Message ID | 1509350613-15356-1-git-send-email-dongli.zhang@oracle.com (mailing list archive) |
---|---|
State | New, archived |
Headers | show |
On 10/30/2017 04:03 AM, Dongli Zhang wrote: > After guest live migration on xen, steal time in /proc/stat > (cpustat[CPUTIME_STEAL]) might decrease because steal returned by > xen_steal_lock() might be less than this_rq()->prev_steal_time which is > derived from previous return value of xen_steal_clock(). > > For instance, steal time of each vcpu is 335 before live migration. > > cpu 198 0 368 200064 1962 0 0 1340 0 0 > cpu0 38 0 81 50063 492 0 0 335 0 0 > cpu1 65 0 97 49763 634 0 0 335 0 0 > cpu2 38 0 81 50098 462 0 0 335 0 0 > cpu3 56 0 107 50138 374 0 0 335 0 0 > > After live migration, steal time is reduced to 312. > > cpu 200 0 370 200330 1971 0 0 1248 0 0 > cpu0 38 0 82 50123 500 0 0 312 0 0 > cpu1 65 0 97 49832 634 0 0 312 0 0 > cpu2 39 0 82 50167 462 0 0 312 0 0 > cpu3 56 0 107 50207 374 0 0 312 0 0 > > Since runstate times are cumulative and cleared during xen live migration > by xen hypervisor, the idea of this patch is to accumulate runstate times > to global percpu variables before live migration suspend. Once guest VM is > resumed, xen_get_runstate_snapshot_cpu() would always return the sum of new > runstate times and previously accumulated times stored in global percpu > variables. > > Similar and more severe issue would impact prior linux 4.8-4.10 as > discussed by Michael Las at > https://0xstubs.org/debugging-a-flaky-cpu-steal-time-counter-on-a-paravirtualized-xen-guest, > which would overflow steal time and lead to 100% st usage in top command > for linux 4.8-4.10. A backport of this patch would fix that issue. > > References: https://0xstubs.org/debugging-a-flaky-cpu-steal-time-counter-on-a-paravirtualized-xen-guest > Signed-off-by: Dongli Zhang <dongli.zhang@oracle.com> > > --- > Changed since v1: > * relocate modification to xen_get_runstate_snapshot_cpu > > Changed since v2: > * accumulate runstate times before live migration > > Changed since v3: > * do not accumulate times in the case of guest checkpointing > > Changed since v4: > * allocate array of vcpu_runstate_info to reduce number of memory allocation > > --- > drivers/xen/manage.c | 2 ++ > drivers/xen/time.c | 68 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++-- > include/xen/interface/vcpu.h | 2 ++ > include/xen/xen-ops.h | 1 + > 4 files changed, 71 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) > > diff --git a/drivers/xen/manage.c b/drivers/xen/manage.c > index c425d03..3dc085d 100644 > --- a/drivers/xen/manage.c > +++ b/drivers/xen/manage.c > @@ -72,6 +72,7 @@ static int xen_suspend(void *data) > } > > gnttab_suspend(); > + xen_accumulate_runstate_time(-1); > xen_arch_pre_suspend(); > > /* > @@ -84,6 +85,7 @@ static int xen_suspend(void *data) > : 0); > > xen_arch_post_suspend(si->cancelled); > + xen_accumulate_runstate_time(si->cancelled); I am not convinced that the comment above HYPERVISOR_suspend() is correct. The call can return an error code and so if it returns -EPERM (which AFAICS it can't now but might in the future) then xen_accumulate_runstate_time() will do wrong thing. > gnttab_resume(); > > if (!si->cancelled) { > diff --git a/drivers/xen/time.c b/drivers/xen/time.c > index ac5f23f..cf3afb9 100644 > --- a/drivers/xen/time.c > +++ b/drivers/xen/time.c > @@ -19,6 +19,9 @@ > /* runstate info updated by Xen */ > static DEFINE_PER_CPU(struct vcpu_runstate_info, xen_runstate); > > +static DEFINE_PER_CPU(u64[RUNSTATE_max], old_runstate_time); > +static struct vcpu_runstate_info *runstate_delta; I'd move this inside xen_accumulate_runstate_time() since that's the only function that uses it. And why does it need to be vcpu_runstate_info and not u64[4]? > + > /* return an consistent snapshot of 64-bit time/counter value */ > static u64 get64(const u64 *p) > { > @@ -47,8 +50,8 @@ static u64 get64(const u64 *p) > return ret; > } > > -static void xen_get_runstate_snapshot_cpu(struct vcpu_runstate_info *res, > - unsigned int cpu) > +static void xen_get_runstate_snapshot_cpu_delta( > + struct vcpu_runstate_info *res, unsigned int cpu) > { > u64 state_time; > struct vcpu_runstate_info *state; > @@ -66,6 +69,67 @@ static void xen_get_runstate_snapshot_cpu(struct vcpu_runstate_info *res, > (state_time & XEN_RUNSTATE_UPDATE)); > } > > +static void xen_get_runstate_snapshot_cpu(struct vcpu_runstate_info *res, > + unsigned int cpu) > +{ > + int i; > + > + xen_get_runstate_snapshot_cpu_delta(res, cpu); > + > + for (i = 0; i < RUNSTATE_max; i++) > + res->time[i] += per_cpu(old_runstate_time, cpu)[i]; > +} > + > +void xen_accumulate_runstate_time(int action) > +{ > + struct vcpu_runstate_info state; > + int cpu, i; > + > + switch (action) { > + case -1: /* backup runstate time before suspend */ > + WARN_ON_ONCE(unlikely(runstate_delta)); pr_warn_once(), to be consistent with the rest of the file. And then should you return if this is true? > + > + runstate_delta = kcalloc(num_possible_cpus(), > + sizeof(*runstate_delta), > + GFP_KERNEL); > + if (unlikely(!runstate_delta)) { > + pr_alert("%s: failed to allocate runstate_delta\n", > + __func__); pr_warn() should be sufficient. Below too. Also, as a side question --- can we do kmalloc() at this point? > + return; > + } > + > + for_each_possible_cpu(cpu) { > + xen_get_runstate_snapshot_cpu_delta(&state, cpu); > + memcpy(runstate_delta[cpu].time, state.time, > + RUNSTATE_max * sizeof(*runstate_delta[cpu].time)); sizeof(runstate_delta[cpu].time). > + } > + > + break; > + > + case 0: /* backup runstate time after resume */ > + if (unlikely(!runstate_delta)) { > + pr_alert("%s: cannot accumulate runstate time as runstate_delta is NULL\n", > + __func__); > + return; > + } > + > + for_each_possible_cpu(cpu) { > + for (i = 0; i < RUNSTATE_max; i++) > + per_cpu(old_runstate_time, cpu)[i] += > + runstate_delta[cpu].time[i]; > + } > + break; > + > + default: /* do not accumulate runstate time for checkpointing */ > + break; > + } > + > + if (action != -1 && runstate_delta) { > + kfree(runstate_delta); > + runstate_delta = NULL; > + } > +} > + > /* > * Runstate accounting > */ > diff --git a/include/xen/interface/vcpu.h b/include/xen/interface/vcpu.h > index 98188c8..85e81ce 100644 > --- a/include/xen/interface/vcpu.h > +++ b/include/xen/interface/vcpu.h > @@ -110,6 +110,8 @@ DEFINE_GUEST_HANDLE_STRUCT(vcpu_runstate_info); > */ > #define RUNSTATE_offline 3 > > +#define RUNSTATE_max 4 This file is part of Xen ABI. While this macro technically doesn't change anything I'd rather have those updates first appear in Xen code. Besides, this change leaves vcpu_runstate_info.time[4] definition intact. I think all RUNSTATE_* macros would need to be moved above vcpu_runstate_info definition. TBH, for purposes of this patch I'd use 4. -boris
Hi Boris, On 10/30/2017 09:34 PM, Boris Ostrovsky wrote: > On 10/30/2017 04:03 AM, Dongli Zhang wrote: >> After guest live migration on xen, steal time in /proc/stat >> (cpustat[CPUTIME_STEAL]) might decrease because steal returned by >> xen_steal_lock() might be less than this_rq()->prev_steal_time which is >> derived from previous return value of xen_steal_clock(). >> >> For instance, steal time of each vcpu is 335 before live migration. >> >> cpu 198 0 368 200064 1962 0 0 1340 0 0 >> cpu0 38 0 81 50063 492 0 0 335 0 0 >> cpu1 65 0 97 49763 634 0 0 335 0 0 >> cpu2 38 0 81 50098 462 0 0 335 0 0 >> cpu3 56 0 107 50138 374 0 0 335 0 0 >> >> After live migration, steal time is reduced to 312. >> >> cpu 200 0 370 200330 1971 0 0 1248 0 0 >> cpu0 38 0 82 50123 500 0 0 312 0 0 >> cpu1 65 0 97 49832 634 0 0 312 0 0 >> cpu2 39 0 82 50167 462 0 0 312 0 0 >> cpu3 56 0 107 50207 374 0 0 312 0 0 >> >> Since runstate times are cumulative and cleared during xen live migration >> by xen hypervisor, the idea of this patch is to accumulate runstate times >> to global percpu variables before live migration suspend. Once guest VM is >> resumed, xen_get_runstate_snapshot_cpu() would always return the sum of new >> runstate times and previously accumulated times stored in global percpu >> variables. >> >> Similar and more severe issue would impact prior linux 4.8-4.10 as >> discussed by Michael Las at >> https://0xstubs.org/debugging-a-flaky-cpu-steal-time-counter-on-a-paravirtualized-xen-guest, >> which would overflow steal time and lead to 100% st usage in top command >> for linux 4.8-4.10. A backport of this patch would fix that issue. >> >> References: https://0xstubs.org/debugging-a-flaky-cpu-steal-time-counter-on-a-paravirtualized-xen-guest >> Signed-off-by: Dongli Zhang <dongli.zhang@oracle.com> >> >> --- >> Changed since v1: >> * relocate modification to xen_get_runstate_snapshot_cpu >> >> Changed since v2: >> * accumulate runstate times before live migration >> >> Changed since v3: >> * do not accumulate times in the case of guest checkpointing >> >> Changed since v4: >> * allocate array of vcpu_runstate_info to reduce number of memory allocation >> >> --- >> drivers/xen/manage.c | 2 ++ >> drivers/xen/time.c | 68 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++-- >> include/xen/interface/vcpu.h | 2 ++ >> include/xen/xen-ops.h | 1 + >> 4 files changed, 71 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) >> >> diff --git a/drivers/xen/manage.c b/drivers/xen/manage.c >> index c425d03..3dc085d 100644 >> --- a/drivers/xen/manage.c >> +++ b/drivers/xen/manage.c >> @@ -72,6 +72,7 @@ static int xen_suspend(void *data) >> } >> >> gnttab_suspend(); >> + xen_accumulate_runstate_time(-1); >> xen_arch_pre_suspend(); >> >> /* >> @@ -84,6 +85,7 @@ static int xen_suspend(void *data) >> : 0); >> >> xen_arch_post_suspend(si->cancelled); >> + xen_accumulate_runstate_time(si->cancelled); > > I am not convinced that the comment above HYPERVISOR_suspend() is > correct. The call can return an error code and so if it returns -EPERM > (which AFAICS it can't now but might in the future) then > xen_accumulate_runstate_time() will do wrong thing. I would split xen_accumulate_runstate_time() into two functions to avoid the -EPERM issue, as one is for saving and another is for accumulation, respectively. Otherwise, can you use xen_accumulate_runstate_time(2) for saving before suspend and xen_accumulate_runstate_time(si->cancelled) after resume? > > >> gnttab_resume(); >> >> if (!si->cancelled) { >> diff --git a/drivers/xen/time.c b/drivers/xen/time.c >> index ac5f23f..cf3afb9 100644 >> --- a/drivers/xen/time.c >> +++ b/drivers/xen/time.c >> @@ -19,6 +19,9 @@ >> /* runstate info updated by Xen */ >> static DEFINE_PER_CPU(struct vcpu_runstate_info, xen_runstate); >> >> +static DEFINE_PER_CPU(u64[RUNSTATE_max], old_runstate_time); >> +static struct vcpu_runstate_info *runstate_delta; > > I'd move this inside xen_accumulate_runstate_time() since that's the If we split xen_accumulate_runstate_time() into two functions, we would leave runstate_delta as global static. > only function that uses it. And why does it need to be > vcpu_runstate_info and not u64[4]? This was suggested by Juergen to avoid the allocation and reclaim of the second dimensional array as in v4 of this patch? Or would you like to allocate sizeof(u64[4]) * num_possible_cpus() and emulate the 2d array with this 1d array and move the pointer forward sizeof(u64[4]) in each iteration? > >> + >> /* return an consistent snapshot of 64-bit time/counter value */ >> static u64 get64(const u64 *p) >> { >> @@ -47,8 +50,8 @@ static u64 get64(const u64 *p) >> return ret; >> } >> >> -static void xen_get_runstate_snapshot_cpu(struct vcpu_runstate_info *res, >> - unsigned int cpu) >> +static