This gains a few clock cycles per vmexit. On Intel there is no need
anymore to enable the interrupts in vmx_handle_external_intr, since
we are using the "acknowledge interrupt on exit" feature. AMD
needs to do that, and must be careful to avoid the interrupt shadow.
Signed-off-by: Paolo Bonzini <pbonzini@redhat.com>
static void svm_handle_external_intr(struct kvm_vcpu *vcpu)
{
local_irq_enable();
+ /*
+ * We must have an instruction with interrupts enabled, so
+ * the timer interrupt isn't delayed by the interrupt shadow.
+ */
+ asm("nop");
+ local_irq_disable();
}
static void svm_sched_in(struct kvm_vcpu *vcpu, int cpu)
"push %[sp]\n\t"
#endif
"pushf\n\t"
- "orl $0x200, (%%" _ASM_SP ")\n\t"
__ASM_SIZE(push) " $%c[cs]\n\t"
"call *%[entry]\n\t"
:
[ss]"i"(__KERNEL_DS),
[cs]"i"(__KERNEL_CS)
);
- } else
- local_irq_enable();
+ }
}
static bool vmx_has_high_real_mode_segbase(void)
++vcpu->stat.exits;
- /*
- * We must have an instruction between local_irq_enable() and
- * kvm_guest_exit(), so the timer interrupt isn't delayed by
- * the interrupt shadow. The stat.exits increment will do nicely.
- * But we need to prevent reordering, hence this barrier():
- */
- barrier();
-
- guest_exit();
+ guest_exit_irqoff();
+ local_irq_enable();
preempt_enable();
vcpu->srcu_idx = srcu_read_lock(&vcpu->kvm->srcu);