[PATCH 0/2] Performance improvement about cache flush

Yanan Wang wangyanan55 at huawei.com
Mon Jan 25 09:10:42 EST 2021


Hi,
This two patches are posted to introduce a new method that can distinguish cases
of allocating memcache more precisely, and to elide some unnecessary cache flush.

For patch-1:
With a guest translation fault, we don't really need the memcache pages when
only installing a new entry to the existing page table or replacing the table
entry with a block entry. And with a guest permission fault, we also don't need
the memcache pages for a write_fault in dirty-logging time if VMs are not
configured with huge mappings. So a new method is introduced to distinguish cases
of allocating memcache more precisely.

For patch-2:
If migration of a VM with hugepages is canceled midway, KVM will adjust the
stage-2 table mappings back to block mappings. With multiple vCPUs accessing
guest pages within the same 1G range, there could be numbers of translation
faults to handle, and KVM will uniformly flush data cache for 1G range before
handling the faults. As it will cost a long time to flush the data cache for
1G range of memory(130ms on Kunpeng 920 servers, for example), the consequent
cache flush for each translation fault will finally lead to vCPU stuck for
seconds or even a soft lockup. I have met both the stuck and soft lockup on
Kunpeng servers with FWB not supported.

When KVM need to recover the table mappings back to block mappings, as we only
replace the existing page tables with a block entry and the cacheability has not
been changed, the cache maintenance opreations can be skipped.

Yanan Wang (2):
  KVM: arm64: Distinguish cases of allocating memcache more precisely
  KVM: arm64: Skip the cache flush when coalescing tables into a block

 arch/arm64/kvm/mmu.c | 37 +++++++++++++++++++++----------------
 1 file changed, 21 insertions(+), 16 deletions(-)

-- 
2.19.1




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