it as simple as possible.
> 
> Paul

I don't see there is anything left show: interrupt delivery is *obviously*
performance critical: people are running *latency benchmarks* measuring
how fast a packet can get from an external interface into guest,
in microseconds. We definitely want to remove obvious waste there.


-- 
MST

  reply	other threads:[~2009-11-26 13:37 UTC|newest]

Thread overview: 9+ messages / expand[flat|nested]  mbox.gz  Atom feed  top
2009-11-25 16:58 [Qemu-devel] [PATCH 0/4] pci: interrupt status/interrupt disable support Michael S. Tsirkin
2009-11-26  3:21 ` [Qemu-devel] " Isaku Yamahata
2009-11-26  9:48   ` Michael S. Tsirkin
2009-11-26 12:41     ` Paul Brook
2009-11-26 12:59       ` Michael S. Tsirkin
2009-11-26 13:21         ` Paul Brook
2009-11-26 13:34           ` Michael S. Tsirkin [this message]
2009-11-26 10:38   ` Michael S. Tsirkin
2009-11-26 13:11     ` Michael S. Tsirkin

Reply instructions:

You may reply publicly to this message via plain-text email
using any one of the following methods:

* Save the following mbox file, import it into your mail client,
  and reply-to-all from there: mbox

  Avoid top-posting and favor interleaved quoting:
  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Posting_style#Interleaved_style

* Reply using the --to, --cc, and --in-reply-to
  switches of git-send-email(1):

  git send-email \
    --in-reply-to=20091126133409.GB31817@redhat.com \
    --to=mst@redhat.com \
    --cc=paul@codesourcery.com \
    --cc=qemu-devel@nongnu.org \
    --cc=yamahata@valinux.co.jp \
    /path/to/YOUR_REPLY

  https://kernel.org/pub/software/scm/git/docs/git-send-email.html

* If your mail client supports setting the In-Reply-To header
  via mailto: links, try the mailto: link
Be sure your reply has a Subject: header at the top and a blank line before the message body.
This is a public inbox, see mirroring instructions
for how to clone and mirror all data and code used for this inbox;
as well as URLs for NNTP newsgroup(s).