Message ID | 20200326193156.4322-75-robert.foley@linaro.org (mailing list archive) |
---|---|
State | New, archived |
Headers | show |
Series | per-CPU locks | expand |
Robert Foley <robert.foley@linaro.org> writes: > From: "Emilio G. Cota" <cota@braap.org> > > This yields sizable scalability improvements, as the below results show. > > Host: Two Intel E5-2683 v3 14-core CPUs at 2.00 GHz (Haswell) > > Workload: Ubuntu 18.04 ppc64 compiling the linux kernel with > "make -j N", where N is the number of cores in the guest. > > Speedup vs a single thread (higher is better): > > 14 +---------------------------------------------------------------+ > | + + + + + + $$$$$$ + | > | $$$$$ | > | $$$$$$ | > 12 |-+ $A$$ +-| > | $$ | > | $$$ | > 10 |-+ $$ ##D#####################D +-| > | $$$ #####**B**************** | > | $$####***** ***** | > | A$#***** B | > 8 |-+ $$B** +-| > | $$** | > | $** | > 6 |-+ $$* +-| > | A** | > | $B | > | $ | > 4 |-+ $* +-| > | $ | > | $ | > 2 |-+ $ +-| > | $ +cputlb-no-bql $$A$$ | > | A +per-cpu-lock ##D## | > | + + + + + + baseline **B** | > 0 +---------------------------------------------------------------+ > 1 4 8 12 16 20 24 28 > Guest vCPUs > png: https://imgur.com/zZRvS7q Can we re-run these numbers on the re-based series?
Robert Foley <robert.foley@linaro.org> writes: > From: "Emilio G. Cota" <cota@braap.org> > > This yields sizable scalability improvements, as the below results show. > > Host: Two Intel E5-2683 v3 14-core CPUs at 2.00 GHz (Haswell) > > Workload: Ubuntu 18.04 ppc64 compiling the linux kernel with > "make -j N", where N is the number of cores in the guest. > <snip> So my numbers running a aarch64 guest running pigz with an x86_64 host the gains start to tail off past -smp 12 but still seem to be showing some gain up to -smp 16 (the host has 24 cores): ./aarch64-softmmu/qemu-system-aarch64 -machine virt,graphics=on,gic-version=3,virtualization=on -cpu cortex-a53 -serial mon:stdio -nic user,model=virtio-net-pci,hostfwd=tcp::2222-:22 -device virtio-scsi-pci -device scsi-hd,drive=hd0 -blockdev driver=raw,node-name=hd0,discard=unmap,file.driver=host_device,file.filename=/dev/zvol/hackpool-0/debian-buster-arm64 -kernel ../../../linux.git/builds/arm64.nopreempt/arch/arm64/boot/Image -append "console=ttyAMA0 root=/dev/sda2 systemd.unit=benchmark-pigz.service" -display none -m 4096 -snapshot -smp $SMP | Command | Mean [s] | Min...Max [s] | |-----------------------------+------------------+------------------| | =$QEMU $QEMU_ARGS -smp 4= | 146.738 ± 62.272 | 43.861...246.139 | | =$QEMU $QEMU_ARGS -smp 5= | 33.984 ± 13.370 | 29.501...72.032 | | =$QEMU $QEMU_ARGS -smp 6= | 26.128 ± 0.189 | 25.837...26.475 | | =$QEMU $QEMU_ARGS -smp 7= | 23.459 ± 0.090 | 23.252...23.560 | | =$QEMU $QEMU_ARGS -smp 8= | 21.579 ± 0.117 | 21.418...21.764 | | =$QEMU $QEMU_ARGS -smp 9= | 20.163 ± 0.142 | 19.938...20.387 | | =$QEMU $QEMU_ARGS -smp 10= | 19.028 ± 0.106 | 18.877...19.183 | | =$QEMU $QEMU_ARGS -smp 11= | 18.166 ± 0.093 | 18.081...18.386 | | =$QEMU $QEMU_ARGS -smp 12= | 17.464 ± 0.067 | 17.383...17.614 | | =$QEMU $QEMU_ARGS -smp 13= | 16.928 ± 0.104 | 16.754...17.158 | | =$QEMU $QEMU_ARGS -smp 14= | 16.615 ± 0.188 | 16.486...17.105 | | =$QEMU $QEMU_ARGS -smp 15= | 16.344 ± 0.176 | 16.094...16.680 | | =$QEMU $QEMU_ARGS -smp 16= | 16.085 ± 0.215 | 15.869...16.623 |
