Patch name: VM Power Management Brief description: Verify VM power management in virtualized environments Test Flag: Tested-by Tester name: yong.liu at intel.com Test environment: OS: Fedora20 3.11.10-301.fc20.x86_64 GCC: gcc version 4.8.3 20140911 CPU: Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E5-2680 v2 @ 2.80GHz NIC: Intel Corporation 82599ES 10-Gigabit SFI/SFP+ Network Connection [8086:10fb] Test Tool Chain information: Qemu: 1.6.1 libvirt: 1.1.3 Guest OS: Fedora20 3.11.10-301.fc20.x86_64 Guest GCC: gcc version 4.8.3 20140624
Commit ID: 72d3e7ad3183f42f8b9fb3bb1c12b3e1b39eef39 Detailed Testing information DPDK SW Configuration: Default x86_64-native-linuxapp-gcc configuration Test Result Summary: Total 7 cases, 7 passed, 0 failed Test Case - name: VM Power Management Channel Test Case - Description: Check vm power management communication channels can successfully connected Test Case -command / instruction: Create folder in system temporary filesystem for power monitor socket mkdir -p /tmp/powermonitor Configure VM XML and pin VCPUs to specified CPUs <vcpu placement='static'>5</vcpu> <cputune> <vcpupin vcpu='0' cpuset='1'/> <vcpupin vcpu='1' cpuset='2'/> <vcpupin vcpu='2' cpuset='3'/> <vcpupin vcpu='3' cpuset='4'/> <vcpupin vcpu='4' cpuset='5'/> </cputune> Configure VM XML to set up virtio serial ports <channel type='unix'> <source mode='bind' path='/tmp/powermonitor/<vm_name>.<channel_num>'/> <target type='virtio' name='virtio.serial.port.poweragent.<channel_num>'/> <address type='virtio-serial' controller='0' bus='0' port='4'/> </channel> Run power-manager monitor in Host ./build/vm_power_mgr -c 0x3 -n 4 Startup VM and run guest_vm_power_mgr guest_vm_power_mgr -c 0x1f -n 4 -- -i Add vm in host and check vm_power_mgr can get frequency normally vmpower> add_vm <vm_name> vmpower> add_channels <vm_name> all vmpower> get_cpu_freq <core_num> Check vcpu/cpu mapping can be detected normally vmpower> show_vm <vm_name> Test Case - expected test result: VM power management communication channels can sucessfully connected and host can get vm core information Test Case - name: VM Power Management Numa Test Case - Description: Check vm power management support manage cores in different sockets Test Case -command / instruction: Get core and socket information by cpu_layout ./tools/cpu_layout.py Configure VM XML to pin VCPUs on Socket1: Repeat Case1 Check vcpu/cpu mapping can be detected normally vmpower> show_vm <vm_name> Test Case - expected test result: VM power management communication channels can sucessfully connected and show correct vm core information Test Case - name: VM scale cpu frequency down Test Case - Description: Check vm power management support VM configure self cores frequency down Test Case -command / instruction: Setup VM power management environment Send cpu frequency down hints to Host vmpower(guest)> set_cpu_freq 0 down Verify the frequency of physical CPU has been scaled down correctly vmpower> get_cpu_freq 1 Core 1 frequency: 2700000 Check other CPUs' frequency is not affected by actions above Check if the other VM works fine (if they use different CPUs) Repeat above actions several times Test Case - expected test result: Frequency for VM's core can be scaling down normally Test Case - name: VM scale cpu frequency up Test Case - Description: Check vm power management support VM configure self cores frequency up Test Case -command / instruction: Setup VM power management environment Send cpu frequency up hints to Host vmpower(guest)> set_cpu_freq 0 up Verify the frequency of physical CPU has been scaled up correctly vmpower> get_cpu_freq 1 Check other CPUs' frequency is not affected by actions above Check if the other VM works fine (if they use different CPUs) Repeat above actions several times Test Case - expected test result: Frequency for VM's core can be scaling up normally Test Case - name: VM Scale CPU Frequency to Min Test Case - Description: Check vm power management support VM configure self cores frequency to minimum Test Case -command / instruction: Setup VM power management environment Send cpu frequency scale to minimum hints vmpower(guest)> set_cpu_freq 0 min Verify the frequency of physical CPU has been scale to min correctly vmpower> get_cpu_freq 1 Core 1 frequency: 1200000 Check other CPUs' frequency is not affected by actions above check if the other VM works fine (if they use different CPUs) Test Case - expected test result: Frequency for VM's core can be scaling to minimum normally Test Case - name: VM Scale CPU Frequency to Max Test Case - Description: Check vm power management support VM configure self cores frequency to maximum Test Case -command / instruction: