Re: [KVM PATCH v7 2/3] kvm: add support for irqfd via eventfd-notificationinterface

From: Davide Libenzi
Date: Thu May 14 2009 - 23:27:47 EST


On Thu, 14 May 2009, Gregory Haskins wrote:

> Avi Kivity wrote:
> > Gregory Haskins wrote:
> >> KVM provides a complete virtual system environment for guests, including
> >> support for injecting interrupts modeled after the real
> >> exception/interrupt
> >> facilities present on the native platform (such as the IDT on x86).
> >> Virtual interrupts can come from a variety of sources (emulated devices,
> >> pass-through devices, etc) but all must be injected to the guest via
> >> the KVM infrastructure. This patch adds a new mechanism to inject a
> >> specific
> >> interrupt to a guest using a decoupled eventfd mechnanism: Any legal
> >> signal
> >> on the irqfd (using eventfd semantics from either userspace or
> >> kernel) will
> >> translate into an injected interrupt in the guest at the next available
> >> interrupt window.
> >>
> >> +
> >> +static void
> >> +irqfd_inject(struct work_struct *work)
> >> +{
> >> + struct _irqfd *irqfd = container_of(work, struct _irqfd, work);
> >> + struct kvm *kvm = irqfd->kvm;
> >> +
> >>
> >
> >
> > I think you need to ->read() from the irqfd, otherwise the count will
> > never clear.
>
> Yeah, and this is a disavantage to using eventfd vs a custom anon-fd
> implementation.
>
> However, the count is really only there for deciding whether to sleep a
> traditional eventfd recipient which doesn't really apply in this
> application. I suppose we could try to invoke the read method (or add a
> new method to eventfd to allow it to be cleared independent of the
> f_ops->read() (ala eventfd_signal() vs f_ops->write()). I'm not
> convinced we really need to worry about it, though. IMO we can just let
> the count accumulate.
>
> But if you insist this loose end should be addressed, perhaps Davide has
> some thoughts on how to best do this?

The counter is 64bit, so at 1M IRQ/s will take about 585K years to
saturate. But from a symmetry POV, it may be better to clear it. Maybe
with a kernel-side eventfd_read()?


- Davide


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