On Tue, 12 May 2020 at 12:27, Alex Bennée <alex.bennee@linaro.org> wrote: > Robert Foley <robert.foley@linaro.org> writes: > > > From: "Emilio G. Cota" <cota@braap.org> > > > > This yields sizable scalability improvements, as the below results show. > > > > Host: Two Intel E5-2683 v3 14-core CPUs at 2.00 GHz (Haswell) > > > > Workload: Ubuntu 18.04 ppc64 compiling the linux kernel with > > "make -j N", where N is the number of cores in the guest. > > > > Speedup vs a single thread (higher is better): snip > > png: https://imgur.com/zZRvS7q > > Can we re-run these numbers on the re-based series? Sure, we will re-run the numbers. Regards, -Rob
We re-ran the numbers with the latest re-based series. We used an aarch64 ubuntu VM image with a host CPU: Intel(R) Xeon(R) Silver 4114 CPU @ 2.20GHz, 2 CPUs, 10 cores/CPU, 20 Threads/CPU. 40 cores total. For the bare hardware and kvm tests (first chart) the host CPU was: HiSilicon 1620 CPU 2600 Mhz, 2 CPUs, 64 Cores per CPU, 128 CPUs total. First, we ran a test of building the kernel in the VM. We did not see any major improvements nor major regressions. We show the results of the Speedup of building the kernel on bare hardware compared with kvm and QEMU (both the baseline and cpu locks). Speedup vs a single thread for kernel build 40 +----------------------------------------------------------------------+ | + + + + + + ** | | bare hardwar********* | | kvm ####### | 35 |-+ baseline $$$$$$$-| | *cpu lock %%%%%%% | | *** | | ** | 30 |-+ *** +-| | *** | | *** | | ** | 25 |-+ *** +-| | *** | | ** | | ** | 20 |-+ ** +-| | ** ######### | | ** ################ | | ** ########## | | ** ### | 15 |-+ * #### +-| | ** ### | | * ### | | * ### | 10 |-+ **### +-| | *## | | ## $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$ | | #$$$$$%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% | 5 |-+ $%%%%%% %%%$%$%$%$%$%$%$%$%$%$%$%$%$%$%$% +-| | %% % | | %% | |% + + + + + + | 0 +----------------------------------------------------------------------+ 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 Guest vCPUs After seeing these results and the scaling limits inherent in the build itself, we decided to run a test which might show the scaling improvements clearer. So we chose unix bench. Unix bench result (higher is better) vs number vCPUs. 3000 +--------------------------------------------------------------------+ | + + + + + + + + + | | baseline ******* | | # cpu lock ####### | | ##*# | 2500 |-+ #** *# +-| | # *# | | #* *# | | # *# | | #* # | | # *# | 2000 |-+ #* # +-| | # *# | | #* *# | | # *#### | | #* * ### | 1500 |-+ # *** ## +-| | # * ## | | # * ### | | # ** ## | | # * ### | | # * ## | 1000 |-+ # ** # +-| | # * ### | | # ** # | | # * # | | #* * ## | 500 |-# ** # # +-| | # * # ## # | |#* * ## # # | |#* ** ## # | |* # # | |* + + + + + + **********************# | 0 +--------------------------------------------------------------------+ 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 Guest vCPUs We also ran tests to compare the boot times. This test showed the most improvements compared to the baseline. Boot time in seconds (lower is better) vs number vCPUs. 