Igor Mammedov <imamm...@redhat.com> writes: > On Tue, 05 Jan 2021 17:31:43 +0100 > Vitaly Kuznetsov <vkuzn...@redhat.com> wrote: > >> Igor Mammedov <imamm...@redhat.com> writes: >> >> > On Tue, 05 Jan 2021 12:50:05 +0100 >> > >> > I think there is a misunderstanding, idea was: >> > >> > cpu_initfn() { >> > //current set >> > cpu->default_hyperv_cpu_features = ACD >> > } >> > >> > compat_props_5.1 { >> > cpu.default_hyperv_cpu_features = AB >> > } >> > >> > compat_props_5.2 { >> > cpu.default_hyperv_cpu_features = ABC >> > } >> > >> >> ... >> >> > I was talking about CPU features/properties only, it doesn't apply to >> > other devices. >> > It makes sense for machine to have a knob to create onboard hyperv specific >> > devices if there is any (do we have any?). >> > >> > If there aren't any currently, I wouldn't bother with machine knob >> > and just use -cpu foo,hv_default=on or -device cpu,hv_default=on >> > like any other cpu feature. >> > >> >> We don't currently have any devices which are not 'CPU features' (in >> QEMU terminology), however, we already have Vmbus and I can easily >> imagine us implementing e.g. hartbeat/kvp/vss/... devices on top. We >> *may* want to enable these 'automatically' and that's what make >> '-machine' option preferable. It is, however, not a *must* right now and >> we can indeed wait until these devices appear and be happy with >> 'hv_default' -cpu option for now. We will, however, need to teach upper >> layers about the change when/if it happens. > > which makes me think we are trying to bite something that we shouldn't. > Do we really need this patch (QEMU knob) to magically enable subset of > features and/or devices for a specific OS flavor? > > It's job of upper layers to abstract low level QEMU details in to coarse > grained knobs (libvirt/virt-install/virt-manager/...). > For example virt-install may know that it installing a specific Windows > version, and can build a tailored for that OS configuration including > needed hyperv CPU features and hyperv specific devices. > (if I'm not mistaken libosinfo is used to get metadata for preferred > configuration, so perhaps this should become a patch for that library > and its direct users). > > What we actually lack is a documentation for preferred configuration > in docs/hyperv.txt, currently it just enumerates possible features. > We can just document a recommended 'best practices' there without > putting it in QEMU code and let upper layers to do their job in > the stack.
The problem we're facing here is that when a new enlightenment is implemented it takes forever to propagate to the whole stack. We don't have any different recommendations for different Windows versions, neither does genuine Hyper-V. The 'fine grained' mechanis we have just contributes to the creation of various Frankenstein configurations (which look nothing like real Hyper-V), people just google for 'Windows KVM slow', add something to their scripts and this keeps propagating. Every time I see a configuration with only a few 'hv_*' options I ask 'why don't you enable the rest?' and I'm yet to receive an answer different from 'hm, I don't know, I copied it from somewhere and it worked'. Setting 'hv_*' options individually should be considered debug only. -- Vitaly