void xen_get_runstate_snapshot_cpu_delta( >> + struct vcpu_runstate_info *res, unsigned int cpu) >> { >> u64 state_time; >> struct vcpu_runstate_info *state; >> @@ -66,6 +69,67 @@ static void xen_get_runstate_snapshot_cpu(struct vcpu_runstate_info *res, >> (state_time & XEN_RUNSTATE_UPDATE)); >> } >> >> +static void xen_get_runstate_snapshot_cpu(struct vcpu_runstate_info *res, >> + unsigned int cpu) >> +{ >> + int i; >> + >> + xen_get_runstate_snapshot_cpu_delta(res, cpu); >> + >> + for (i = 0; i < RUNSTATE_max; i++) >> + res->time[i] += per_cpu(old_runstate_time, cpu)[i]; >> +} >> + >> +void xen_accumulate_runstate_time(int action) >> +{ >> + struct vcpu_runstate_info state; >> + int cpu, i; >> + >> + switch (action) { >> + case -1: /* backup runstate time before suspend */ >> + WARN_ON_ONCE(unlikely(runstate_delta)); > > pr_warn_once(), to be consistent with the rest of the file. And then > should you return if this is true? I would prefer to not return if it is true but just warn the administrator that there is memory leakage issue while leaving runstate accumulation works normally. > >> + >> + runstate_delta = kcalloc(num_possible_cpus(), >> + sizeof(*runstate_delta), >> + GFP_KERNEL); >> + if (unlikely(!runstate_delta)) { >> + pr_alert("%s: failed to allocate runstate_delta\n", >> + __func__); > > pr_warn() should be sufficient. Below too. > > Also, as a side question --- can we do kmalloc() at this point? Yes. kmalloc_array() is better than kcalloc, unless we have 2 dimensional array and we need to guarantee the value of first dimension is always 0. > >> + return; >> + } >> + >> + for_each_possible_cpu(cpu) { >> + xen_get_runstate_snapshot_cpu_delta(&state, cpu); >> + memcpy(runstate_delta[cpu].time, state.time, >> + RUNSTATE_max * sizeof(*runstate_delta[cpu].time)); > > sizeof(runstate_delta[cpu].time). > >> + } >> + >> + break; >> + >> + case 0: /* backup runstate time after resume */ >> + if (unlikely(!runstate_delta)) { >> + pr_alert("%s: cannot accumulate runstate time as runstate_delta is NULL\n", >> + __func__); >> + return; >> + } >> + >> + for_each_possible_cpu(cpu) { >> + for (i = 0; i < RUNSTATE_max; i++) >> + per_cpu(old_runstate_time, cpu)[i] += >> + runstate_delta[cpu].time[i]; >> + } >> + break; >> + >> + default: /* do not accumulate runstate time for checkpointing */ >> + break; >> + } >> + >> + if (action != -1 && runstate_delta) { >> + kfree(runstate_delta); >> + runstate_delta = NULL; >> + } >> +} >> + >> /* >> * Runstate accounting >> */ >> diff --git a/include/xen/interface/vcpu.h b/include/xen/interface/vcpu.h >> index 98188c8..85e81ce 100644 >> --- a/include/xen/interface/vcpu.h >> +++ b/include/xen/interface/vcpu.h >> @@ -110,6 +110,8 @@ DEFINE_GUEST_HANDLE_STRUCT(vcpu_runstate_info); >> */ >> #define RUNSTATE_offline 3 >> >> +#define RUNSTATE_max 4 > > This file is part of Xen ABI. While this macro technically doesn't > change anything I'd rather have those updates first appear in Xen code. > > Besides, this change leaves vcpu_runstate_info.time[4] definition > intact. I think all RUNSTATE_* macros would need to be moved above > vcpu_runstate_info definition. > > TBH, for purposes of this patch I'd use 4. > > > -boris > > > _______________________________________________ > Xen-devel mailing list > Xen-devel@lists.xen.org > https://lists.xen.org/xen-devel > Thank you very much for your suggestions! Dongli Zhang
On 10/30/2017 08:14 PM, Dongli Zhang wrote: > Hi Boris, > > On 10/30/2017 09:34 PM, Boris Ostrovsky wrote: >> On 10/30/2017 04:03 AM, Dongli Zhang wrote: >>> After guest live migration on xen, steal time in /proc/stat >>> (cpustat[CPUTIME_STEAL]) might decrease because steal returned by >>> xen_steal_lock() might be less than this_rq()->prev_steal_time which is >>> derived from previous return value of xen_steal_clock(). >>> >>> For instance, steal time of each vcpu is 335 before live migration. >>> >>> cpu 198 0 368 200064 1962 0 0 1340 0 0 >>> cpu0 38 0 81 50063 492 0 0 335 0 0 >>> cpu1 65 0 97 49763 634 0 0 335 0 0 >>> cpu2 38 0 81 50098 462 0 0 335 0 0 >>> cpu3 56 0 107 50138 374 0 0 335 0 0 >>> >>> After live migration, steal time is reduced to 312. >>> >>> cpu 200 0 370 200330 1971 0 0 1248 0 0 >>> cpu0 38 0 82 50123 500 0 0 312 0 0 >>> cpu1 65 0 97 49832 634 0 0 312 0 0 >>> cpu2 39 0 82 50167 462 0 0 312 0 0 >>> cpu3 56 0 107 50207 374 0 0 312 0 0 >>> >>> Since runstate times are cumulative and cleared during xen live migration >>> by xen hypervisor, the idea of this patch is to accumulate runstate times >>> to global percpu variables before live migration suspend. Once guest VM is >>> resumed, xen_get_runstate_snapshot_cpu() would always return the sum of new >>> runstate times and previously accumulated times stored in global percpu >>> variables. >>> >>> Similar and more severe issue would impact prior linux 4.8-4.10 as >>> discussed by Michael Las at >>> https://0xstubs.org/debugging-a-flaky-cpu-steal-time-counter-on-a-paravirtualized-xen-guest, >>> which would overflow steal time and lead to 100% st usage in top command >>> for linux 4.8-4.10. A backport of this patch would fix that issue. >>> >>> References: https://0xstubs.org/debugging-a-flaky-cpu-steal-time-counter-on-a-paravirtualized-xen-guest >>> Signed-off-by: Dongli Zhang <dongli.zhang@oracle.com> >>> >>> --- >>> Changed since v1: >>> * relocate modification to xen_get_runstate_snapshot_cpu >>> >>> Changed since v2: >>> * accumulate runstate times before live migration >>> >>> Changed since v3: >>> * do not accumulate times in the case of guest checkpointing >>> >>> Changed since v4: >>> * allocate array of vcpu_runstate_info to reduce number of memory allocation >>> >>> --- >>> drivers/xen/manage.c | 2 ++ >>> drivers/xen/time.c | 68 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++-- >>> include/xen/interface/vcpu.h | 2 ++ >>> include/xen/xen-ops.h | 1 + >>> 4 files changed, 71 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) >>> >>> diff --git a/drivers/xen/manage.c b/drivers/xen/manage.c >>> index c425d03..3dc085d 100644 >>> --- a/drivers/xen/manage.c >>> +++ b/drivers/xen/manage.c >>> @@ -72,6 +72,7 @@ static int xen_suspend(void *data) >>> } >>> >>> gnttab_suspend(); >>> + xen_accumulate_runstate_time(-1); >>> xen_arch_pre_suspend(); >>> >>> /* >>> @@ -84,6 +85,7 @@ static int xen_suspend(void *data) >>> : 0); >>> >>> xen_arch_post_suspend(si->cancelled); >>> + xen_accumulate_runstate_time(si->cancelled); >> >> I am not convinced that the comment above HYPERVISOR_suspend() is >> correct. The call can return an error code and so if it returns -EPERM >> (which AFAICS it can't now but might in the future) then >> xen_accumulate_runstate_time() will do wrong thing. > > I would split xen_accumulate_runstate_time() into two functions to avoid the > -EPERM issue, as one is for saving and another is for accumulation, respectively. > > Otherwise, can you use xen_accumulate_runstate_time(2) for saving before suspend > and xen_accumulate_runstate_time(si->cancelled) after resume? I'd probably just say something like si->cancelled = HYPERVISOR_suspend() ? 1 : 0; and keep xen_accumulate_runstate_time() as is (maybe rename it to xen_manage_runstate_time()). And also remove the comment above the hypercall as it is incorrect (but please mention the reason in the commit message) > >> >> >>> gnttab_resume(); >>> >>> if (!si->cancelled) { >>> diff --git a/drivers/xen/time.c b/drivers/xen/time.c >>> index ac5f23f..cf3afb9 100644 >>> --- a/drivers/xen/time.c >>> +++ b/drivers/xen/time.c >>> @@ -19,6 +19,9 @@ >>> /* runstate info updated by Xen */ >>> static DEFINE_PER_CPU(struct vcpu_runstate_info, xen_runstate); >>> >>> +static DEFINE_PER_CPU(u64[RUNSTATE_max], old_runstate_time); >>> +static struct vcpu_runstate_info *runstate_delta; >> >> I'd move this inside xen_accumulate_runstate_time() since that's the > > If we split xen_accumulate_runstate_time() into two functions, we would leave > runstate_delta as global static. > >> only function that uses it. And why does it need to be >> vcpu_runstate_info and not u64[4]? > > This was suggested by Juergen to avoid the allocation and reclaim of the second > dimensional array as in v4 of this patch? > > Or would you like to allocate sizeof(u64[4]) * num_possible_cpus() and emulate > the 2d array with this 1d array and move the pointer forward sizeof(u64[4]) in > each iteration? I was thinking of u64 **runstate_delta = (u64 **)kmalloc(sizeof(xen_runstate.time) * num_possible_cpus()) and then you should be able to access runstate_delta[cpu][RUNSTATE_*]. > >> >>> + >>> /* return an consistent snapshot of 64-bit time/counter value */ >>> static u64 get64(const u64 *p) >>> { >>> @@ -47,8 +50,8 @@ static u64 get64(const u64 *p) >>> return ret; >>> } >>> >>> -static void xen_get_runstate_snapshot_cpu(struct vcpu_runstate_info *res, >>> - unsigned int cpu) >>> +static void xen_get_runstate_snapshot_cpu_delta( >>> + struct vcpu_runstate_info *res, unsigned int cpu) >>> { >>> u64 state_time; >>> struct vcpu_runstate_info *state; >>> @@ -66,6 +69,67 @@ static void xen_get_runstate_snapshot_cpu(struct vcpu_runstate_info *res, >>> (state_time & XEN_RUNSTATE_UPDATE)); >>> } >>> >>> +static void xen_get_runstate_snapshot_cpu(struct vcpu_runstate_info *res, >>> + unsigned int cpu) >>> +{ >>> + int i; >>> + >>> + xen_get_runstate_snapshot_cpu_delta(res, cpu); >>> + >>> + for (i = 0; i < RUNSTATE_max; i++) >>> + res->time[i] += per_cpu(old_runstate_time, cpu)[i]; >>> +} >>> + >>> +void xen_accumulate_runstate_time(int action) >>> +{ >>> + struct vcpu_runstate_info state; >>> + int cpu, i; >>> + >>> + switch (action) { >>> + case -1: /* backup runstate time before suspend */ >>> + WARN_ON_ONCE(unlikely(runstate_delta)); >> >> pr_warn_once(), to be consistent with the rest of the file. And then >> should you return if this is true? > > I would prefer to not return if it is true but just warn the administrator that > there is memory leakage issue while leaving runstate accumulation works normally. > >> >>> + >>> + runstate_delta = kcalloc(num_possible_cpus(), >>> + sizeof(*runstate_delta), >>> + GFP_KERNEL); >>> + if (unlikely(!runstate_delta)) { >>> + pr_alert("%s: failed to allocate runstate_delta\n", >>> + __func__); >> >> pr_warn() should be sufficient. Below too. >> >> Also, as a side question --- can we do kmalloc() at this point? > > Yes. kmalloc_array() is better than kcalloc, unless we have 2 dimensional array > and we need to guarantee the value of first dimension is always 0. That's not what was thinking about. GFP_KERNEL may sleep and I don't know how sleep is handled at this point. Everything is pretty much dead now. Perhaps GFP_ATOMIC might be a better choice. -boris
Hi Boris, On 10/31/2017 08:58 AM, Boris Ostrovsky wrote: > > > On 10/30/2017 08:14 PM, Dongli Zhang wrote: >> Hi Boris, >> >> On 10/30/2017 09:34 PM, Boris Ostrovsky wrote: >>> On 10/30/2017 04:03 AM, Dongli Zhang wrote: >>>> After guest live migration on xen, steal time in /proc/stat >>>> (cpustat[CPUTIME_STEAL]) might decrease because steal returned by >>>> xen_steal_lock() might be less than this_rq()->prev_steal_time which is >>>> derived from previous return value of xen_steal_clock(). >>>> >>>> For instance, steal time of each vcpu is 335 before live migration. >>>> >>>> cpu 198 0 368 200064 1962 0 0 1340 0 0 >>>> cpu0 38 0 81 50063 492 0 0 335 0 0 >>>> cpu1 65 0 97 49763 634 0 0 335 0 0 >>>> cpu2 38 0 81 50098 462 0 0 335 0 0 >>>> cpu3 56 0 107 50138 374 0 0 335 0 0 >>>> >>>> After live migration, steal time is reduced to 312. >>>> >>>> cpu 200 0 370 200330 1971 0 0 1248 0 0 >>>> cpu0 38 