550 +---------------------------------------------------------------------+ | + + + + + + + + + * | | baseline ******* | 500 |-+ cpu lock #######-| | * | | * | | * | 450 |-+ ** #+-| | * # | | ** * ## | 400 |-+ * ** ** # +-| | * * ** # | | * ** ## | 350 |-+ * * # +-| | * ## | | * # | 300 |-+ * ## +-| | * # | | * ## | | * # | 250 |-+ ** # +-| | * ## | | ** # | 200 |-+ *** ## +-| | ** ### | | * #### | 150 |-+ * ###### +-| | **** ### | |* * ## | |#* ####### | 100 |-# ***### +-| | #* ####### | | ###### + + + + + + + + | 50 +---------------------------------------------------------------------+ 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 Guest vCPUs Pictures are also here: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1ASg5XyP9hNfN9VysXC3qe5s9QSJlwFAt/view?usp=sharing We will plan to update this commit in the series with the final two results (unix bench and boot times). Regards, -Rob On Tue, 12 May 2020 at 15:26, Robert Foley <robert.foley@linaro.org> wrote: > > On Tue, 12 May 2020 at 12:27, Alex Bennée <alex.bennee@linaro.org> wrote: > > Robert Foley <robert.foley@linaro.org> writes: > > > > > From: "Emilio G. Cota" <cota@braap.org> > > > > > > This yields sizable scalability improvements, as the below results show. > > > > > > Host: Two Intel E5-2683 v3 14-core CPUs at 2.00 GHz (Haswell) > > > > > > Workload: Ubuntu 18.04 ppc64 compiling the linux kernel with > > > "make -j N", where N is the number of cores in the guest. > > > > > > Speedup vs a single thread (higher is better): > snip > > > png: https://imgur.com/zZRvS7q > > > > Can we re-run these numbers on the re-based series? > > Sure, we will re-run the numbers. > > Regards, > -Rob
On Mon, May 18, 2020 at 09:46:36 -0400, Robert Foley wrote: > We re-ran the numbers with the latest re-based series. > > We used an aarch64 ubuntu VM image with a host CPU: > Intel(R) Xeon(R) Silver 4114 CPU @ 2.20GHz, 2 CPUs, 10 cores/CPU, > 20 Threads/CPU. 40 cores total. > > For the bare hardware and kvm tests (first chart) the host CPU was: > HiSilicon 1620 CPU 2600 Mhz, 2 CPUs, 64 Cores per CPU, 128 CPUs total. > > First, we ran a test of building the kernel in the VM. > We did not see any major improvements nor major regressions. > We show the results of the Speedup of building the kernel > on bare hardware compared with kvm and QEMU (both the baseline and cpu locks). > > > Speedup vs a single thread for kernel build > > 40 +----------------------------------------------------------------------+ > | + + + + + + ** | > | bare hardwar********* | > | kvm ####### | > 35 |-+ baseline $$$$$$$-| > | *cpu lock %%%%%%% | > | *** | > | ** | > 30 |-+ *** +-| > | *** | > | *** | > | ** | > 25 |-+ *** +-| > | *** | > | ** | > | ** | > 20 |-+ ** +-| > | ** ######### | > | ** ################ | > | ** ########## | > | ** ### | > 15 |-+ * #### +-| > | ** ### | > | * ### | > | * ### | > 10 |-+ **### +-| > | *## | > | ## $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$ | > | #$$$$$%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% | > 5 |-+ $%%%%%% %%%$%$%$%$%$%$%$%$%$%$%$%$%$%$%$% +-| > | %% % | > | %% | > |% + + + + + + | > 0 +----------------------------------------------------------------------+ > 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 > Guest vCPUs > > > After seeing these results and the scaling limits inherent in the build itself, > we decided to run a test which might show the scaling improvements clearer. Thanks for doing these tests. I know from experience that benchmarking is hard and incredibly time consuming, so please do not be discouraged by my comments below. A couple of points: 1. I am not familiar with aarch64 KVM but I'd expect it to scale almost like the native run. Are you assigning enough RAM to the guest? Also, it can help to run the kernel build in a ramfs in the guest. 