The goal is to increase KVM_MAX_VCPUS without worrying about memory
impact of many small guests.
This is a second out of three major "dynamic" options:
1) size vcpu array at VM creation time
2) resize vcpu array when new VCPUs are created
3) use a lockless list/tree for VCPUs
The disadvantage of (1) is its requirement on userspace changes and
limited flexibility because userspace must provide the maximal count on
start. The main advantage is that kvm->vcpus will work like it does
now. It has been posted as "[PATCH 0/4] KVM: add KVM_CREATE_VM2 to
allow dynamic kvm->vcpus array",
http://www.mail-archive.com/linux-kernel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx/msg1377285.html
The main problem of (2), this series, is that we cannot extend the array
in place and therefore require some kind of protection when moving it.
RCU seems best, but it makes the code slower and harder to deal with.
The main advantage is that we do not need userspace changes.