Zachary Amsden wrote:
In general, I/O in a virtual guest is subject to performance problems. The I/O can not be completed physically, but must be virtualized. This
means trapping and decoding port I/O instructions from the guest OS. Not only is the trap for a #GP heavyweight, both in the processor and
the hypervisor (which usually has a complex #GP path), but this forces
the hypervisor to decode the individual instruction which has faulted. Worse, even with hardware assist such as VT, the exit reason alone is
not sufficient to determine the true nature of the faulting instruction,
requiring a complex and costly instruction decode and simulation.
This patch provides hypercalls for the i386 port I/O instructions, which
vastly helps guests which use native-style drivers. For certain VMI
workloads, this provides a performance boost of up to 30%. We expect
KVM and lguest to be able to achieve similar gains on I/O intensive
workloads.
What about cost on hardware?