2. The build itself does not seem to impose a scaling limit, since it scales very well when run natively (per-thread I presume aarch64 TCG is still slower than native, even if TCG is run on a faster x86 machine). The limit here is probably aarch64 TCG. In particular, last time I checked aarch64 TCG has room for improvement scalability-wise handling interrupts and some TLB operations; this is likely to explain why we see no benefit with per-CPU locks, i.e. the bottleneck is elsewhere. This can be confirmed with the sync profiler. IIRC I originally used ppc64 for this test because ppc64 TCG does not have any other big bottlenecks scalability-wise. I just checked but unfortunately I can't find the ppc64 image I used :( What I can offer is the script I used to run these benchmarks; see the appended. Thanks, Emilio --- #!/bin/bash set -eu # path to host files MYHOME=/local/home/cota/src # guest image QEMU_INST_PATH=$MYHOME/qemu-inst IMG=$MYHOME/qemu/img/ppc64/ubuntu.qcow2 ARCH=ppc64 COMMON_ARGS="-M pseries -nodefaults \ -hda $IMG -nographic -serial stdio \ -net nic -net user,hostfwd=tcp::2222-:22 \ -m 48G" # path to this script's directory, where .txt output will be copied # from the guest. QELT=$MYHOME/qelt HOST_PATH=$QELT/fig/kcomp # The guest must be able to SSH to the HOST without entering a password. # The way I set this up is to have a passwordless SSH key in the guest's # root user, and then copy that key's public key to the host. # I used the root user because the guest runs on bootup (as root) a # script that scp's run-guest.sh (see below) from the host, then executes it. # This is done via a tiny script in the guest invoked from systemd once # boot-up has completed. HOST=foo@bar.edu # This is a script in the host to use an appropriate cpumask to # use cores in the same socket if possible. # See https://github.com/cota/cputopology-perl CPUTOPO=$MYHOME/cputopology-perl # For each run we create this file that then the guest will SCP # and execute. It is a quick and dirty way of passing arguments to the guest. create_file () { TAG=$1 CORES=$2 NAME=$ARCH.$TAG-$CORES.txt echo '#!/bin/bash' > run-guest.sh echo 'cp -r /home/cota/linux-4.18-rc7 /tmp2/linux' >> run-guest.sh echo "cd /tmp2/linux" >> run-guest.sh echo "{ time make -j $CORES vmlinux >/dev/null; } 2>>/home/cota/$NAME" >> run-guest.sh # Output with execution time is then scp'ed to the host. echo "ssh $HOST 'cat >> $HOST_PATH/$NAME' < /home/cota/$NAME" >> run-guest.sh echo "poweroff" >> run-guest.sh } # Change here THREADS and also the TAGS that point to different QEMU installations. for THREADS in 64 32 16; do for TAG in cpu-exclusive-work cputlb-no-bql per-cpu-lock cpu-has-work baseline; do QEMU=$QEMU_INST_PATH/$TAG/bin/qemu-system-$ARCH CPUMASK=$($CPUTOPO/list.pl --policy=compact-smt $THREADS) create_file $TAG $THREADS time taskset -c $CPUMASK $QEMU $COMMON_ARGS -smp $THREADS done done