0 82 50123 500 0 0 312 0 0 >>>> cpu1 65 0 97 49832 634 0 0 312 0 0 >>>> cpu2 39 0 82 50167 462 0 0 312 0 0 >>>> cpu3 56 0 107 50207 374 0 0 312 0 0 >>>> >>>> Since runstate times are cumulative and cleared during xen live migration >>>> by xen hypervisor, the idea of this patch is to accumulate runstate times >>>> to global percpu variables before live migration suspend. Once guest VM is >>>> resumed, xen_get_runstate_snapshot_cpu() would always return the sum of new >>>> runstate times and previously accumulated times stored in global percpu >>>> variables. >>>> >>>> Similar and more severe issue would impact prior linux 4.8-4.10 as >>>> discussed by Michael Las at >>>> https://0xstubs.org/debugging-a-flaky-cpu-steal-time-counter-on-a-paravirtualized-xen-guest, >>>> >>>> which would overflow steal time and lead to 100% st usage in top command >>>> for linux 4.8-4.10. A backport of this patch would fix that issue. >>>> >>>> References: >>>> https://0xstubs.org/debugging-a-flaky-cpu-steal-time-counter-on-a-paravirtualized-xen-guest >>>> >>>> Signed-off-by: Dongli Zhang <dongli.zhang@oracle.com> >>>> >>>> --- >>>> Changed since v1: >>>> * relocate modification to xen_get_runstate_snapshot_cpu >>>> >>>> Changed since v2: >>>> * accumulate runstate times before live migration >>>> >>>> Changed since v3: >>>> * do not accumulate times in the case of guest checkpointing >>>> >>>> Changed since v4: >>>> * allocate array of vcpu_runstate_info to reduce number of memory allocation >>>> >>>> --- >>>> drivers/xen/manage.c | 2 ++ >>>> drivers/xen/time.c | 68 >>>> ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++-- >>>> include/xen/interface/vcpu.h | 2 ++ >>>> include/xen/xen-ops.h | 1 + >>>> 4 files changed, 71 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) >>>> >>>> diff --git a/drivers/xen/manage.c b/drivers/xen/manage.c >>>> index c425d03..3dc085d 100644 >>>> --- a/drivers/xen/manage.c >>>> +++ b/drivers/xen/manage.c >>>> @@ -72,6 +72,7 @@ static int xen_suspend(void *data) >>>> } >>>> gnttab_suspend(); >>>> + xen_accumulate_runstate_time(-1); >>>> xen_arch_pre_suspend(); >>>> /* >>>> @@ -84,6 +85,7 @@ static int xen_suspend(void *data) >>>> : 0); >>>> xen_arch_post_suspend(si->cancelled); >>>> + xen_accumulate_runstate_time(si->cancelled); >>> >>> I am not convinced that the comment above HYPERVISOR_suspend() is >>> correct. The call can return an error code and so if it returns -EPERM >>> (which AFAICS it can't now but might in the future) then >>> xen_accumulate_runstate_time() will do wrong thing. >> >> I would split xen_accumulate_runstate_time() into two functions to avoid the >> -EPERM issue, as one is for saving and another is for accumulation, respectively. >> >> Otherwise, can you use xen_accumulate_runstate_time(2) for saving before suspend >> and xen_accumulate_runstate_time(si->cancelled) after resume? > > > I'd probably just say something like > > si->cancelled = HYPERVISOR_suspend() ? 1 : 0; As the call of HYPERVISOR_suspend() takes 3 lines, I would make it as below and I think gcc would optimize it. - /* - * This hypercall returns 1 if suspend was cancelled - * or the domain was merely checkpointed, and 0 if it - * is resuming in a new domain. - */ si->cancelled = HYPERVISOR_suspend(xen_pv_domain() ? virt_to_gfn(xen_start_info) : 0); + si->cancelled = si->cancelled ? 1 : 0; > > and keep xen_accumulate_runstate_time() as is (maybe rename it to > xen_manage_runstate_time()). And also remove the comment above the hypercall as > it is incorrect (but please mention the reason in the commit message) > >> >>> >>> >>>> gnttab_resume(); >>>> if (!si->cancelled) { >>>> diff --git a/drivers/xen/time.c b/drivers/xen/time.c >>>> index ac5f23f..cf3afb9 100644 >>>> --- a/drivers/xen/time.c >>>> +++ b/drivers/xen/time.c >>>> @@ -19,6 +19,9 @@ >>>> /* runstate info updated by Xen */ >>>> static DEFINE_PER_CPU(struct vcpu_runstate_info, xen_runstate); >>>> +static DEFINE_PER_CPU(u64[RUNSTATE_max], old_runstate_time); >>>> +static struct vcpu_runstate_info *runstate_delta; >>> >>> I'd move this inside xen_accumulate_runstate_time() since that's the >> >> If we split xen_accumulate_runstate_time() into two functions, we would leave >> runstate_delta as global static. >> >>> only function that uses it. And why does it need to be >>> vcpu_runstate_info and not u64[4]? >> >> This was suggested by Juergen to avoid the allocation and reclaim of the second >> dimensional array as in v4 of this patch? >> >> Or would you like to allocate sizeof(u64[4]) * num_possible_cpus() and emulate >> the 2d array with this 1d array and move the pointer forward sizeof(u64[4]) in >> each iteration? > > > I was thinking of > > u64 **runstate_delta = (u64 **)kmalloc(sizeof(xen_runstate.time) * > num_possible_cpus()) > > and then you should be able to access runstate_delta[cpu][RUNSTATE_*]. Would the above code work? You are allocating data only for 1st dimension of a 2d array. How can you access the 2nd array with runstate_delta[cpu][RUNSTATE_*]? Is there any option in gcc that support this? I have actually tested this with below code in linux and kernel panic with page fault when doing memcpy. +void xen_manage_runstate_time(int action) +{ + static u64 **runstate_delta; + struct vcpu_runstate_info state; + int cpu, i; + + switch (action) { + case -1: /* backup runstate time before suspend */ + WARN_ON_ONCE(unlikely(runstate_delta)); + + runstate_delta = (u64 **)kmalloc(sizeof(xen_runstate.time) * num_possible_cpus(), GFP_ATOMIC); + if (unlikely(!runstate_delta)) { + pr_alert("%s: failed to allocate runstate_delta\n", + __func__); + return; + } + + for_each_possible_cpu(cpu) { + xen_get_runstate_snapshot_cpu_delta(&state, cpu); + memcpy(runstate_delta[cpu], state.time, + sizeof(xen_runstate.time)); + } + + break; > >> >>> >>>> + >>>> /* return