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Re: [PATCH RFC] memory: pause all vCPUs for the duration of memory trans


From: Igor Mammedov
Subject: Re: [PATCH RFC] memory: pause all vCPUs for the duration of memory transactions
Date: Tue, 27 Oct 2020 15:20:04 +0100

On Tue, 27 Oct 2020 14:47:14 +0100
Vitaly Kuznetsov <vkuznets@redhat.com> wrote:

> David Hildenbrand <david@redhat.com> writes:
> 
> >>> Same applies to all other kinds of operations (splitting, punching out,
> >>> ...) as you also mentioned.  
> >> 
> >> One question from a QEMU newbie though: why do you put
> >> kvm_ioctl_inhibit_begin()/kvm_ioctl_inhibit_end() to kvm_region_resize()
> >> only and not taking it all the way up to
> >> memory_region_transaction_begin()/memory_region_transaction_end() to
> >> support atomicity for all kinds of updates right away?  
> >
> > The clean way to implement it for 
> > memory_region_transaction_begin()/memory_region_transaction_end() is by 
> > implementing  
> > ->begin()
> > ->commit()  
> > callbacks for the KVM MemoryListener, and doing it in there, in KVM code.
> >
> >
> > Now, I wasn't sure how this might affect real-time workloads, where you 
> > really don't want to kick CPUs out of KVM. You can make a lot of 
> > operations without requiring this handling like
> >
> > 1. Adding regions (memory hotplug)
> > 2. Removing regions (memory hotunplug)
> > 3. Enabling/disabling dirty logging
> >
> > Resize/split(/move/...) are the problematic operations where we would 
> > need that handling. Modifying the size/location of existing slots.
> >
> > One way to tackle it would be to "sense" upfront if such "modifying" 
> > operations will be required, communicating that via "->begin()", and 
> > letting the KVM notifier decide based on that information whether to get 
> > everything out of KVM. Sounds feasible.
> >  
> 
> I don't actually know if we have such use-cases but thinking about
> e.g. punching a hole in a middle of an existing slot requires:
> 1) Resizing the existing slot to its first half
> 2) Creating the hole
> 3) Creating a new slot for the second half of the slot.
> In case we'd like to make this atomic, we need to cover the whole
> transaction. But again, I don't know if we have a use-case for it or
> not.

it usually happens during boot time on x86 where MMIO (re)maps
cause punching holes in lower RAM.
(you can observe it by tracing MemoryListener::region_add/del hooks)

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