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RE: [Xen-devel] Domain-Virtual time

Hi Priya --

You need only run additional domains (thus "overcommitting" the CPU(s) and 
guaranteeing that NO domain is getting close to an entire CPU) to demonstrate 
that it is certainly not domain time.  It IS system time but, as the VMware 
paper describes, virtualizing time on an older (buggy) OS is more of an art 
than a science.  Unless one builds directly into the hypervisor a complete list 
of all OS's (including all versions and patch-levels) and all of their bugs and 
idiosyncrasies, the result is a s*it-load of options at different levels of the 
virtualization stack (including hardware configuration such as in a boot-time 
BIOS menu).

As you may also have read, even on a physical machine running a native OS, time 
drift is very possible as time in every system is based on one or more 
inexpensive crystals with frequencies that are only estimates of a (extremely 
expensive) cesium clock (which for lack of a better term we will call "true" 
time) and may themselves drift relative to true time and relative to each other 
on the same system or even an apparently identical system.  This can often be 
demonstrated as you saw by checking /proc/cpuinfo... but identical values don't 
mean that the clocks are true, just that the difference is lower than the 
kernel code measuring it can discern or choose to report.

When virtualizing time, some of the problems manifest in time drift in the 
virtual system which moves faster than true time and some slower than true time.

NTP does its best to find a source of true time and then adjusts the clock on 
the system it is controlling so that it asymptotically approaches true time 
withOUT allowing time to go backwards (as this can cause all sorts of 
challenging system problems... imagine a "make" where time randomly goes 
backwards in the middle!).  But NTP may not have a good source for true time 
(as it is an administrator who configures it), NTP may subtly conflict with 
some combinations of the options set by administrators in the virtualization 
stack (because not everyone has access to "true" time... for example suppose 
your virtual machine has not networking configured), and NTP may silently give 
up if the drift is too bad for it to safely compensate.  (On a physical 
machine, this would be considered a "hardware bug" and you would ship your box 
back to the vendor to get one without a "broken" clock.)

So if you have ever heard the old pop song by Chicago "Does anybody really know 
what time it is?", the title is truer than most people believe ;-)

Hope that helps!
Dan

From: Priya [mailto:pbhat@xxxxxxxxxxxx] 
Sent: Friday, February 26, 2010 9:47 AM
To: Dan Magenheimer
Cc: xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx; xen-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: [Xen-devel] Domain-Virtual time

Thanks Dan! That's a lot of useful information. 

Since yesterday, I started NTP on my machines to correct and measure the amount 
of drift. (I am running 3 HVMs with a Ubuntu 8.04 Linux (tick-less) kernel 
which were all installed in an identical manner. At the time of installing the 
HVMs I did not change the default timer_mode).

The funny thing is that NTP is measuring a very different drift on my three 
machines (-189.206, -108.373 and -71.321 parts per million). The drift reported 
on Domain-0 is -11.393. So I don't think my machines are showing the system 
time. 

In addition, the negative sign on the drift means that my machines are running 
faster that the real time, which is again puzzling. I found out that VMWare has 
issues with overcompensation on its linux kernels that cause the VM time to run 
faster. Could Xen be having a similar problem ?

The fact that all three on my machines are showing different drifts makes me 
doubt that they are showing the system time. I checked the CPU frequency that 
the three machines are reporting (from /proc/cpuinfo) and they are similar but 
not identical.

Any thoughts?
On Thu, Feb 25, 2010 at 3:36 PM, Dan Magenheimer <dan.magenheimer@xxxxxxxxxx> 
wrote:
Should be "true" system time, i.e. should be very close to what
you see on a "wallclock" (clock on the wall).

HVM's are sadly very widely varied in the parameters needed
to minimize time drift.  In general in the past, timer_mode=0
(or timer_mode unspecified) would be best for 32-bit Linux
domains, timer_mode=1 would be best for Windows domains,
and timer_mode=2 would be best for 64-bit Linux domains.
However, for best results on Linux, this must be combined with
kernel boot parameters that properly select a clock -- and
on some Linux kernel versions, the parameters needed are
different between 32-bit and 64-bit versions of the same
kernel version.  It is up to providers of HVM templates
(aka "appliances") to choose parameters wisely.

Also, you haven't specified your Xen version, but I believe
Xen 4.0 switches the timer_mode default from 0 to 1 so, sadly,
clock behavior may change when moving an unchanged HVM
domain from pre-4.0 to 4.0.

So for best results you should run ntpd in any Linux HVM
domain (and I don't know what you do in Windows).  But
even ntpd may be inadequate to avoid drift if poor parameters
are chosen.

==========

From: Priya [mailto:pbhat@xxxxxxxxxxxx]
Sent: Thursday, February 25, 2010 9:04 AM
To: xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx; xen-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [Xen-devel] Domain-Virtual time

Sorry for multiple emails. I sent the last one from the wrong address.

Can anyone please tell me if the value returned by a time querying instruction 
like gettimeofday() on a Xen (Linux) HVM is the true (System) time or the 
Domain-virtual time?

PS: Domain virtual time is defined as the time that progresses at the same pace 
as cycle counter, but only while a domain is executing. It stops while the 
domain is de-scheduled where as System time accurately reflects the passage of 
real time.

I am facing issues because my HVMs show a time drift.

Thanks

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