an consistent snapshot of 64-bit time/counter value */ >>>> static u64 get64(const u64 *p) >>>> { >>>> @@ -47,8 +50,8 @@ static u64 get64(const u64 *p) >>>> return ret; >>>> } >>>> -static void xen_get_runstate_snapshot_cpu(struct vcpu_runstate_info *res, >>>> - unsigned int cpu) >>>> +static void xen_get_runstate_snapshot_cpu_delta( >>>> + struct vcpu_runstate_info *res, unsigned int cpu) >>>> { >>>> u64 state_time; >>>> struct vcpu_runstate_info *state; >>>> @@ -66,6 +69,67 @@ static void xen_get_runstate_snapshot_cpu(struct >>>> vcpu_runstate_info *res, >>>> (state_time & XEN_RUNSTATE_UPDATE)); >>>> } >>>> +static void xen_get_runstate_snapshot_cpu(struct vcpu_runstate_info *res, >>>> + unsigned int cpu) >>>> +{ >>>> + int i; >>>> + >>>> + xen_get_runstate_snapshot_cpu_delta(res, cpu); >>>> + >>>> + for (i = 0; i < RUNSTATE_max; i++) >>>> + res->time[i] += per_cpu(old_runstate_time, cpu)[i]; >>>> +} >>>> + >>>> +void xen_accumulate_runstate_time(int action) >>>> +{ >>>> + struct vcpu_runstate_info state; >>>> + int cpu, i; >>>> + >>>> + switch (action) { >>>> + case -1: /* backup runstate time before suspend */ >>>> + WARN_ON_ONCE(unlikely(runstate_delta)); >>> >>> pr_warn_once(), to be consistent with the rest of the file. And then >>> should you return if this is true? >> >> I would prefer to not return if it is true but just warn the administrator that >> there is memory leakage issue while leaving runstate accumulation works normally. >> >>> >>>> + >>>> + runstate_delta = kcalloc(num_possible_cpus(), >>>> + sizeof(*runstate_delta), >>>> + GFP_KERNEL); >>>> + if (unlikely(!runstate_delta)) { >>>> + pr_alert("%s: failed to allocate runstate_delta\n", >>>> + __func__); >>> >>> pr_warn() should be sufficient. Below too. >>> >>> Also, as a side question --- can we do kmalloc() at this point? >> >> Yes. kmalloc_array() is better than kcalloc, unless we have 2 dimensional array >> and we need to guarantee the value of first dimension is always 0. > > > That's not what was thinking about. GFP_KERNEL may sleep and I don't know how > sleep is handled at this point. Everything is pretty much dead now. Perhaps > GFP_ATOMIC might be a better choice. > > -boris > > _______________________________________________ > Xen-devel mailing list > Xen-devel@lists.xen.org > https://lists.xen.org/xen-devel Thank you very much for your suggestion! Dongli Zhang
On 10/30/2017 11:13 PM, Dongli Zhang wrote: > Hi Boris, > > On 10/31/2017 08:58 AM, Boris Ostrovsky wrote: >> >> >> On 10/30/2017 08:14 PM, Dongli Zhang wrote: >>> Hi Boris, >>> >>> On 10/30/2017 09:34 PM, Boris Ostrovsky wrote: >>>> On 10/30/2017 04:03 AM, Dongli Zhang wrote: >>>>> After guest live migration on xen, steal time in /proc/stat >>>>> (cpustat[CPUTIME_STEAL]) might decrease because steal returned by >>>>> xen_steal_lock() might be less than this_rq()->prev_steal_time which is >>>>> derived from previous return value of xen_steal_clock(). >>>>> >>>>> For instance, steal time of each vcpu is 335 before live migration. >>>>> >>>>> cpu 198 0 368 200064 1962 0 0 1340 0 0 >>>>> cpu0 38 0 81 50063 492 0 0 335 0 0 >>>>> cpu1 65 0 97 49763 634 0 0 335 0 0 >>>>> cpu2 38 0 81 50098 462 0 0 335 0 0 >>>>> cpu3 56 0 107 50138 374 0 0 335 0 0 >>>>> >>>>> After live migration, steal time is reduced to 312. >>>>> >>>>> cpu 200 0 370 200330 1971 0 0 1248 0 0 >>>>> cpu0 38 0 82 50123 500 0 0 312 0 0 >>>>> cpu1 65 0 97 49832 634 0 0 312 0 0 >>>>> cpu2 39 0 82 50167 462 0 0 312 0 0 >>>>> cpu3 56 0 107 50207 374 0 0 312 0 0 >>>>> >>>>> Since runstate times are cumulative and cleared during xen live migration >>>>> by xen hypervisor, the idea of this patch is to accumulate runstate times >>>>> to global percpu variables before live migration suspend. Once guest VM is >>>>> resumed, xen_get_runstate_snapshot_cpu() would always return the sum of new >>>>> runstate times and previously accumulated times stored in global percpu >>>>> variables. >>>>> >>>>> Similar and more severe issue would impact prior linux 4.8-4.10 as >>>>> discussed by Michael Las at >>>>> https://0xstubs.org/debugging-a-flaky-cpu-steal-time-counter-on-a-paravirtualized-xen-guest, >>>>> >>>>> which would overflow steal time and lead to 100% st usage in top command >>>>> for linux 4.8-4.10. A backport of this patch would fix that issue. >>>>> >>>>> References: >>>>> https://0xstubs.org/debugging-a-flaky-cpu-steal-time-counter-on-a-paravirtualized-xen-guest >>>>> >>>>> Signed-off-by: Dongli Zhang <dongli.zhang@oracle.com> >>>>> >>>>> --- >>>>> Changed since v1: >>>>> * relocate modification to xen_get_runstate_snapshot_cpu >>>>> >>>>> Changed since v2: >>>>> * accumulate runstate times before live migration >>>>> >>>>> Changed since v3: >>>>> * do not accumulate times in the case of guest checkpointing >>>>> >>>>> Changed since v4: >>>>> * allocate array of vcpu_runstate_info to reduce number of memory allocation >>>>> >>>>> --- >>>>> drivers/xen/manage.c | 2 ++ >>>>> drivers/xen/time.c | 68 >>>>> ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++-- >>>>> include/xen/interface/vcpu.h | 2 ++ >>>>> include/xen/xen-ops.h | 1 + >>>>> 4 files changed, 71 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) >>>>> >>>>> diff --git a/drivers/xen/manage.c b/drivers/xen/manage.c >>>>> index c425d03..3dc085d 100644 >>>>> --- a/drivers/xen/manage.c >>>>> +++ b/drivers/xen/manage.c >>>>> @@ -72,6 +72,7 @@ static int xen_suspend(void *data) >>>>> } >>>>> gnttab_suspend(); >>>>> + xen_accumulate_runstate_time(-1); >>>>> xen_arch_pre_suspend(); >>>>> /* >>>>> @@ -84,6 +85,7 @@ static int xen_suspend(void *data) >>>>> : 0); >>>>> xen_arch_post_suspend(si->cancelled); >>>>> + xen_accumulate_runstate_time(si->cancelled); >>>> >>>> I am not convinced that the comment above HYPERVISOR_suspend() is >>>> correct. The call can return an error code and so if it returns -EPERM >>>> (which AFAICS it can't now but might in the future) then >>>> xen_accumulate_runstate_time() will do wrong thing. >>> >>> I would split xen_accumulate_runstate_time() into two functions to avoid the >>> -EPERM issue, as one is for saving and another is for accumulation, respectively. >>> >>> Otherwise, can you use xen_accumulate_runstate_time(2) for saving before suspend >>> and xen_accumulate_runstate_time(si->cancelled) after resume? >> >> >> I'd probably just say something like >> >> si->cancelled = HYPERVISOR_suspend() ? 