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Re: [Xen-devel] VT is comically slow

To: xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: [Xen-devel] VT is comically slow
From: alex@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Date: 2006年7月06日 11:16:18 -0800
Delivery-date: 2006年7月06日 12:16:40 -0700
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Rik van Riel wrote:
> VT by itself seems fine, but once a VT domain is running a workload that
> is network intensive combined with a disk/cpu intensive workload, things
> get incredibly slow.
>
> Operations that take less than a second with either workload running
> alone can now take many seconds, sometimes the better part of a minute!
>
> Is this some limitation of the qemu device model?
We (Virtual Iron) are in a process of developing accelerated drivers for the 
HVM guests. Our goal for this effort is to get as close to native performance 
as possible and to make paravirtualization of guests unnecessary. The drivers 
currently support most flavors of RHEL, SLES and Windows. The early 
performance numbers are encouraging. Some numbers are many times faster than 
QEMU emulation and are close to native performance numbers (and we are just 
beginning to tune the performance).
Just to give people a flavor of the performance that we are getting, here are 
some preliminary results on Intel Woodcrest (51xx series), with a Gigabit 
network, with SAN storage and all of the VMs were 1 CPU. These numbers are 
very early, disks numbers are very good and we are still tuning the network 
numbers.
Bonnie-SAN - bigger is better RHEL-4.0 (32-bit) VI-accel 
RHEL-4.0(32-bit)
Write, KB/sec 52,106 49,500
Read, KB/sec 59,392 57,186 
netperf - bigger is better RHEL-4.0 (32-bit) VI-accel 
RHEL-4.0(32-bit)
tcp req/resp (t/sec) 6,831 5,648
SPECjbb2000 - bigger is better RHEL-4.0 (32-bit) VI-accel 
RHEL-4.0(32-bit)
JRockit JVM thruput 43,061 40,364
This code is modeled on Xen backend/frontend architecture concepts and will be 
GPLed. 
 
-Alex V.
Alex Vasilevsky
Chief Technology Officer, Founder
Virtual Iron Software, Inc
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