Re: [PATCH 0/4] Avoid soft lockup message when KVM is stopped by host

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On Thu, 01 Sep 2011 14:24:12 -0500, Anthony Liguori wrote:
On 08/30/2011 07:26 AM, Marcelo Tosatti wrote:
On Mon, Aug 29, 2011 at 05:27:11PM -0600, Eric B Munson wrote:
Currently, when qemu stops a guest kernel that guest will issue a soft lockup message when it resumes. This set provides the ability for qemu to comminucate to the guest that it has been stopped. When the guest hits the watchdog on resume it will check if it was suspended before issuing the warning.

Eric B Munson (4):
   Add flag to indicate that a vm was stopped by the host
   Add functions to check if the host has stopped the vm
   Add generic stubs for kvm stop check functions
   Add check for suspended vm in softlockup detector

  arch/x86/include/asm/pvclock-abi.h |    1 +
  arch/x86/include/asm/pvclock.h     |    2 ++
  arch/x86/kernel/kvmclock.c         |   14 ++++++++++++++
  include/asm-generic/pvclock.h      |   14 ++++++++++++++
  kernel/watchdog.c                  |   12 ++++++++++++
  5 files changed, 43 insertions(+), 0 deletions(-)
  create mode 100644 include/asm-generic/pvclock.h

--
1.7.4.1

How is the host supposed to set this flag?

As mentioned previously, if you save save/restore the offset added to
kvmclock on stop/cont (and the TSC MSR, forgot to mention that), no
paravirt infrastructure is required. Which means the issue is also fixed
for older guests.

IIRC, the steal time patches have some logic that basically say:

if there was steal time:
   kick soft lockup detector

I wonder if that serves this purpose provided that time spent in stop
is accounted as steal time.  If it isn't, perhaps it should be?

Regards,

Anthony Liguori


I could be missing it, but I don't see anywhere in the steal time patches that kicks the watchdog.

Accounting stopped time as stolen time opens a possible problem when the accounting (CPU power modification) part is turned on. As a process accumulates steal time its CPU power is increased. If we account stopped time as stolen, it will do strange things with CPU power for that process. I believe that it is for this reason that patch 4 of Glauber's series explicitly states that halted time is not stolen time. Stolen time is only accumulated when a vCPU actually has work to do.

Eric
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