On Mon, Dec 07 2020 at 14:16, Vitaly Kuznetsov wrote: > Maxim Levitsky <mlevitsk@xxxxxxxxxx> writes: >> But other than that I don't mind making TSC offset global per VM thing. >> Paulo, what do you think about this? >> > > Not Paolo here but personally I'd very much prefer we go this route but > unsynchronized TSCs are, unfortunately, still a thing: I was observing > it on an AMD Epyc server just a couple years ago (cured with firmware > update). Right this happens still occasionally, but for quite some time this is 100% firmware sillyness and not a fundamental property of the hardware anymore. Interestingly enough has the number of reports on Intel based systems vs. such wreckage as obvservable via TSC_ADJUST gone down after we added support for it and yelled prominently. I wish AMD would have that as well. > We try to catch such situation in KVM instead of blowing up but > this may still result in subtle bugs I believe. Maybe we would be better > off killing all VMs in case TSC ever gets unsynced (by default). I just ran a guest on an old machine with unsynchronized TSCs and was able to observe clock monotonic going backwards between two threads pinned on two vCPUs, which _is_ bad. Getting unsynced clocks reliably under control is extremly hard. > Another thing to this bucket is kvmclock which is currently per-cpu. If > we forbid TSC to un-synchronize (he-he), there is no point in doing > that. We can as well use e.g. Hyper-V TSC page method which is > per-VM. Creating another PV clock in KVM may be a hard sell as all > modern x86 CPUs support TSC scaling (in addition to TSC offsetting which > is there for a long time) and when it's there we don't really need a PV > clock to make migration possible. That should be the long term goal. Thanks, tglx