Setup VM power management environment Send cpu frequency scale to maximum hints vmpower(guest)> set_cpu_freq 0 max Verify the frequency of physical CPU has been scale to max correctly vmpower> get_cpu_freq 1 Core 1 frequency: 2800000 Check other CPUs' frequency is not affected by actions above check if the other VM works fine (if they use different CPUs) Test Case - expected test result: Frequency for VM's core can be scaling to maximum normally Test Case - name: VM Power Management Multi VMs Test Case - Description: Check vm power management support multiple VMs Test Case -command / instruction: Setup VM power management environment for VM1 Setup VM power management environment for VM2 Run power-manager in Host ./build/vm_power_mgr -c 0x3 -n 4 Startup VM1 and VM2 Add VM1 in host and check vm_power_mgr can get frequency normally vmpower> add_vm <vm1_name> vmpower> add_channels <vm1_name> all vmpower> get_cpu_freq <core_num> Add VM2 in host and check vm_power_mgr can get frequency normally vmpower> add_vm <vm2_name> vmpower> add_channels <vm2_name> all vmpower> get_cpu_freq <core_num> Check VM1 and VM2 cpu frequency can by modified by guest_cli Poweroff VM2 and remove VM2 from host vm_power_mgr vmpower> rm_vm <vm2_name> Test Case - expected test result: VM power management supported multiple VMs add and remove > -----Original Message----- > From: Carew, Alan > Sent: Monday, October 13, 2014 3:36 AM > To: dev at dpdk.org > Cc: Liu, Yong > Subject: [PATCH v4 00/10] VM Power Management > > Virtual Machine Power Management. > > The following patches add two DPDK sample applications and an alternate > implementation of librte_power for use in virtualized environments. > The idea is to provide librte_power functionality from within a VM to address > the lack of MSRs to facilitate frequency changes from within a VM. > It is ideally suited for Haswell which provides per core frequency scaling. > > The current librte_power affects frequency changes via the acpi-cpufreq > 'userspace' power governor, accessed via sysfs. > > General Overview:(more information in each patch that follows). > The VM Power Management solution provides two components: > > 1)VM: Allows for the a DPDK application in a VM to reuse the librte_power > interface. Each lcore opens a Virto-Serial endpoint channel to the host, > where the re-implementation of librte_power simply forwards the requests > for > frequency change to a host based monitor. The host monitor itself uses > librte_power. > Each lcore channel corresponds to a > serial device '/dev/virtio-ports/virtio.serial.port.poweragent.<lcore_num>' > which is opened in non-blocking mode. > While each Virtual CPU can be mapped to multiple physical CPUs it is > recommended that each vCPU should be mapped to a single core only. > > 2)Host: The host monitor is managed by a CLI, it allows for adding > qemu/KVM > virtual machines and associated channels to the monitor, manually changing > CPU frequency, inspecting the state of VMs, vCPU to pCPU pinning and > managing > channels. > Host channel endpoints are Virto-Serial endpoints configured as AF_UNIX > file > sockets which follow a specific naming convention > i.e /tmp/powermonitor/<vm_name>.<channel_number>, > each channel has an 1:1 mapping to a VM endpoint > i.e. /dev/virtio-ports/virtio.serial.port.poweragent.<lcore_num> > Host channel endpoints are opened in non-blocking mode and are > monitored via epoll. > Requests over each channel to change frequency are forwarded to the > original > librte_power. > > Channels must be manually configured as qemu-kvm command line > arguments or > libvirt domain definition(xml) e.g. > <controller type='virtio-serial' index='0'> > <address type='pci' domain='0x0000' bus='0x00' slot='0x06' function='0x0'/> > </controller> > <channel type='unix'> > <source mode='bind' > path='/tmp/powermonitor/<vm_name>.<channel_num>'/> > <target type='virtio' name='virtio.serial.port.poweragent.<channel_num>/> > <address type='virtio-serial' controller='0' bus='0' port='<N>'/> > </channel> > > Where multiple channels can be configured by specifying multiple <channel> > elements, by replacing <vm_name>, <channel_num>. > <N>(port number) should be incremented by 1 for each new channel > element. > More information on Virtio-Serial can be found here: > http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Features/VirtioSerial > To enable the Hypervisor creation of channels, the host endpoint directory > must be created with qemu permissions: > mkdir /tmp/powermonitor > chown qemu:qemu /tmp/powermonitor > > The host application runs on two separate lcores: > Core N) CLI: For management of Virtual Machines adding channels to > Monitor thread, > inspecting state and manually setting CPU frequency [PATCH 02/09] > Core N+1) Monitor Thread: An epoll based infinite loop that waits on channel > events > from VMs and calls the corresponding librte_power functions. > > A sample application is also provided to run on Virtual Machines, this > application provides a CLI to manually set the frequency of a > vCPU[PATCH 08/09] > > The current l3fwd-power sample application can also be run on a VM. > > Changes in V4: > Fixed double free of channel during VM shutdown. > > Changes in V3: > Fixed crash in Guest CLI when host application is not running. > Renamed #defines to be more specific to the module they belong > Added vCPU pinning via CLI > > Changes in V2: > Runtime selection of librte_power implementations. > Updated Unit tests to cover librte_power changes. > PATCH[0/3] was sent twice, again as PATCH[0/4] > Miscellaneous fixes. > > Alan Carew (10): > Channel Manager and Monitor for VM Power Management(Host). > VM Power Management CLI(Host). > CPU Frequency Power Management(Host). > VM Power Management application and Makefile. > VM Power Management CLI(Guest). > VM communication channels for VM Power Management(Guest). > librte_power common interface for Guest and Host > Packet format for VM Power Management(Host and Guest). > Build system integration for VM Power Management(Guest and Host) > VM Power Management Unit Tests > > app/test/Makefile | 3 +- > app/test/autotest_data.py | 26 + > app/test/test_power.c | 445 +----------- > app/test/test_power_acpi_cpufreq.c | 544 ++++++++++++++ > app/test/test_power_kvm_vm.c | 308 ++++++++ > examples/vm_power_manager/Makefile | 57 ++ > examples/vm_power_manager/channel_manager.c | 804 > +++++++++++++++++++++ > examples/vm_power_manager/channel_manager.h | 314 ++++++++ > examples/vm_power_manager/channel_monitor.c | 231 ++++++ > examples/vm_power_manager/channel_monitor.h | 102 +++ > examples/vm_power_manager/guest_cli/Makefile | 56 ++ > examples/vm_power_manager/guest_cli/main.c | 87 +++ > examples/vm_power_manager/guest_cli/main.h | 52 ++ > .../guest_cli/vm_power_cli_guest.c | 155 ++++ > .../guest_cli/vm_power_cli_guest.h | 55 ++ > examples/vm_power_manager/main.c | 117 +++ > examples/vm_power_manager/main.h | 52 ++ > examples/vm_power_manager/power_manager.c | 244 +++++++ > examples/vm_power_manager/power_manager.h | 188 +++++ > examples/vm_power_manager/vm_power_cli.c | 669 > +++++++++++++++++ > examples/vm_power_manager/vm_power_cli.h | 47 ++ > lib/librte_power/Makefile | 3 +- > lib/librte_power/channel_commands.h | 77 ++ > lib/librte_power/guest_channel.c | 162 +++++ > lib/librte_power/guest_channel.h | 89 +++ > lib/librte_power/rte_power.c | 540 ++------------ > lib/librte_power/rte_power.h | 120 ++- > lib/librte_power/rte_power_acpi_cpufreq.c | 545 ++++++++++++++ > lib/librte_power/rte_power_acpi_cpufreq.h | 192 +++++ > lib/librte_power/rte_power_common.h | 39 + > lib/librte_power/rte_power_kvm_vm.c | 135 ++++ > lib/librte_power/rte_power_kvm_vm.h | 179 +++++ > 32 files changed, 5725 insertions(+), 912 deletions(-) > create mode 100644 app/test/test_power_acpi_cpufreq.c > create mode 100644 app/test/test_power_kvm_vm.c > create mode 100644 examples/vm_power_manager/Makefile > create mode 100644 examples/vm_power_manager/channel_manager.c > create mode 100644 examples/vm_power_manager/channel_manager.h > create mode 100644 examples/vm_power_manager/channel_monitor.c > create mode 100644 examples/vm_power_manager/channel_monitor.h > create mode 100644 examples/vm_power_manager/guest_cli/Makefile > create mode 100644 examples/vm_power_manager/guest_cli/main.c > create mode 100644 examples/vm_power_manager/guest_cli/main.h > create mode 100644 > examples/vm_power_manager/guest_cli/vm_power_cli_guest.c > create mode 100644 > examples/vm_power_manager/guest_cli/vm_power_cli_guest.h > create mode 100644 examples/vm_power_manager/main.c > create mode 100644 examples/vm_power_manager/main.h > create mode 100644 examples/vm_power_manager/power_manager.c > create mode 100644 examples/vm_power_manager/power_manager.h > create mode 100644 examples/vm_power_manager/vm_power_cli.c > create mode 100644 examples/vm_power_manager/vm_power_cli.h > create mode 100644 lib/librte_power/channel_commands.h > create mode 100644 lib/librte_power/guest_channel.c > create mode 100644 lib/librte_power/guest_channel.h > create mode 100644 lib/librte_power/rte_power_acpi_cpufreq.c > create mode 100644 lib/librte_power/rte_power_acpi_cpufreq.h > create mode 100644 lib/librte_power/rte_power_common.h > create mode 100644 lib/librte_power/rte_power_kvm_vm.c > create mode 100644 lib/librte_power/rte_power_kvm_vm.h > > -- > 1.9.3