On Mon, 2010-08-23 at 16:27 -0500, Anthony Liguori wrote:
> On 08/23/2010 04:16 PM, Andre Przywara wrote:
> > Anthony Liguori wrote:
> >> On 08/23/2010 01:59 PM, Marcelo Tosatti wrote:
> >>> On Wed, Aug 11, 2010 at 03:52:18PM +0200, Andre Przywara wrote:
> >>>> According to the user-provided assignment bind the respective part
> >>>> of the guest's memory to the given host node. This uses Linux'
> >>>> mbind syscall (which is wrapped only in libnuma) to realize the
> >>>> pinning right after the allocation.
> >>>> Failures are not fatal, but produce a warning.
> >>>>
> >>>> Signed-off-by: Andre Przywara<andre.przyw...@amd.com>
> > >>> ...
> >>> Why is it not possible (or perhaps not desired) to change the binding
> >>> after the guest is started?
> >>>
> >>> Sounds unflexible.
> > The solution is to introduce a monitor interface to later adjust the 
> > pinning, allowing both changing the affinity only (only valid for 
> > future fault-ins) and actually copying the memory (more costly).
> 
> This is just duplicating numactl.
> 
> > Actually this is the next item on my list, but I wanted to bring up 
> > the basics first to avoid recoding parts afterwards. Also I am not 
> > (yet) familiar with the QMP protocol.
> >>
> >> We really need a solution that lets a user use a tool like numactl 
> >> outside of the QEMU instance.
> > I fear that is not how it's meant to work with the Linux' NUMA API. In 
> > opposite to the VCPU threads, which are externally visible entities 
> > (PIDs), the memory should be private to the QEMU process. While you 
> > can change the NUMA allocation policy of the _whole_ process, there is 
> > no way to externally distinguish parts of the process' memory. 
> > Although you could later (and externally) migrate already faulted 
> > pages (via move_pages(2) and by looking in /proc/$$/numa_maps), you 
> > would let an external tool interfere with QEMUs internal memory 
> > management. Take for instance the change of the allocation policy 
> > regarding the 1MB and 3.5-4GB holes. An external tool would have to 
> > either track such changes or you simply could not change such things 
> > in QEMU.
> 
> It's extremely likely that if you're doing NUMA pinning, you're also 
> doing large pages via hugetlbfs.  numactl can already set policies for 
> files in hugetlbfs so all you need to do is have a separate hugetlbfs 
> file for each numa node.

Why would we resort to hugetlbfs when we have transparent hugepages?

FWIW, large apps like databases have set a precedent for managing their
own NUMA policies.  I don't see why qemu should be any different.
Numactl is great for small apps that need to be pinned in one node, or
spread evenly on all nodes.  Having to get hugetlbfs involved just to
workaround a shortcoming of numactl just seems like a bad idea.   
> 
> Then you have all the flexibility of numactl and you can implement node 
> migration external to QEMU if you so desire.
> 
> > So what is wrong with keeping that code in QEMU, which knows best 
> > about the internals and already has flexible and mighty ways (command 
> > line and QMP) of manipulating its behavior?
> 
> NUMA is a last-mile optimization.  For the audience that cares about 
> this level of optimization, only providing an interface that allows a 
> small set of those optimizations to be used is unacceptable.
> 
> There's a very simple way to do this right and that's by adding 
> interfaces to QEMU that let's us work with existing tooling instead of 
> inventing new interfaces.
> 
> Regards,
> 
> Anthony Liguori
> 
> > Regards,
> > Andre.

-Andrew Theurer

--
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe kvm" in
the body of a message to majord...@vger.kernel.org
More majordomo info at  http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html

Reply via email to