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xen-devel
[Xen-devel] Re: [Devel] Re: [RFC] Virtualization steps
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devel@xxxxxxxxxx |
Subject: |
[Xen-devel] Re: [Devel] Re: [RFC] Virtualization steps |
From: |
Kirill Korotaev <dev@xxxxxxxxxx> |
Date: |
Wed, 29 Mar 2006 04:55:01 +0400 |
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akpm@xxxxxxxx, Nick Piggin <nickpiggin@xxxxxxxxxxxx>, "xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx" <xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, sam@xxxxxxxxxx, linux-kernel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx, "Eric W. Biederman" <ebiederm@xxxxxxxxxxxx>, Alexey Kuznetsov <kuznet@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>, serue@xxxxxxxxxx, herbert@xxxxxxxxxxxx |
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Kirill Korotaev wrote:
Oh, after you come to an agreement and start posting patches, can you
also outline why we want this in the kernel (what it does that low
level virtualization doesn't, etc, etc), and how and why you've agreed
to implement it. Basically, some background and a summary of your
discussions for those who can't follow everything. Or is that a faq
item?
Nick, will be glad to shed some light on it.
First of all, what it does which low level virtualization can't:
- it allows to run 100 containers on 1GB RAM
(it is called containers, VE - Virtual Environments,
VPS - Virtual Private Servers).
- it has no much overhead (<1-2%), which is unavoidable with hardware
virtualization. For example, Xen has >20% overhead on disk I/O.
I think the Xen guys would disagree with you on this. Xen claims <3%
overhead on the XenSource site.
Where did you get these figures from? What Xen version did you test?
What was your configuration? Did you have kernel debugging enabled? You
can't just post numbers without the data to back it up, especially when
it conflicts greatly with the Xen developers statements. AFAIK Xen is
well on it's way to inclusion into the mainstream kernel.
I have no exact numbers in the hands as I'm in another country right now.
But! We tested Xen not long ago with iozone test suite and it gave
~20-30% disk I/O overhead. Recently we were testing CPU scheduler and
EDF scheduler gave me 33% overhead on some very simple loads with almost
busy loops inside VMs. It also was not providing any good fairness on
2CPU SMP system to my suprise. You can object to me, but better simply
retest it if interested yourself. There were other tests as well, which
reported very different overheads on Xen 3. I suppose Xen guys do such
measurements themself, no?
And I'm sure, they are constantly improving it, they are doing a good
work on it.
Thanks,
Kirill
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