On Sat, Mar 10, 2012 at 12:24 PM, Anthony Liguori <anthony@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On 03/10/2012 09:58 AM, Eduardo Habkost wrote: >> >> On Sat, Mar 10, 2012 at 12:42:46PM +0000, Daniel P. Berrange wrote: >>>> >>>> >>>> I could have sworn we had this discussion a year ago or so, and had >>>> decided >>>> that the default CPU models would be in something like >>>> /usr/share/qemu/cpu-x86_64.conf >>>> and loaded regardless of the -nodefconfig setting. >>>> /etc/qemu/target-x86_64.conf >>>> would be solely for end user configuration changes, not for QEMU builtin >>>> defaults. >>>> >>>> But looking at the code in QEMU, it doesn't seem we ever implemented >>>> this ? >>> >>> >>> Arrrgggh. It seems this was implemented as a patch in RHEL-6 qemu RPMs >>> but, >>> contrary to our normal RHEL development practice, it was not based on >>> a cherry-pick of an upstream patch :-( >>> >>> For sake of reference, I'm attaching the two patches from the RHEL6 >>> source >>> RPM that do what I'm describing >>> >>> NB, I'm not neccessarily advocating these patches for upstream. I still >>> maintain that libvirt should write out a config file containing the >>> exact CPU model description it desires and specify that with -readconfig. >>> The end result would be identical from QEMU's POV and it would avoid >>> playing games with QEMU's config loading code. >> >> >> I agree that libvirt should just write the config somewhere. The problem >> here is to define: 1) what information should be mandatory on that >> config data; 2) who should be responsible to test and maintain sane >> defaults (and where should they be maintained). >> >> The current cpudef definitions are simply too low-level to require it to >> be written from scratch. Lots of testing have to be done to make sure we >> have working combinations of CPUID bits defined, so they can be used as >> defaults or templates. Not facilitating reuse of those tested >> defauls/templates by libvirt is duplication of efforts. >> >> Really, if we expect libvirt to define all the CPU bits from scratch on >> a config file, we could as well just expect libvirt to open /dev/kvm >> itself and call the all CPUID setup ioctl()s itself. That's how >> low-level some of the cpudef bits are. > > > Let's step back here. > > Why are you writing these patches? It's probably not because you have a > desire to say -cpu Westmere when you run QEMU on your laptop. I'd wager to > say that no human has ever done that or that if they had, they did so by > accident because they read documentation and thought they had to. > > Humans probably do one of two things: 1) no cpu option or 2) -cpu host. > > So then why are you introducing -cpu Westmere? Because ovirt-engine has a > concept of datacenters and the entire datacenter has to use a compatible CPU > model to allow migration compatibility. Today, the interface that > ovirt-engine exposes is based on CPU codenames. Presumably ovirt-engine > wants to add a Westmere CPU group and as such have levied a requirement down > the stack to QEMU. > > But there's no intrinsic reason why it uses CPU model names. VMware doesn't > do this. It has a concept of compatibility groups[1]. > > oVirt could just as well define compatibility groups like GroupA, GroupB, > GroupC, etc. and then the -cpu option we would be discussing would be -cpu > GroupA. > > This is why it's a configuration option and not builtin to QEMU. It's a > user interface as as such, should be defined at a higher level. > > Perhaps it really should be VDSM that is providing the model info to > libvirt? Then they can add whatever groups then want whenever they want as > long as we have the appropriate feature bits. > > P.S. I spent 30 minutes the other day helping a user who was attempting to > figure out whether his processor was a Conroe, Penryn, etc. Making this > determination is fairly difficult and it makes me wonder whether having CPU > code names is even the best interface for oVirt.. > > [1] > http://kb.vmware.com/selfservice/microsites/search.do?language=en_US&cmd=displayKC&externalId=1991 > > Regards, > > Anthony Liguori FWIW, as a user this would be a good improvement. As it stands right now when a cluster of machines is established as being redundant migratable machines for each other I must do the following for each machine: virsh -c qemu://machine/system capabilities | xpath /capabilities/host/cpu > machine-cpu.xml Once I have that data I combine them together and use virsh cpu-baseline, which is a handy addition from the past of doing it manually, but still not optimal. This gives me a model which is mostly meaningless and uninteresting to me, but I know all the guests must use Penryn for example. If ovirt and by extension libvirt let me know that guest X is running on CPU-A, I know I could migrate it to any other machine supporting CPU-A or CPU-B (assuming B is a super set of A). -- Doug Goldstein -- libvir-list mailing list libvir-list@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/libvir-list