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Re: [Qemu-devel] Rethinking missed tick catchup
From: |
Gleb Natapov |
Subject: |
Re: [Qemu-devel] Rethinking missed tick catchup |
Date: |
Wed, 12 Sep 2012 18:06:47 +0300 |
On Wed, Sep 12, 2012 at 09:44:10AM -0500, Anthony Liguori wrote:
> Jan Kiszka <address@hidden> writes:
>
> > On 2012-09-12 15:54, Anthony Liguori wrote:
> >>
> >> Hi,
> >>
> >> We've been running into a lot of problems lately with Windows guests and
> >> I think they all ultimately could be addressed by revisiting the missed
> >> tick catchup algorithms that we use. Mike and I spent a while talking
> >> about it yesterday and I wanted to take the discussion to the list to
> >> get some additional input.
> >>
> >> Here are the problems we're seeing:
> >>
> >> 1) Rapid reinjection can lead to time moving faster for short bursts of
> >> time. We've seen a number of RTC watchdog BSoDs and it's possible
> >> that at least one cause is reinjection speed.
> >>
> >> 2) When hibernating a host system, the guest gets is essentially paused
> >> for a long period of time. This results in a very large tick catchup
> >> while also resulting in a large skew in guest time.
> >>
> >> I've gotten reports of the tick catchup consuming a lot of CPU time
> >> from rapid delivery of interrupts (although I haven't reproduced this
> >> yet).
> >>
> >> 3) Windows appears to have a service that periodically syncs the guest
> >> time with the hardware clock. I've been told the resync period is an
> >> hour. For large clock skews, this can compete with reinjection
> >> resulting in a positive skew in time (the guest can be ahead of the
> >> host).
> >>
> >> I've been thinking about an algorithm like this to address these
> >> problems:
> >>
> >> A) Limit the number of interrupts that we reinject to the equivalent of
> >> a small period of wallclock time. Something like 60 seconds.
> >>
> >> B) In the event of (A), trigger a notification in QEMU. This is easy
> >> for the RTC but harder for the in-kernel PIT. Maybe it's a good time to
> >> revisit usage of the in-kernel PIT?
> >>
> >> C) On acculumated tick overflow, rely on using a qemu-ga command to
> >> force a resync of the guest's time to the hardware wallclock time.
> >>
> >> D) Whenever the guest reads the wallclock time from the RTC, reset all
> >> accumulated ticks.
> >>
> >> In order to do (C), we'll need to plumb qemu-ga through QMP. Mike and I
> >> discussed a low-impact way of doing this (having a separate dispatch
> >> path for guest agent commands) and I'm confident we could do this for
> >> 1.3.
> >>
> >> This would mean that management tools would need to consume qemu-ga
> >> through QMP. Not sure if this is a problem for anyone.
> >>
> >> I'm not sure whether it's worth trying to support this with the
> >> in-kernel PIT or not either.
> >
> > As with our current discussion around fixing the PIC and its impact on
> > the PIT, we should try on the userspace model first and then check if
> > the design can be adapted to support in-kernel as well.
> >
> > For which guests is the PIT important again? Old Linux kernels? Windows
> > should be mostly happy with the RTC - or the HPET.
>
> I thought that only 64-bit Win2k8+ used the RTC.
>
> I thought win2k3 and even 32-bit win2k8 still used the PIT.
>
Only WindowsXP non-acpi hal uses PIT. Any other windows uses RTC. In
other words we do not care about PIT.
> >> Are there other issues with reinjection that people are aware of? Does
> >> anything seem obviously wrong with the above?
> >
> > We should take the chance and design everything in a way that the HPET
> > can finally be (left) enabled.
>
> I thought the issue with the HPET was access frequency and the cost of
> heavy weight exits.
>
> I don't have concrete data here. I've only heard it second hand. Can
> anyone comment more?
>
There is no any reason whatsoever to emulate HPET for Windows. It will
make it slower. Hyper-V does not emulate it. For proper time support in
Windows we need to implement relevant part of Hyper-V spec.
--
Gleb.
Re: [Qemu-devel] Rethinking missed tick catchup, Gleb Natapov, 2012/09/12
- Re: [Qemu-devel] Rethinking missed tick catchup, Anthony Liguori, 2012/09/12
- Re: [Qemu-devel] Rethinking missed tick catchup, Gleb Natapov, 2012/09/13
- Re: [Qemu-devel] Rethinking missed tick catchup, Eric Blake, 2012/09/13
- Re: [Qemu-devel] Rethinking missed tick catchup, Daniel P. Berrange, 2012/09/13
- Re: [Qemu-devel] Rethinking missed tick catchup, Anthony Liguori, 2012/09/13
- Re: [Qemu-devel] Rethinking missed tick catchup, Gleb Natapov, 2012/09/13