On 02-01-2023 05:16 pm, Marc Zyngier wrote:
On Thu, 29 Dec 2022 13:53:15 +0000,
Marc Zyngier <maz@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On Wed, 24 Aug 2022 07:03:03 +0100,
Ganapatrao Kulkarni <gankulkarni@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Guest-Hypervisor forwards the timer interrupt to Guest-Guest, if it is
enabled, unmasked and ISTATUS bit of register CNTV_CTL_EL0 is set for a
loaded timer.
For NV2 implementation, the Host-Hypervisor is not emulating the ISTATUS
bit while forwarding the Emulated Vtimer Interrupt to Guest-Hypervisor.
This results in the drop of interrupt from Guest-Hypervisor, where as
Host Hypervisor marked it as an active interrupt and expecting Guest-Guest
to consume and acknowledge. Due to this, some of the Guest-Guest vCPUs
are stuck in Idle thread and rcu soft lockups are seen.
This issue is not seen with NV1 case since the register CNTV_CTL_EL0 read
trap handler is emulating the ISTATUS bit.
Adding code to set/emulate the ISTATUS when the emulated timers are fired.
Signed-off-by: Ganapatrao Kulkarni <gankulkarni@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
---
arch/arm64/kvm/arch_timer.c | 5 +++++
1 file changed, 5 insertions(+)
diff --git a/arch/arm64/kvm/arch_timer.c b/arch/arm64/kvm/arch_timer.c
index 27a6ec46803a..0b32d943d2d5 100644
--- a/arch/arm64/kvm/arch_timer.c
+++ b/arch/arm64/kvm/arch_timer.c
@@ -63,6 +63,7 @@ static u64 kvm_arm_timer_read(struct kvm_vcpu *vcpu,
struct arch_timer_context *timer,
enum kvm_arch_timer_regs treg);
static bool kvm_arch_timer_get_input_level(int vintid);
+static u64 read_timer_ctl(struct arch_timer_context *timer);
static struct irq_ops arch_timer_irq_ops = {
.get_input_level = kvm_arch_timer_get_input_level,
@@ -356,6 +357,8 @@ static enum hrtimer_restart kvm_hrtimer_expire(struct hrtimer *hrt)
return HRTIMER_RESTART;
}
+ /* Timer emulated, emulate ISTATUS also */
+ timer_set_ctl(ctx, read_timer_ctl(ctx));
Why should we do that for non-NV2 configurations?
kvm_timer_update_irq(vcpu, true, ctx);
return HRTIMER_NORESTART;
}
@@ -458,6 +461,8 @@ static void timer_emulate(struct arch_timer_context *ctx)
trace_kvm_timer_emulate(ctx, should_fire);
if (should_fire != ctx->irq.level) {
+ /* Timer emulated, emulate ISTATUS also */
+ timer_set_ctl(ctx, read_timer_ctl(ctx));
kvm_timer_update_irq(ctx->vcpu, should_fire, ctx);
return;
}
I'm not overly keen on this. Yes, we can set the status bit there. But
conversely, the bit will not get cleared when the guest reprograms the
timer, and will take a full exit/entry cycle for it to appear.
Ergo, the architecture is buggy as memory (the VNCR page) cannot be
used to emulate something as dynamic as a timer.
It is only with FEAT_ECV that we can solve this correctly by trapping
the counter/timer accesses and emulate them for the guest hypervisor.
I'd rather we add support for that, as I expect all the FEAT_NV2
implementations to have it (and hopefully FEAT_FGT as well).
So I went ahead and implemented some very basic FEAT_ECV support to
correctly emulate the timers (trapping the CTL/CVAL accesses).
Performance dropped like a rock (~30% extra overhead) for L2
exit-heavy workloads that are terminated in userspace, such as virtio.
For those workloads, vcpu_{load,put}() in L1 now generate extra traps,
as we save/restore the timer context, and this is enough to make
things visibly slower, even on a pretty fast machine.
I managed to get *some* performance back by satisfying CTL/CVAL reads
very early on the exit path (a pretty common theme with NV). Which
means we end-up needing something like what you have -- only a bit
more complete. I came up with the following:
diff --git a/arch/arm64/kvm/arch_timer.c b/arch/arm64/kvm/arch_timer.c
index 4945c5b96f05..a198a6211e2a 100644
--- a/arch/arm64/kvm/arch_timer.c
+++ b/arch/arm64/kvm/arch_timer.c
@@ -450,6 +450,25 @@ static void kvm_timer_update_irq(struct kvm_vcpu *vcpu, bool new_level,
{
int ret;
+ /*
+ * Paper over NV2 brokenness by publishing the interrupt status
+ * bit. This still results in a poor quality of emulation (guest
+ * writes will have no effect until the next exit).
+ *
+ * But hey, it's fast, right?
+ */
+ if (vcpu_has_nv2(vcpu) && is_hyp_ctxt(vcpu) &&
+ (timer_ctx == vcpu_vtimer(vcpu) || timer_ctx == vcpu_ptimer(vcpu))) {
+ u32 ctl = timer_get_ctl(timer_ctx);
+
+ if (new_level)
+ ctl |= ARCH_TIMER_CTRL_IT_STAT;
+ else
+ ctl &= ~ARCH_TIMER_CTRL_IT_STAT;
+
+ timer_set_ctl(timer_ctx, ctl);
+ }
+
timer_ctx->irq.level = new_level;
trace_kvm_timer_update_irq(vcpu->vcpu_id, timer_ctx->irq.irq,
timer_ctx->irq.level);
which reports the interrupt state in all cases.
Does this work for you?
Thanks Marc for the patch. I will try this and update at the earliest.
Thanks,
M.
Thanks,
Ganapat
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