From: Carsten Schiers <carsten@schiers.de>
To: xen-devel@lists.xensource.com
Cc: jeremy@goop.org
Subject: Problem with booting 2.6.32.16 pvops DomU
Date: Wed, 7 Jul 2010 11:07:38 +0200 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <3119103.71278493658977.JavaMail.root@uhura> (raw)
Hi,
I tried to boot a 64 Bit 2.6.32.16 pvops DomU from Jeremy's git on Xen 3.4.4-rc1-pre
and 64 Bit 2.6.18.8 Dom0.
It will hang very quickly after 0.5 secs and produce the following output on xm dmesg:
(XEN) traps.c:2230:d25 Domain attempted WRMSR 00000000c0010004 from
00009310:79804ace to 00000000:00000000
(XEN) traps.c:2230:d25 Domain attempted WRMSR 00000000c0010000 from
00000009:0487e489 to 00000000:00430076
BR,
Carsten.
----- Originalnachricht -----
Von: Carsten Schiers <carsten@schiers.de>
Gesendet: Mon, 5.7.2010 11:09
An: xen-devel@lists.xensource.com
Betreff: [Xen-devel] Question on xenpm
Dear all,
after having upgraded my server from AMD 4050e to X4 640, I now use cpufreq=xen and had
to adapt a munin script (monitoring tool) to display the residency in the different P-states.
This script uses /sys/device/system/cpu/cpu0/cpufreq to read out the information, whereas
I now use xenpm get-cpufreq-state.
Before I noticed that the CPU is in highest possible P-state (lowest frequences) nearly all
of the time, and a minimal percentage in the lowest. Now I can see a 50/50 distribution.
Interesting enough, the xenpm get-cpuidle-state will show that the CPUs are at aprox. 90%
in C1 idle state.
Can there be a difference in how the two methods to collect the info are working? I mean
something like xenpm will not count residency when in C1, but cpufreq driver will normaly
do?
BR,
Carsten.
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next reply other threads:[~2010-07-07 9:07 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 4+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2010-07-07 9:07 Carsten Schiers [this message]
2010-07-07 15:34 ` Problem with booting 2.6.32.16 pvops DomU Jeremy Fitzhardinge
2010-07-08 9:51 ` GiovanniB
2010-07-13 16:51 ` Jeremy Fitzhardinge
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