On 08/28/2013 01:45 AM, Andrew Jones wrote: >> What I'm more worried about is what number is libvirt supposed to show >> to the end user, and should libvirt enforce the lower recommended max, >> or the larger kernel absolute max? Which of the two values does the QMP >> 'MachineInfo' type return in its 'cpu-max' field during the >> 'query-machines' command? Should we be modifying QMP to return both >> values, so that libvirt can also expose the logic to the end user of >> allowing a recommended vs. larger development max? >> > > Machine definitions maintain yet another 'max_cpus'. And it appears that > qmp would return that value. It would probably be best if it returned > max(qemu_machine.max_cpus, kvm_max_cpus) though. > > I'm starting to think that we should just keep things simple for most of > the virt stack by sticking to enforcing the larger developer max. And > then on a production kernel we should just compile KVM_MAX_VCPUS = > KVM_SOFT_MAX_VCPUS and be done with it. With that thought, this patch > could be dropped too. The alternative seems to be supporting a run-time > selectable experimental mode throughout the whole virt stack. Indeed - if it is a number you are unwilling to support, don't compile it into the kernel in the first place. Allowing arbitrary limits that are lower than the maximum imply policy, and policy implies touching the stack (because someone, somewhere in the stack, will have good reason for setting policy different than the lowest layer); fix the maximum instead, and the whole stack complies without having to worry about policy. IMO, this is a case where fewer knobs is better. -- Eric Blake eblake redhat com +1-919-301-3266 Libvirt virtualization library http://libvirt.org
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