On 09/16/2009 03:45 PM, Avi Kivity wrote:
The various x86 syscall related MSRs (MSR_LSTAR and friends, EFER when SCE needs to be updated) are fairly expensive to read or write. Since different operating systems can set different values for these MSRs, KVM needs to reload them when switching to a different guest or to the host. Switching on every guest entry/exit is too expensive, so KVM reloads on guest preemption, which is a lot rarer. Even so, preemption based reload is suboptimal: - if we're switching to a kernel thread and back, there's no need to reload the MSRs. Examples of kernel threads we're likely to switch to are: - the idle task - a threaded interrupt handler - a kernel-mode virtio server (vhost-net) - if we're switching to a guest running the same OS, the MSRs will have the same values and there's no need to reload them - if the guest and host run the same OS, again the MSRs need not be reloaded. This patchset implements just-in-time reloads to defer them to the last possible instant. When we do reload, we check whether the values have in fact changed and reload conditionally. For the just-in-time reloads the first patch implements "user return notifiers", a callback invoked just before return to userspace. This has been written so that there is no code impact if KVM is not configured, and no runtime impact if KVM is not running. The patchset improves guest/idle/guest switches by about 2000 cycles.
I've applied this to kvm.git master. -- error compiling committee.c: too many arguments to function -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe kvm" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html