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Re: [Xen-devel] [PATCH, RFC] x86: make the GDT per-CPU


  • To: Jan Beulich <jbeulich@xxxxxxxxxx>, <xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • From: Keir Fraser <keir.fraser@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Thu, 11 Sep 2008 11:54:49 +0100
  • Cc:
  • Delivery-date: Thu, 11 Sep 2008 03:55:44 -0700
  • List-id: Xen developer discussion <xen-devel.lists.xensource.com>
  • Thread-index: AckT/M90DbeuJH/wEd2NXQAX8io7RQ==
  • Thread-topic: [Xen-devel] [PATCH, RFC] x86: make the GDT per-CPU

On 10/9/08 15:35, "Jan Beulich" <jbeulich@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

> The major issue with supporting a significantly larger number of physical
> CPUs appears to be the use of per-CPU GDT entries - at present, x86-64
> could support only up to 126 CPUs (with code changes to also use the
> top-most GDT page, that would be 254). Instead of trying to go with
> incremental steps here, by converting the GDT itself to be per-CPU,
> limitations in that respect go away entirely.

Two thoughts:

Firstly, we don't really need the LDT and TSS GST slots to be always valid.
Actually we always initialise the slot immediately before LTR or LLDT. So we
could even have per-CPU LDT and TSS initialisation share a single slot.
Then, with the extra reserved page, we'd be good for nearly 512 CPUs.

Secondly: Actually your patch looks not too bad. But the double LGDT in
context switch is nasty. But also I do not see why it is necessary?
Presumably your fear is about using the prev->vcpu_id's mapped GDT in
next->vcpu_id's page tables? But we should only be relying on GDT entries
(HYPERVISOR_CS, HYPERVISOR_DS, for example) which are identical in all
per-CPU GDTs. So why do you need to add that LGDT before CR3 switch at all?

You would need to use l1e_write_atomic() in the context-switch code, to make
sure all VCPU's hypervisor reserved GDT mappings are always valid. Actually
you must at least use l1e_write() in any case -- it is not safe to not use
one of those macros on a live pagetable (by which I mean possibly in use by
some CPU) because a direct write of a PAE pte is not atomic and can cause
the pte to pass through a bogus intermediate state (which could be bogusly
prefetched by a CPU into its TLB. Yuk!).

 -- Keir



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