Re: [PATCH 1/7] KVM: userspace interface

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Anthony Liguori wrote:

We started using VT only for 64 bit, then added 32 bit, then 16-bit protected, then vm86 and real mode. We'd transfer the x86 state on each mode change, but it was (a) fragile (b) considered unclean.

You're right that "big real" mode is not supported, but so far that hasn't been a problem. Do you know of an OS that needs big real mode?

AFAIK the SLES boot splash patches to grub use it. It's definitely a requirement. Currently, there is an effort in Xen to use QEMU for partial emulation. Hopefully, it will be there for the next release.


Ouch.  Boot splash patches.

Well, we had real mode in qemu once, we can put it there again.

Allowing QEMU to do emulation also will help with IO performance. Instead of having to take many trips to userspace for MMIO especially, you can allow QEMU to execute a certain number of basic blocks and then return. Minimizing trips between userspace and the kernel is going to be critical performance wise.


My plan was to allow userspace to register certain mmio addresses for cacheing, so that if the guest code had a code sequence like

 writel(dst_x_reg, x);
 writel(dst_y_reg, y)
 writel(width_reg, w);
 writel(height_reg, h);
 writel(blt_cmd_reg, fill);

then kvm would cache the first four in a mmap()able memory area and only exit to userspace on the fifth. Userspace would then read the cached registers from memory and emulate the command.

This saves userspace transitions but not guest/host switches. I'm counting on Intel and AMD to reduce the cost of these, but it will probably never be cheap.

Paravirtualized drivers are also an option; we may try to keep compatibility with Xen's.



I've been tossing around the idea of doing partial IO emulation in the kernel. If you could sync the device states between userspace and kernel, it should be possible. Given that the you're already in the kernel at VMEXIT time, if you could feed something right to the block driver or network driver, you ought to be able to get pretty darn good performance.


Do you mean putting the device model into the kernel?


--
Do not meddle in the internals of kernels, for they are subtle and quick to panic.

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