Re: [PATCH v2] KVM: x86: do not go through vcpu in __get_kvmclock_ns

From: Radim KrÄmÃÅ
Date: Wed Nov 16 2016 - 13:10:20 EST


2016-11-16 12:27-0500, Paolo Bonzini:
>> > + if (!ka->use_master_clock)
>> > + return ktime_get_boot_ns() + ka->kvmclock_offset;
>> >
>> > - return ns;
>> > + hv_clock.tsc_timestamp = ka->master_cycle_now;
>> > + hv_clock.system_time = ka->master_kernel_ns + ka->kvmclock_offset;
>> > + kvm_get_time_scale(NSEC_PER_SEC, __this_cpu_read(cpu_tsc_khz) * 1000LL,
>> > + &hv_clock.tsc_shift,
>> > + &hv_clock.tsc_to_system_mul);
>>
>> Doesn't this result in a minor drift with scaled clock, because the
>> guest can be combining two systems that approximate frequency?
>
> You mean instead of doing read_l1_tsc?

Yes, when we avoid the scaling and use host TSC directly.

>> 1) tsc_shift and tsc_to_system_mul for kvmclock scaling
>> 2) hardware TSC scaling ratio
>>
>> If we are on a 7654321 kHz TSC and TSC-ratio scale to 1234567 kHz and
>> then tsc_shift+tsc_to_system_mul kvmclock-scale to 1000000 kHz, we
>> should be using multipliers of
>> 0.161290204578564186163606151349022336533834941074459772460... and
>> 0.810000591300431649315104000025920018921613812778083328000...,
>> to achieve that. Those multipliers cannot be precisely expressed in
>> what we have (shifts and 64/32 bit multipliers with intermediate values
>> only up to 128 bits), so performing the scaling will result in slightly
>> incorrect frequency.
>>
>> The result of combining two operations that alter the freqency is quite
>> unlikely to cancel out and produce the same result as an operation that
>> uses a different shift+multiplier to scale in one step, so I think that
>> we aren't getting the same time as the guest with TSC-scaling is seeing.
>
> I think you get pretty good precision, since 30 fractional bits are more
> or less equivalent to nanosecond precision. For example, cutting the two
> ratios above to 30 fractional bits I get respectively 173184038/2^30
> and 869731512/2^30. Multiplying them gives 140279173/2^30 which matches
> exactly the fixed point representation of 1000000/7654321.
>
> Since the TSC scaling frequency has a larger precision (32 or 48 bits),
> you should get at most 1 ulp error, which is not bad.

True, it would take many years to accumulate into a second.

Thanks.