On Thu, Mar 16, 2017 at 03:08:07PM +0100, Radim Krčmář wrote:
> 2017-03-16 09:24-0400, Gabriel L. Somlo:
> > On Thu, Mar 16, 2017 at 01:41:28AM +0200, Michael S. Tsirkin wrote:
> > > On Wed, Mar 15, 2017 at 07:35:34PM -0400, Gabriel L. Somlo wrote:
> > > > On Wed, Mar 15, 2017 at 11:22:18PM +0200, Michael S. Tsirkin wrote:
> > > > > Guests running Mac OS 5, 6, and 7 (Leopard through Lion) have a 
> > > > > problem:
> > > > > unless explicitly provided with kernel command line argument
> > > > > "idlehalt=0" they'd implicitly assume MONITOR and MWAIT availability,
> > > > > without checking CPUID.
> > > > > 
> > > > > We currently emulate that as a NOP but on VMX we can do better: let
> > > > > guest stop the CPU until timer, IPI or memory change.  CPU will be 
> > > > > busy
> > > > > but that isn't any worse than a NOP emulation.
> > > > > 
> > > > > Note that mwait within guests is not the same as on real hardware
> > > > > because halt causes an exit while mwait doesn't.  For this reason it
> > > > > might not be a good idea to use the regular MWAIT flag in CPUID to
> > > > > signal this capability.  Add a flag in the hypervisor leaf instead.
> > > > > 
> > > > > Additionally, we add a capability for QEMU - e.g. if it knows there's 
> > > > > an
> > > > > isolated CPU dedicated for the VCPU it can set the standard MWAIT flag
> > > > > to improve guest behaviour.
> > > > 
> > > > Same behavior (on the mac pro 1,1 running F22 with custom-compiled
> > > > kernel from kvm git master, plus this patch on top).
> > > > 
> > > > The OS X 10.7 kernel hangs (or at least progresses extremely slowly)
> > > > on boot, does not bring up guest graphical interface within the first
> > > > 10 minutes that I waited for it. That, in contrast with the default
> > > > nop-based emulation where the guest comes up within 30 seconds.
> > > 
> > > 
> > > Thanks a lot, meanwhile I'll try to write a unit-test and experiment
> > > with various behaviours.
> > > 
> > > > I will run another round of tests on a newer Mac (4-year-old macbook
> > > > air) and report back tomorrow.
> > > > 
> > > > Going off on a tangent, why would encouraging otherwise well-behaved
> > > > guests (like linux ones, for example) to use MWAIT be desirable to
> > > > begin with ? Is it a matter of minimizing the overhead associated with
> > > > exiting and re-entering L1 ? Because if so, AFAIR staying inside L1 and
> > > > running guest-mode MWAIT in a tight loop will actually waste the host
> > > > CPU without the opportunity to yield to some other L0 thread. Sorry if
> > > > I fell into the middle of an ongoing conversation on this and missed
> > > > most of the relevant context, in which case please feel free to ignore
> > > > me... :)
> > > > 
> > > > Thanks,
> > > > --G
> > > 
> > > It's just some experiments I'm running, I'm not ready to describe it
> > > yet. I thought this part might be useful to at least some guests, so
> > > trying to upstream it right now.
> > 
> > OK, so on a macbook air running F25 and the latest kvm git master plus
> > your v5 patch (4.11.0-rc2+), things appear to work.
> > 
> > host-side cpuid output:
> > eax=0x000040 ebx=0x000040 ecx=0x000003 edx=0x021120
> > 
> > guest-side cpuid output:
> > eax=00000000 ebx=00000000 ecx=0x000003 edx=00000000
> > 
> > processor   : 3
> > vendor_id   : GenuineIntel
> > cpu family  : 6
> > model               : 42
> > model name  : Intel(R) Core(TM) i7-2677M CPU @ 1.80GHz
> > stepping    : 7
> > microcode   : 0x29
> > cpu MHz             : 1157.849
> > cache size  : 4096 KB
> > physical id : 0
> > siblings    : 4
> > core id             : 1
> > cpu cores   : 2
> > apicid              : 3
> > initial apicid      : 3
> > fpu         : yes
> > fpu_exception       : yes
> > cpuid level : 13
> > wp          : yes
> > flags               : fpu vme de pse tsc msr pae mce cx8 apic sep mtrr pge 
> > mca cmov pat pse36 clflush dts acpi mmx fxsr sse sse2 ss ht tm pbe syscall 
> > nx rdtscp lm constant_tsc arch_perfmon pebs bts rep_good nopl xtopology 
> > nonstop_tsc cpuid aperfmperf pni pclmulqdq dtes64 monitor ds_cpl vmx smx 
> > est tm2 ssse3 cx16 xtpr pdcm pcid sse4_1 sse4_2 x2apic popcnt 
> > tsc_deadline_timer aes xsave avx lahf_lm tpr_shadow vnmi flexpriority ept 
> > vpid xsaveopt dtherm ida arat pln pts
> > bugs                :
> > bogomips    : 3604.68
> > clflush size        : 64
> > cache_alignment     : 64
> > address sizes       : 36 bits physical, 48 bits virtual
> > power management:
> > 
> > After studying your patch a bit more carefully (sorry, it's crazy
> > around here right now :) ) I realized you're simply trying to
> > (selectively) decide when to exit L1 and emulate as NOP vs. when to
> > just allow L1 to execute MONITOR & MWAIT natively.