1 : 0; > > As the call of HYPERVISOR_suspend() takes 3 lines, I would make it as below and > I think gcc would optimize it. > > - /* > - * This hypercall returns 1 if suspend was cancelled > - * or the domain was merely checkpointed, and 0 if it > - * is resuming in a new domain. > - */ > si->cancelled = HYPERVISOR_suspend(xen_pv_domain() > ? virt_to_gfn(xen_start_info) > : 0); > + si->cancelled = si->cancelled ? 1 : 0; Or xen_manage_runstate_time(si->cancelled ? 1 : 0) --- that way you preserve si->cancelled if anyone cares later (which at the moment nooone does) Either way I think is fine. > >> >> and keep xen_accumulate_runstate_time() as is (maybe rename it to >> xen_manage_runstate_time()). And also remove the comment above the hypercall as >> it is incorrect (but please mention the reason in the commit message) >> >>> >>>> >>>> >>>>> gnttab_resume(); >>>>> if (!si->cancelled) { >>>>> diff --git a/drivers/xen/time.c b/drivers/xen/time.c >>>>> index ac5f23f..cf3afb9 100644 >>>>> --- a/drivers/xen/time.c >>>>> +++ b/drivers/xen/time.c >>>>> @@ -19,6 +19,9 @@ >>>>> /* runstate info updated by Xen */ >>>>> static DEFINE_PER_CPU(struct vcpu_runstate_info, xen_runstate); >>>>> +static DEFINE_PER_CPU(u64[RUNSTATE_max], old_runstate_time); >>>>> +static struct vcpu_runstate_info *runstate_delta; >>>> >>>> I'd move this inside xen_accumulate_runstate_time() since that's the >>> >>> If we split xen_accumulate_runstate_time() into two functions, we would leave >>> runstate_delta as global static. >>> >>>> only function that uses it. And why does it need to be >>>> vcpu_runstate_info and not u64[4]? >>> >>> This was suggested by Juergen to avoid the allocation and reclaim of the second >>> dimensional array as in v4 of this patch? >>> >>> Or would you like to allocate sizeof(u64[4]) * num_possible_cpus() and emulate >>> the 2d array with this 1d array and move the pointer forward sizeof(u64[4]) in >>> each iteration? >> >> >> I was thinking of >> >> u64 **runstate_delta = (u64 **)kmalloc(sizeof(xen_runstate.time) * >> num_possible_cpus()) >> >> and then you should be able to access runstate_delta[cpu][RUNSTATE_*]. > > Would the above code work? Ugh... If course it will not, it's clearly wrong. So nevermind, sorry. Keep it the way it was originally. -boris
Hi Dongli, Thank you for the patch! Yet something to improve: [auto build test ERROR on xen-tip/linux-next] [also build test ERROR on v4.14-rc7 next-20171018] [if your patch is applied to the wrong git tree, please drop us a note to help improve the system] url: https://github.com/0day-ci/linux/commits/Dongli-Zhang/xen-time-do-not-decrease-steal-time-after-live-migration-on-xen/20171102-011408 base: https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/xen/tip.git linux-next config: arm64-defconfig (attached as .config) compiler: aarch64-linux-gnu-gcc (Debian 6.1.1-9) 6.1.1 20160705 reproduce: wget https://raw.githubusercontent.com/intel/lkp-tests/master/sbin/make.cross -O ~/bin/make.cross chmod +x ~/bin/make.cross # save the attached .config to linux build tree make.cross ARCH=arm64 All error/warnings (new ones prefixed by >>): drivers//xen/time.c: In function 'xen_accumulate_runstate_time': >> drivers//xen/time.c:92:20: error: implicit declaration of function 'kcalloc' [-Werror=implicit-function-declaration] runstate_delta = kcalloc(num_possible_cpus(), ^~~~~~~ >> drivers//xen/time.c:92:18: warning: assignment makes pointer from integer without a cast [-Wint-conversion] runstate_delta = kcalloc(num_possible_cpus(), ^ >> drivers//xen/time.c:128:3: error: implicit declaration of function 'kfree' [-Werror=implicit-function-declaration] kfree(runstate_delta); ^~~~~ cc1: some warnings being treated as errors vim +/kcalloc +92 drivers//xen/time.c 82 83 void xen_accumulate_runstate_time(int action) 84 { 85 struct vcpu_runstate_info state; 86 int cpu, i; 87 88 switch (action) { 89 case -1: /* backup runstate time before suspend */ 90 WARN_ON_ONCE(unlikely(runstate_delta)); 91 > 92 runstate_delta = kcalloc(num_possible_cpus(), 93 sizeof(*runstate_delta), 94 GFP_KERNEL); 95 if (unlikely(!runstate_delta)) { 96 pr_alert("%s: failed to allocate runstate_delta\n", 97 __func__); 98 return; 99 } 100 101 for_each_possible_cpu(cpu) { 102 xen_get_runstate_snapshot_cpu_delta(&state, cpu); 103 memcpy(runstate_delta[cpu].time, state.time, 104 RUNSTATE_max * sizeof(*runstate_delta[cpu].time)); 105 } 106 107 break; 108 109 case 0: /* backup runstate time after resume */ 110 if (unlikely(!runstate_delta)) { 111 pr_alert("%s: cannot accumulate runstate time as runstate_delta is NULL\n", 112 __func__); 113 return; 114 } 115 116 for_each_possible_cpu(cpu) { 117 for (i = 0; i < RUNSTATE_max; i++) 118 per_cpu(old_runstate_time, cpu)[i] += 119 runstate_delta[cpu].time[i]; 120 } 121 break; 122 123 default: /* do not accumulate runstate time for checkpointing */ 124 break; 125 } 126 127 if (action != -1 && runstate_delta) { > 128 kfree(runstate_delta); 129 runstate_delta = NULL; 130 } 131 } 132 --- 0-DAY kernel test infrastructure Open Source Technology Center https://lists.01.org/pipermail/kbuild-all Intel Corporation