On Wed, 20 May 2020 at 00:46, Emilio G. Cota <cota@braap.org> wrote: > > On Mon, May 18, 2020 at 09:46:36 -0400, Robert Foley wrote: > > Thanks for doing these tests. I know from experience that benchmarking > is hard and incredibly time consuming, so please do not be discouraged by > my comments below. > Hi, Thanks for all the comments, and for including the script! These are all very helpful. We will work to replicate these results using a PPC VM, and will re-post them here. Thanks & Regards, -Rob > A couple of points: > > 1. I am not familiar with aarch64 KVM but I'd expect it to scale almost > like the native run. Are you assigning enough RAM to the guest? Also, > it can help to run the kernel build in a ramfs in the guest. > 2. The build itself does not seem to impose a scaling limit, since > it scales very well when run natively (per-thread I presume aarch64 TCG is > still slower than native, even if TCG is run on a faster x86 machine). > The limit here is probably aarch64 TCG. In particular, last time I > checked aarch64 TCG has room for improvement scalability-wise handling > interrupts and some TLB operations; this is likely to explain why we > see no benefit with per-CPU locks, i.e. the bottleneck is elsewhere. > This can be confirmed with the sync profiler. > > IIRC I originally used ppc64 for this test because ppc64 TCG does not > have any other big bottlenecks scalability-wise. I just checked but > unfortunately I can't find the ppc64 image I used :( What I can offer > is the script I used to run these benchmarks; see the appended. > > Thanks, > Emilio > > --- > #!/bin/bash > > set -eu > > # path to host files > MYHOME=/local/home/cota/src > > # guest image > QEMU_INST_PATH=$MYHOME/qemu-inst > IMG=$MYHOME/qemu/img/ppc64/ubuntu.qcow2 > > ARCH=ppc64 > COMMON_ARGS="-M pseries -nodefaults \ > -hda $IMG -nographic -serial stdio \ > -net nic -net user,hostfwd=tcp::2222-:22 \ > -m 48G" > > # path to this script's directory, where .txt output will be copied > # from the guest. > QELT=$MYHOME/qelt > HOST_PATH=$QELT/fig/kcomp > > # The guest must be able to SSH to the HOST without entering a password. > # The way I set this up is to have a passwordless SSH key in the guest's > # root user, and then copy that key's public key to the host. > # I used the root user because the guest runs on bootup (as root) a > # script that scp's run-guest.sh (see below) from the host, then executes it. > # This is done via a tiny script in the guest invoked from systemd once > # boot-up has completed. > HOST=foo@bar.edu > > # This is a script in the host to use an appropriate cpumask to > # use cores in the same socket if possible. > # See https://github.com/cota/cputopology-perl > CPUTOPO=$MYHOME/cputopology-perl > > # For each run we create this file that then the guest will SCP > # and execute. It is a quick and dirty way of passing arguments to the guest. > create_file () { > TAG=$1 > CORES=$2 > NAME=$ARCH.$TAG-$CORES.txt > > echo '#!/bin/bash' > run-guest.sh > echo 'cp -r /home/cota/linux-4.18-rc7 /tmp2/linux' >> run-guest.sh > echo "cd /tmp2/linux" >> run-guest.sh > echo "{ time make -j $CORES vmlinux >/dev/null; } 2>>/home/cota/$NAME" >> run-guest.sh > # Output with execution time is then scp'ed to the host. > echo "ssh $HOST 'cat >> $HOST_PATH/$NAME' < /home/cota/$NAME" >> run-guest.sh > echo "poweroff" >> run-guest.sh > } > > # Change here THREADS and also the TAGS that point to different QEMU installations. > for THREADS in 64 32 16; do > for TAG in cpu-exclusive-work cputlb-no-bql per-cpu-lock cpu-has-work baseline; do > QEMU=$QEMU_INST_PATH/$TAG/bin/qemu-system-$ARCH > CPUMASK=$($CPUTOPO/list.pl --policy=compact-smt $THREADS) > > create_file $TAG $THREADS > time taskset -c $CPUMASK $QEMU $COMMON_ARGS -smp $THREADS > done > done