> > 
> > Is that right ? Because if so, the issues I saw on my MacPro1,1 are
> > weird and inexplicable, given that allowing L>=1 to run MONITOR/MWAIT
> > natively was one of the options Alex Graf and Rene Rebe used back in
> > the very early days of OS X on QEMU, at the time I got involved with
> > that project. Here's part of an out of tree patch against 3.4 which did
> > just that, and worked as far as I remember on *any* MWAIT capable
> > intel chip I had access to back in 2010:
> > 
> > ##############################################################################
> > # 99-mwait.patch.kvm-kmod (Rene Rebe <r...@exactcode.de>) 2010-04-27
> > ##############################################################################
> > diff -pNarU5 linux-3.4/arch/x86/kvm/cpuid.c 
> > linux-3.4-mac/arch/x86/kvm/cpuid.c
> > --- linux-3.4/arch/x86/kvm/cpuid.c  2012-05-20 18:29:13.000000000 -0400
> > +++ linux-3.4-mac/arch/x86/kvm/cpuid.c      2012-10-09 11:42:59.921215750 
> > -0400
> > @@ -222,11 +222,11 @@ static int do_cpuid_ent(struct kvm_cpuid
> >             f_nx | 0 /* Reserved */ | F(MMXEXT) | F(MMX) |
> >             F(FXSR) | F(FXSR_OPT) | f_gbpages | f_rdtscp |
> >             0 /* Reserved */ | f_lm | F(3DNOWEXT) | F(3DNOW);
> >     /* cpuid 1.ecx */
> >     const u32 kvm_supported_word4_x86_features =
> > -           F(XMM3) | F(PCLMULQDQ) | 0 /* DTES64, MONITOR */ |
> > +           F(XMM3) | F(PCLMULQDQ) | F(MWAIT) /* DTES64, MONITOR */ |
> >             0 /* DS-CPL, VMX, SMX, EST */ |
> >             0 /* TM2 */ | F(SSSE3) | 0 /* CNXT-ID */ | 0 /* Reserved */ |
> >             F(FMA) | F(CX16) | 0 /* xTPR Update, PDCM */ |
> >             0 /* Reserved, DCA */ | F(XMM4_1) |
> >             F(XMM4_2) | F(X2APIC) | F(MOVBE) | F(POPCNT) |
> > diff -pNarU5 linux-3.4/arch/x86/kvm/svm.c linux-3.4-mac/arch/x86/kvm/svm.c
> > --- linux-3.4/arch/x86/kvm/svm.c    2012-05-20 18:29:13.000000000 -0400
> > +++ linux-3.4-mac/arch/x86/kvm/svm.c        2012-10-09 11:44:41.598997481 
> > -0400
> > @@ -1102,12 +1102,10 @@ static void init_vmcb(struct vcpu_svm *s
> >     set_intercept(svm, INTERCEPT_VMSAVE);
> >     set_intercept(svm, INTERCEPT_STGI);
> >     set_intercept(svm, INTERCEPT_CLGI);
> >     set_intercept(svm, INTERCEPT_SKINIT);
> >     set_intercept(svm, INTERCEPT_WBINVD);
> > -   set_intercept(svm, INTERCEPT_MONITOR);
> > -   set_intercept(svm, INTERCEPT_MWAIT);
> >     set_intercept(svm, INTERCEPT_XSETBV);
> >  
> >     control->iopm_base_pa = iopm_base;
> >     control->msrpm_base_pa = __pa(svm->msrpm);
> >     control->int_ctl = V_INTR_MASKING_MASK;
> > diff -pNarU5 linux-3.4/arch/x86/kvm/vmx.c linux-3.4-mac/arch/x86/kvm/vmx.c
> > --- linux-3.4/arch/x86/kvm/vmx.c    2012-05-20 18:29:13.000000000 -0400
> > +++ linux-3.4-mac/arch/x86/kvm/vmx.c        2012-10-09 11:42:59.925215977 
> > -0400
> > @@ -1938,11 +1938,11 @@ static __init void nested_vmx_setup_ctls
> >             nested_vmx_procbased_ctls_low, nested_vmx_procbased_ctls_high);
> >     nested_vmx_procbased_ctls_low = 0;
> >     nested_vmx_procbased_ctls_high &=
> >             CPU_BASED_VIRTUAL_INTR_PENDING | CPU_BASED_USE_TSC_OFFSETING |
> >             CPU_BASED_HLT_EXITING | CPU_BASED_INVLPG_EXITING |