diff --git a/drivers/xen/manage.c b/drivers/xen/manage.c index c425d03..3dc085d 100644 --- a/drivers/xen/manage.c +++ b/drivers/xen/manage.c @@ -72,6 +72,7 @@ static int xen_suspend(void *data) } gnttab_suspend(); + xen_accumulate_runstate_time(-1); xen_arch_pre_suspend(); /* @@ -84,6 +85,7 @@ static int xen_suspend(void *data) : 0); xen_arch_post_suspend(si->cancelled); + xen_accumulate_runstate_time(si->cancelled); gnttab_resume(); if (!si->cancelled) { diff --git a/drivers/xen/time.c b/drivers/xen/time.c index ac5f23f..cf3afb9 100644 --- a/drivers/xen/time.c +++ b/drivers/xen/time.c @@ -19,6 +19,9 @@ /* runstate info updated by Xen */ static DEFINE_PER_CPU(struct vcpu_runstate_info, xen_runstate); +static DEFINE_PER_CPU(u64[RUNSTATE_max], old_runstate_time); +static struct vcpu_runstate_info *runstate_delta; + /* return an consistent snapshot of 64-bit time/counter value */ static u64 get64(const u64 *p) { @@ -47,8 +50,8 @@ static u64 get64(const u64 *p) return ret; } -static void xen_get_runstate_snapshot_cpu(struct vcpu_runstate_info *res, - unsigned int cpu) +static void xen_get_runstate_snapshot_cpu_delta( + struct vcpu_runstate_info *res, unsigned int cpu) { u64 state_time; struct vcpu_runstate_info *state; @@ -66,6 +69,67 @@ static void xen_get_runstate_snapshot_cpu(struct vcpu_runstate_info *res, (state_time & XEN_RUNSTATE_UPDATE)); } +static void xen_get_runstate_snapshot_cpu(struct vcpu_runstate_info *res, + unsigned int cpu) +{ + int i; + + xen_get_runstate_snapshot_cpu_delta(res, cpu); + + for (i = 0; i < RUNSTATE_max; i++) + res->time[i] += per_cpu(old_runstate_time, cpu)[i]; +} + +void xen_accumulate_runstate_time(int action) +{ + struct vcpu_runstate_info state; + int cpu, i; + + switch (action) { + case -1: /* backup runstate time before suspend */ + WARN_ON_ONCE(unlikely(runstate_delta)); + + runstate_delta = kcalloc(num_possible_cpus(), + sizeof(*runstate_delta), + GFP_KERNEL); + if (unlikely(!runstate_delta)) { + pr_alert("%s: failed to allocate runstate_delta\n", + __func__); + return; + } + + for_each_possible_cpu(cpu) { + xen_get_runstate_snapshot_cpu_delta(&state, cpu); + memcpy(runstate_delta[cpu].time, state.time, + RUNSTATE_max * sizeof(*runstate_delta[cpu].time)); + } + + break; + + case 0: /* backup runstate time after resume */ + if (unlikely(!runstate_delta)) { + pr_alert("%s: cannot accumulate runstate time as runstate_delta is NULL\n", + __func__); + return; + } + + for_each_possible_cpu(cpu) { + for (i = 0; i < RUNSTATE_max; i++) + per_cpu(old_runstate_time, cpu)[i] += + runstate_delta[cpu].time[i]; + } + break; + + default: /* do not accumulate runstate time for checkpointing */ + break; + } + + if (action != -1 && runstate_delta) { + kfree(runstate_delta); + runstate_delta = NULL; + } +} + /* * Runstate accounting */ diff --git a/include/xen/interface/vcpu.h b/include/xen/interface/vcpu.h index 98188c8..85e81ce 100644 --- a/include/xen/interface/vcpu.h +++ b/include/xen/interface/vcpu.h @@ -110,6 +110,8 @@ DEFINE_GUEST_HANDLE_STRUCT(vcpu_runstate_info); */ #define RUNSTATE_offline 3 +#define RUNSTATE_max 4 + /* * Register a shared memory area from which the guest may obtain its own * runstate information without needing to execute a hypercall. diff --git a/include/xen/xen-ops.h b/include/xen/xen-ops.h index 218e6aa..b1f9ae9 100644 --- a/include/xen/xen-ops.h +++ b/include/xen/xen-ops.h @@ -32,6 +32,7 @@ void xen_resume_notifier_unregister(struct notifier_block *nb); bool xen_vcpu_stolen(int vcpu); void xen_setup_runstate_info(int cpu); void xen_time_setup_guest(void); +void xen_accumulate_runstate_time(int action); void xen_get_runstate_snapshot(struct vcpu_runstate_info *res); u64 xen_steal_clock(int cpu);
After guest live migration on xen, steal time in /proc/stat (cpustat[CPUTIME_STEAL]) might decrease because steal returned by xen_steal_lock() might be less than this_rq()->prev_steal_time which is derived from previous return value of xen_steal_clock(). For instance, steal time of each vcpu is 335 before live migration. cpu 198 0 368 200064 1962 0 0 1340 0 0 cpu0 38 0 81 50063 492 0 0 335 0 0 cpu1 65 0 97 49763 634 0 0 335 0 0 cpu2 38 0 81 50098 462 0 0 335 0 0 cpu3 56 0 107 50138 374 0 0 335 0 0 After live migration, steal time is reduced to 312. cpu 200 0 370 200330 1971 0 0 1248 0 0 cpu0 38 0 82 50123 500 0 0 312 0 0 cpu1 65 0 97 49832 634 0 0 312 0 0 cpu2 39 0 82 50167 462 0 0 312 0 0 cpu3 56 0 107 50207 374 0 0 312 0 0 Since runstate times are cumulative and cleared during xen live migration by xen hypervisor, the idea of this patch is to accumulate runstate times to global percpu variables before live migration suspend. Once guest VM is resumed, xen_get_runstate_snapshot_cpu() would always return the sum of new runstate times and previously accumulated times stored in global percpu variables. Similar and more severe issue would impact prior linux 4.8-4.10 as discussed by Michael Las at https://0xstubs.org/debugging-a-flaky-cpu-steal-time-counter-on-a-paravirtualized-xen-guest, which would overflow steal time and lead to 100% st usage in top command for linux 4.8-4.10. A backport of this patch would fix that issue. References: https://0xstubs.org/debugging-a-flaky-cpu-steal-time-counter-on-a-paravirtualized-xen-guest Signed-off-by: Dongli Zhang <dongli.zhang@oracle.com> --- Changed since v1: * relocate modification to xen_get_runstate_snapshot_cpu Changed since v2: * accumulate runstate times before live migration Changed since v3: * do not accumulate times in the case of guest checkpointing Changed since v4: * allocate array of vcpu_runstate_info to reduce number of memory allocation --- drivers/xen/manage.c | 2 ++ drivers/xen/time.c | 68 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++-- include/xen/interface/vcpu.h | 2 ++ include/xen/xen-ops.h | 1 + 4 files changed, 71 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-)