How DNS misnaming distorts internet topology mapping
Ming Zhang, Yaoping Ruan, et al.
USENIX ATC 2006
Currently, I/O device virtualization models in virtual machine (VM) environments require involvement of a virtual machine monitor (VMM) and/or a privileged VM for each I/O operation, which may turn out to be a performance bottleneck for systems with high I/O demands, especially those equipped with modern high speed interconnects such as InfiniBand. In this paper, we propose a new device virtualization model called VMM-bypass I/O, which extends the idea of OS-bypass originated from user-level communication. Essentially, VMM-bypass allows time-critical I/O operations to be carried out directly in guest VMs without involvement of the VMM and/or a privileged VM. By exploiting the intelligence found in modern high speed network interfaces, VMM-bypass can significantly improve I/O and communication performance for VMs without sacrificing safety or isolation. To demonstrate the idea of VMM-bypass, we have developed a prototype called Xen-IB, which offers InfiniBand virtualization support in the Xen 3.0 VM environment. Xen-IB runs with current InfiniBand hardware and does not require modifications to existing user-level applications or kernel-level drivers that use InfiniBand. Our performance measurements show that Xen-IB is able to achieve nearly the same raw performance as the original InfiniBand driver running in a non-virtualized environment.
Ming Zhang, Yaoping Ruan, et al.
USENIX ATC 2006
Erich P. Stuntebeck, John S. Davis II, et al.
HotMobile 2008
Pradip Bose
VTS 1998
Raymond Wu, Jie Lu
ITA Conference 2007