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[Qemu-devel] Re: [PATCH 3/8] v2: add info numa monitor command


From: Anthony Liguori
Subject: [Qemu-devel] Re: [PATCH 3/8] v2: add info numa monitor command
Date: Tue, 16 Dec 2008 18:11:32 -0600
User-agent: Thunderbird 2.0.0.17 (X11/20080925)

Andre Przywara wrote:
Anthony Liguori wrote:

So the current code limits us to 64-cpus? That's a pretty serious limitation IMHO.
I know, but I was hoping that a simpler patch would be easier to merge. So I am happy to fix it later and lift this restriction. I searched for some kind of variable length bitmap type (like Linux' cpu_set_t) already being used in QEMU, but couldn't find anything appropriate. Do you know something? If you look at the glibc cpu_set_t implementation (in bits/sched.h), you surely want to make this a separate patch.

I don't know that there's anything immediately obvious to use.

I think that strongly suggests we're using the wrong structures for node_to_cpus--especially to be in the BIOS FW interface.
Ok, this could be a point, but is this BIOS FW interface really a stable interface we cannot change later easily? IMHO this is QEMU (and derived projects) only, which always provide a matching BIOS anyway.

What about if I prepare the BIOS FW interface for future expansion and stick to the current uint64_t type for now?

Please make the BIOS FW interface and the BIOS patch able to handle > 64 cpus. It's relatively painful to get stuff merged into Bochs and sync the BIOS. I don't want to have to go through that again in the near future once Jes gets wind of the fact that you're limiting us to 64 cpus ;-)

I can live with QEMU being limited to 64 cpus for now.

Regards,
Andre.

And by the way: 64 core machines are _not_ common today, especially not when hosting pure QEMU :-)

It all depends on your perspective. At any rate, the Core i7's reintroduce hyperthreading so you're looking at 16-way CPUs once the octal cores are released. I'm not sure the time frame, but I think 12-core CPUs are in the near future two from both Intel and AMD. A single 4-socket board will be 64-way. A multi-node system will easily be > 64-way. This isn't long term future things, this is stuff that'll be relatively common next year.

Regards,

Anthony Liguori





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