We re-ran the numbers for a ppc64 VM, using the additional configuration details. This seems to show the scalability gains much clearer. Speedup vs a single thread for kernel build 7 +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ | + + + + + + | | ########### baseline ******* | | ##### #### cpu lock ####### | | ## #### | 6 |-+ ## ## +-| | ## #### | | ## ### | | ## ***** # | | ## **** *** # | | ## *** * | 5 |-+ ## *** **** +-| | # **** ** | | # ** ** | | #* ** | | #* ** | | #* * | | # ****** | | # ** | | # * | 3 |-+ # +-| | # | | # | | # | | # | 2 |-+ # +-| | # | | # | | # | | # | | # + + + + + + | 1 +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ 0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 Guest vCPUs https://drive.google.com/file/d/1ASg5XyP9hNfN9VysXC3qe5s9QSJlwFAt/view?usp=sharing Thanks & Regards, -Rob On Wed, 20 May 2020 at 11:01, Robert Foley <robert.foley@linaro.org> wrote: > > On Wed, 20 May 2020 at 00:46, Emilio G. Cota <cota@braap.org> wrote: > > > > On Mon, May 18, 2020 at 09:46:36 -0400, Robert Foley wrote: > > > > Thanks for doing these tests. I know from experience that benchmarking > > is hard and incredibly time consuming, so please do not be discouraged by > > my comments below. > > > > Hi, > Thanks for all the comments, and for including the script! > These are all very helpful. > > We will work to replicate these results using a PPC VM, > and will re-post them here. > > Thanks & Regards, > -Rob > > > A couple of points: > > > > 1. I am not familiar with aarch64 KVM but I'd expect it to scale almost > > like the native run. Are you assigning enough RAM to the guest? Also, > > it can help to run the kernel build in a ramfs in the guest. > > > 2. The build itself does not seem to impose a scaling limit, since > > it scales very well when run natively (per-thread I presume aarch64 TCG is > > still slower than native, even if TCG is run on a faster x86 machine). > > The limit here is probably aarch64 TCG. In particular, last time I > > checked aarch64 TCG has room for improvement scalability-wise handling > > interrupts and some TLB operations; this is likely to explain why we > > see no benefit with per-CPU locks, i.e. the bottleneck is elsewhere. > > This can be confirmed with the sync profiler. > > > > IIRC I originally used ppc64 for this test because ppc64 TCG does not > > have any other big bottlenecks scalability-wise. I just checked but > > unfortunately I can't find the ppc64 image I used :( What I can offer > > is the script I used to run these benchmarks; see the appended. > > > > Thanks, > > Emilio > > > > --- > > #!/bin/bash > > > > set -eu > > > > # path to host files > > MYHOME=/local/home/cota/src > > > > # guest image > > QEMU_INST_PATH=$MYHOME/qemu-inst > > IMG=$MYHOME/qemu/img/ppc64/ubuntu.qcow2 > > > > ARCH=ppc64 > > COMMON_ARGS="-M pseries -nodefaults \ > > -hda $IMG -nographic -serial stdio \ > > -net nic -net user,hostfwd=tcp::2222-:22 \ > > -m 48G" > > > > # path to this script's directory, where .txt output will be copied > > # from the guest. > > QELT=$MYHOME/qelt > > HOST_PATH=$QELT/fig/kcomp > > > > # The