> > -           CPU_BASED_MWAIT_EXITING | CPU_BASED_CR3_LOAD_EXITING |
> > +           CPU_BASED_CR3_LOAD_EXITING |
> >             CPU_BASED_CR3_STORE_EXITING |
> >  #ifdef CONFIG_X86_64
> >             CPU_BASED_CR8_LOAD_EXITING | CPU_BASED_CR8_STORE_EXITING |
> >  #endif
> >             CPU_BASED_MOV_DR_EXITING | CPU_BASED_UNCOND_IO_EXITING |
> > @@ -2404,12 +2404,10 @@ static __init int setup_vmcs_config(stru
> >           CPU_BASED_CR3_LOAD_EXITING |
> >           CPU_BASED_CR3_STORE_EXITING |
> >           CPU_BASED_USE_IO_BITMAPS |
> >           CPU_BASED_MOV_DR_EXITING |
> >           CPU_BASED_USE_TSC_OFFSETING |
> > -         CPU_BASED_MWAIT_EXITING |
> > -         CPU_BASED_MONITOR_EXITING |
> >           CPU_BASED_INVLPG_EXITING |
> >           CPU_BASED_RDPMC_EXITING;
> >  
> >     opt = CPU_BASED_TPR_SHADOW |
> >           CPU_BASED_USE_MSR_BITMAPS |
> > 
> > If all you're trying to do is (selectively) revert to this behavior,
> > that "shouldn't" mess it up for the MacPro either, so I'm thoroughly
> > confused at this point :)
> > 
> > Back in 2010, running MWAIT in L>=1  behaved 100% exactly like a NOP,
> > didn't power down the physical CPU, just immediately moved on to the
> > next instruction. As such, there was no power saving and no
> > opportunity to yield to another L0 thread either, unlike with NOP
> > emulation at L0.
> > 
> > Did that change on newer Intel chips (i.e., is guest-mode MWAIT now
> > doing something smarter than just acting as a guest-mode NOP) ?
> 
> Probably, MWAIT in new intel chips enters power saving mode normally.
> 
> If hardware-executed MWAIT acted as a NOP in your old chip, then that
> shouldn't be a problem either ...  Maybe OS X gets confused into doing
> something really dumb because we do not expose the MONITOR/MWAIT feature
> bit correctly.
> 
> Can you try this QEMU patch on the old hardware?
> 
> diff --git a/target/i386/cpu.c b/target/i386/cpu.c
> index 7aa762245a54..4b112e12188a 100644
> --- a/target/i386/cpu.c
> +++ b/target/i386/cpu.c
> @@ -2764,10 +2764,7 @@ void cpu_x86_cpuid(CPUX86State *env, uint32_t index, 
> uint32_t count,
>          break;
>      case 5:
>          /* mwait info: needed for Core compatibility */
> -        *eax = 0; /* Smallest monitor-line size in bytes */
> -        *ebx = 0; /* Largest monitor-line size in bytes */
> -        *ecx = CPUID_MWAIT_EMX | CPUID_MWAIT_IBE;
> -        *edx = 0;
> +        host_cpuid(index, 0, eax, ebx, ecx, edx);
>          break;
>      case 6:
>          /* Thermal and Power Leaf */
> diff --git a/target/i386/kvm.c b/target/i386/kvm.c
> index 55865dbee0aa..1eb78291b093 100644
> --- a/target/i386/kvm.c
> +++ b/target/i386/kvm.c
> @@ -360,6 +360,7 @@ uint32_t kvm_arch_get_supported_cpuid(KVMState *s, 
> uint32_t function,
>          if (!kvm_irqchip_in_kernel()) {
>              ret &= ~CPUID_EXT_X2APIC;
>          }
> +        ret |= CPUID_EXT_MONITOR;
>      } else if (function == 6 && reg == R_EAX) {
>          ret |= CPUID_6_EAX_ARAT; /* safe to allow because of emulated APIC */
>      } else if (function == 7 && index == 0 && reg == R_EBX) {
> 
> 
> Thanks.

No change, still hangs on boot.

Thanks,
--G
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