Am 11.03.2012 17:16, schrieb Gleb Natapov: > On Sun, Mar 11, 2012 at 10:33:15AM -0500, Anthony Liguori wrote: >> On 03/11/2012 09:56 AM, Gleb Natapov wrote: >>> On Sun, Mar 11, 2012 at 09:12:58AM -0500, Anthony Liguori wrote: >>>> -cpu best wouldn't solve this. You need a read/write configuration >>>> file where QEMU probes the available CPU and records it to be used >>>> for the lifetime of the VM. >>> That what I thought too, but this shouldn't be the case (Avi's idea). >>> We need two things: 1) CPU model config should be per machine type. >>> 2) QEMU should refuse to start if it cannot create cpu exactly as >>> specified by model config. >> >> This would either mean: >> >> A. pc-1.1 uses -cpu best with a fixed mask for 1.1 >> >> B. pc-1.1 hardcodes Westmere or some other family >> > This would mean neither A nor B. May be it wasn't clear but I didn't talk > about -cpu best above. I am talking about any CPU model with fixed meaning > (not host or best which are host cpu dependant). Lets take Nehalem for > example (just to move from Westmere :)). Currently it has level=2. Eduardo > wants to fix it to be 11, but old guests, installed with -cpu Nehalem, > should see the same CPU exactly. How do you do it? Have different > Nehalem definition for pc-1.0 (which level=2) and pc-1.1 (with level=11). > Lets get back to Westmere. It actually has level=11, but that's only > expose another problem. Kernel 3.3 and qemu-1.1 combo will support > architectural PMU which is exposed in cpuid leaf 10. We do not want > guests installed with -cpu Westmere and qemu-1.0 to see architectural > PMU after upgrade. How do you do it? Have different Westmere definitions > for pc-1.0 (does not report PMU) and pc-1.1 (reports PMU). What happens > if you'll try to run qemu-1.1 -cpu Westmere on Kernel < 3.3 (without > PMU support)? Qemu will fail to start. This sounds pretty much like what Liu Jinsong and Jan are discussing in the TSC thread on qemu-devel. (cc'ing) IMO interpreting an explicit -cpu parameter depending on -M would be wrong. Changing the default CPU based on -M is fine with me. For an explicit argument we would need Westmere-1.0 analog to pc-1.0. Then the user gets what the user asks for, without unexpected magic. Note that on my qom-cpu-wip branch [1] (that I hope to have cleaned up and sent out by tomorrow), all built-in CPUs become statically registered QOM types. The external definitions that get passed in via -cpudef become dynamically registered QOM types; I took care to allow overriding existing classes with the specified -cpudef fields (but untested). Setting family, level, etc. for -cpu is done on the X86CPU object instance. [2] What I don't have yet are QOM properties to set the fields from, e.g., machine code, but those should be fairly easy to add. Andreas [1] http://repo.or.cz/w/qemu/afaerber.git/shortlog/refs/heads/qom-cpu-wip [2] http://repo.or.cz/w/qemu/afaerber.git/commit/8a6ede101a2722b790489989f21cad38d3e41fb5 -- SUSE LINUX Products GmbH, Maxfeldstr. 5, 90409 Nürnberg, Germany GF: Jeff Hawn, Jennifer Guild, Felix Imendörffer; HRB 16746 AG Nürnberg -- libvir-list mailing list libvir-list@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/libvir-list