guest must be able to SSH to the HOST without entering a password. > > # The way I set this up is to have a passwordless SSH key in the guest's > > # root user, and then copy that key's public key to the host. > > # I used the root user because the guest runs on bootup (as root) a > > # script that scp's run-guest.sh (see below) from the host, then executes it. > > # This is done via a tiny script in the guest invoked from systemd once > > # boot-up has completed. > > HOST=foo@bar.edu > > > > # This is a script in the host to use an appropriate cpumask to > > # use cores in the same socket if possible. > > # See https://github.com/cota/cputopology-perl > > CPUTOPO=$MYHOME/cputopology-perl > > > > # For each run we create this file that then the guest will SCP > > # and execute. It is a quick and dirty way of passing arguments to the guest. > > create_file () { > > TAG=$1 > > CORES=$2 > > NAME=$ARCH.$TAG-$CORES.txt > > > > echo '#!/bin/bash' > run-guest.sh > > echo 'cp -r /home/cota/linux-4.18-rc7 /tmp2/linux' >> run-guest.sh > > echo "cd /tmp2/linux" >> run-guest.sh > > echo "{ time make -j $CORES vmlinux >/dev/null; } 2>>/home/cota/$NAME" >> run-guest.sh > > # Output with execution time is then scp'ed to the host. > > echo "ssh $HOST 'cat >> $HOST_PATH/$NAME' < /home/cota/$NAME" >> run-guest.sh > > echo "poweroff" >> run-guest.sh > > } > > > > # Change here THREADS and also the TAGS that point to different QEMU installations. > > for THREADS in 64 32 16; do > > for TAG in cpu-exclusive-work cputlb-no-bql per-cpu-lock cpu-has-work baseline; do > > QEMU=$QEMU_INST_PATH/$TAG/bin/qemu-system-$ARCH > > CPUMASK=$($CPUTOPO/list.pl --policy=compact-smt $THREADS) > > > > create_file $TAG $THREADS > > time taskset -c $CPUMASK $QEMU $COMMON_ARGS -smp $THREADS > > done > > done
diff --git a/accel/tcg/cputlb.c b/accel/tcg/cputlb.c index e3b5750c3b..d13feaf3a3 100644 --- a/accel/tcg/cputlb.c +++ b/accel/tcg/cputlb.c @@ -284,7 +284,7 @@ static void flush_all_helper(CPUState *src, run_on_cpu_func fn, CPU_FOREACH(cpu) { if (cpu != src) { - async_run_on_cpu(cpu, fn, d); + async_run_on_cpu_no_bql(cpu, fn, d); } } } @@ -352,8 +352,8 @@ void tlb_flush_by_mmuidx(CPUState *cpu, uint16_t idxmap) tlb_debug("mmu_idx: 0x%" PRIx16 "\n", idxmap); if (cpu->created && !qemu_cpu_is_self(cpu)) { - async_run_on_cpu(cpu, tlb_flush_by_mmuidx_async_work, - RUN_ON_CPU_HOST_INT(idxmap)); + async_run_on_cpu_no_bql(cpu, tlb_flush_by_mmuidx_async_work, + RUN_ON_CPU_HOST_INT(idxmap)); } else { tlb_flush_by_mmuidx_async_work(cpu, RUN_ON_CPU_HOST_INT(idxmap)); } @@ -547,7 +547,7 @@ void tlb_flush_page_by_mmuidx(CPUState *cpu, target_ulong addr, uint16_t idxmap) * we can stuff idxmap into the low TARGET_PAGE_BITS, avoid * allocating memory for this operation. */ - async_run_on_cpu(cpu, tlb_flush_page_by_mmuidx_async_1, + async_run_on_cpu_no_bql(cpu, tlb_flush_page_by_mmuidx_async_1, RUN_ON_CPU_TARGET_PTR(addr | idxmap)); } else { TLBFlushPageByMMUIdxData *d = g_new(TLBFlushPageByMMUIdxData, 1); @@ -555,7 +555,7 @@ void tlb_flush_page_by_mmuidx(CPUState *cpu, target_ulong addr, uint16_t idxmap) /* Otherwise allocate a structure, freed by the worker. */ d->addr = addr; d->idxmap = idxmap; - async_run_on_cpu(cpu, tlb_flush_page_by_mmuidx_async_2, + async_run_on_cpu_no_bql(cpu, tlb_flush_page_by_mmuidx_async_2, RUN_ON_CPU_HOST_PTR(d)); } }