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authorSean Christopherson <seanjc@google.com>2021-04-01 17:56:56 -0700
committerPaolo Bonzini <pbonzini@redhat.com>2021-04-17 08:31:08 -0400
commit8931a454aea03bab21b3b8fcdc94f674eebd1c5d (patch)
tree1223606ea4a22486072a30aa705f5b637623a3a4 /virt
parentf922bd9bf33bd5a8c6694927f010f32127810fbf (diff)
downloadlwn-8931a454aea03bab21b3b8fcdc94f674eebd1c5d.tar.gz
lwn-8931a454aea03bab21b3b8fcdc94f674eebd1c5d.zip
KVM: Take mmu_lock when handling MMU notifier iff the hva hits a memslot
Defer acquiring mmu_lock in the MMU notifier paths until a "hit" has been detected in the memslots, i.e. don't take the lock for notifications that don't affect the guest. For small VMs, spurious locking is a minor annoyance. And for "volatile" setups where the majority of notifications _are_ relevant, this barely qualifies as an optimization. But, for large VMs (hundreds of threads) with static setups, e.g. no page migration, no swapping, etc..., the vast majority of MMU notifier callbacks will be unrelated to the guest, e.g. will often be in response to the userspace VMM adjusting its own virtual address space. In such large VMs, acquiring mmu_lock can be painful as it blocks vCPUs from handling page faults. In some scenarios it can even be "fatal" in the sense that it causes unacceptable brownouts, e.g. when rebuilding huge pages after live migration, a significant percentage of vCPUs will be attempting to handle page faults. x86's TDP MMU implementation is especially susceptible to spurious locking due it taking mmu_lock for read when handling page faults. Because rwlock is fair, a single writer will stall future readers, while the writer is itself stalled waiting for in-progress readers to complete. This is exacerbated by the MMU notifiers often firing multiple times in quick succession, e.g. moving a page will (always?) invoke three separate notifiers: .invalidate_range_start(), invalidate_range_end(), and .change_pte(). Unnecessarily taking mmu_lock each time means even a single spurious sequence can be problematic. Note, this optimizes only the unpaired callbacks. Optimizing the .invalidate_range_{start,end}() pairs is more complex and will be done in a future patch. Suggested-by: Ben Gardon <bgardon@google.com> Signed-off-by: Sean Christopherson <seanjc@google.com> Message-Id: <20210402005658.3024832-9-seanjc@google.com> Signed-off-by: Paolo Bonzini <pbonzini@redhat.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'virt')
-rw-r--r--virt/kvm/kvm_main.c15
1 files changed, 11 insertions, 4 deletions
diff --git a/virt/kvm/kvm_main.c b/virt/kvm/kvm_main.c
index e768b862cbd9..529cff1050d7 100644
--- a/virt/kvm/kvm_main.c
+++ b/virt/kvm/kvm_main.c
@@ -482,10 +482,10 @@ static void kvm_null_fn(void)
static __always_inline int __kvm_handle_hva_range(struct kvm *kvm,
const struct kvm_hva_range *range)
{
+ bool ret = false, locked = false;
struct kvm_gfn_range gfn_range;
struct kvm_memory_slot *slot;
struct kvm_memslots *slots;
- bool ret = false;
int i, idx;
/* A null handler is allowed if and only if on_lock() is provided. */
@@ -493,11 +493,13 @@ static __always_inline int __kvm_handle_hva_range(struct kvm *kvm,
IS_KVM_NULL_FN(range->handler)))
return 0;
- KVM_MMU_LOCK(kvm);
-
idx = srcu_read_lock(&kvm->srcu);
+ /* The on_lock() path does not yet support lock elision. */
if (!IS_KVM_NULL_FN(range->on_lock)) {
+ locked = true;
+ KVM_MMU_LOCK(kvm);
+
range->on_lock(kvm, range->start, range->end);
if (IS_KVM_NULL_FN(range->handler))
@@ -532,6 +534,10 @@ static __always_inline int __kvm_handle_hva_range(struct kvm *kvm,
gfn_range.end = hva_to_gfn_memslot(hva_end + PAGE_SIZE - 1, slot);
gfn_range.slot = slot;
+ if (!locked) {
+ locked = true;
+ KVM_MMU_LOCK(kvm);
+ }
ret |= range->handler(kvm, &gfn_range);
}
}
@@ -540,7 +546,8 @@ static __always_inline int __kvm_handle_hva_range(struct kvm *kvm,
kvm_flush_remote_tlbs(kvm);
out_unlock:
- KVM_MMU_UNLOCK(kvm);
+ if (locked)
+ KVM_MMU_UNLOCK(kvm);
srcu_read_unlock(&kvm->srcu, idx);