[PATCH 0/4] KVM: Fold kvm_arch_sched_in() into kvm_arch_vcpu_load()

Sean Christopherson seanjc at google.com
Thu May 2 00:28:21 AEST 2024


On Wed, May 01, 2024, Oliver Upton wrote:
> On Tue, Apr 30, 2024 at 12:31:53PM -0700, Sean Christopherson wrote:
> > Drop kvm_arch_sched_in() and instead pass a @sched_in boolean to
> > kvm_arch_vcpu_load().
> > 
> > While fiddling with an idea for optimizing state management on AMD CPUs,
> > I wanted to skip re-saving certain host state when a vCPU is scheduled back
> > in, as the state (theoretically) shouldn't change for the task while it's
> > scheduled out.  Actually doing that was annoying and unnecessarily brittle
> > due to having a separate API for the kvm_sched_in() case (the state save
> > needed to be in kvm_arch_vcpu_load() for the common path).
> > 
> > E.g. I could have set a "temporary"-ish flag somewhere in kvm_vcpu, but (a)
> > that's gross and (b) it would rely on the arbitrary ordering between
> > sched_in() and vcpu_load() staying the same.
> 
> Another option would be to change the rules around kvm_arch_sched_in()
> where the callee is expected to load the vCPU context.
> 
> The default implementation could just call kvm_arch_vcpu_load() directly
> and the x86 implementation can order things the way it wants before
> kvm_arch_vcpu_load().
> 
> I say this because ...
> 
> > The only real downside I see is that arm64 and riscv end up having to pass
> > "false" for their direct usage of kvm_arch_vcpu_load(), and passing boolean
> > literals isn't ideal.  But that can be solved by adding an inner helper that
> > omits the @sched_in param (I almost added a patch to do that, but I couldn't
> > convince myself it was necessary).
> 
> Needing to pass @sched_in for other usage of kvm_arch_vcpu_load() hurts
> readability, especially when no other architecture besides x86 cares
> about it.

Yeah, that bothers me too.

I tried your suggestion of having x86's kvm_arch_sched_in() do kvm_arch_vcpu_load(),
and even with an added kvm_arch_sched_out() to provide symmetry, the x86 code is
kludgy, and even the common code is a bit confusing as it's not super obvious
that kvm_sched_{in,out}() is really just kvm_arch_vcpu_{load,put}().

Staring a bit more at the vCPU flags we have, adding a "bool scheduled_out" isn't
terribly gross if it's done in common code and persists across load() and put(),
i.e. isn't so blatantly a temporary field.  And because it's easy, it could be
set with WRITE_ONCE() so that if it can be read cross-task if there's ever a
reason to do so.

The x86 code ends up being less ugly, and adding future arch/vendor code for
sched_in() *or* sched_out() requires minimal churn, e.g. arch code doesn't need
to override kvm_arch_sched_in().

The only weird part is that vcpu->preempted and vcpu->ready have slightly
different behavior, as they are cleared before kvm_arch_vcpu_load().  But the
weirdness is really with those flags no having symmetry, not with scheduled_out
itself.

Thoughts?

static void kvm_sched_in(struct preempt_notifier *pn, int cpu)
{
	struct kvm_vcpu *vcpu = preempt_notifier_to_vcpu(pn);

	WRITE_ONCE(vcpu->preempted, false);
	WRITE_ONCE(vcpu->ready, false);

	__this_cpu_write(kvm_running_vcpu, vcpu);
	kvm_arch_vcpu_load(vcpu, cpu);

	WRITE_ONCE(vcpu->scheduled_out, false);
}

static void kvm_sched_out(struct preempt_notifier *pn,
			  struct task_struct *next)
{
	struct kvm_vcpu *vcpu = preempt_notifier_to_vcpu(pn);

	WRITE_ONCE(vcpu->scheduled_out, true);

	if (current->on_rq) {
		WRITE_ONCE(vcpu->preempted, true);
		WRITE_ONCE(vcpu->ready, true);
	}
	kvm_arch_vcpu_put(vcpu);
	__this_cpu_write(kvm_running_vcpu, NULL);
}


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