On 1/23/24 11:52, Gerd Hoffmann wrote: > On Mon, Jan 22, 2024 at 01:11:52PM -0600, Brian J. Johnson wrote: >> On 1/18/24 09:46, Gerd Hoffmann wrote: >>> On Wed, Jan 10, 2024 at 04:43:47PM +0000, West, Catharine wrote: >>>> Disabling cache by default results in violation of BTG protections (if BTG >>>> enabled). >>>> BIOS cannot assume that cache is disabled before it executes as ACM may be >>>> required to enable NEM. >>>> >>>> Whatever solution needs to be done here cannot evict ACM-enabled NEM. >>> >>> Well, it's OVMF in a virtual machine. No boot guard involved. >>> So we could probably go for a OVMF-specific patch here. >>> >>> But I'd prefer to figure what exactly is happening here before going >>> down that route. An extreme slowdown just because we flip that bit >>> doesn't make sense to me. >>> >>>> Why is boot time increasing? >>> >>> Not clear. It seems to be the lzma uncompress of the firmware volume >>> in rom / pflash which is very slow. Also it is apparently only >>> triggered in case pci device assignment is used. >> >> I've seen extreme slowness on physical platforms when we've mixed up the >> MTRRs or page tables, causing code to be mapped uncached. >> >> Lzma uncompress of ROM could be pretty slow as well, if the ROM is being >> read uncached. Lzma probably reads the data a byte at a time, which is the >> worst case for uncached accesses. Since this is a VM, it's not actually >> uncached at the hardware level, but I don't know how QEMU/KVM handles >> uncached guest mappings.... It may be doing a VMEXIT for every byte. >> >> Anyway, I suggest double-checking your page tables and MTRRs. > > It happens very early at boot, before MTRRs are setup, running on the > initial page tables created by the OVMF reset vector. The initial page > tables have just 'accessed', 'dirty', 'read/write' and 'present' bits > set for the 0-4G identity mapping. > > It seems to have something to do with EPT. It does not happen on AMD > processors. It also does not happen when disabling EPT support in kvm > on the host machine. > > looked at kvm kernel traces, I don't see excessive vmexits.
This discussion evokes vague memories in me. I'll dump them here, but I have no idea if they will be useful. (They probably won't.) - edk2 commit 98f378a7be12 ("OvmfPkg/ResetVector: enable caching in initial page tables", 2013-09-24) - Linux (host) commit 879ae1880449 ("KVM: x86: obey KVM_X86_QUIRK_CD_NW_CLEARED in kvm_set_cr0()", 2015-11-04) Laszlo -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- Groups.io Links: You receive all messages sent to this group. View/Reply Online (#114202): https://edk2.groups.io/g/devel/message/114202 Mute This Topic: https://groups.io/mt/100367559/21656 Group Owner: devel+ow...@edk2.groups.io Unsubscribe: https://edk2.groups.io/g/devel/leave/9847357/21656/1706620634/xyzzy [arch...@mail-archive.com] -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-