1# CPU 2 3Cloud Hypervisor has many options when it comes to the creation of virtual 4CPUs. This document aims to explain what Cloud Hypervisor is capable of and 5how it can be used to meet the needs of very different use cases. 6 7## Options 8 9`CpusConfig` or what is known as `--cpus` from the CLI perspective is the way 10to set vCPUs options for Cloud Hypervisor. 11 12```rust 13struct CpusConfig { 14 boot_vcpus: u8, 15 max_vcpus: u8, 16 topology: Option<CpuTopology>, 17 kvm_hyperv: bool, 18 max_phys_bits: u8, 19 affinity: Option<Vec<CpuAffinity>>, 20 features: CpuFeatures, 21} 22``` 23 24``` 25--cpus boot=<boot_vcpus>,max=<max_vcpus>,topology=<threads_per_core>:<cores_per_die>:<dies_per_package>:<packages>,kvm_hyperv=on|off,max_phys_bits=<maximum_number_of_physical_bits>,affinity=<list_of_vcpus_with_their_associated_cpuset>,features=<list_of_features_to_enable> 26``` 27 28### `boot` 29 30Number of vCPUs present at boot time. 31 32This option allows to define a specific number of vCPUs to be present at the 33time the VM is started. This option is mandatory when using the `--cpus` 34parameter. If `--cpus` is not specified, this option takes the default value 35of `1`, starting the VM with a single vCPU. 36 37Value is an unsigned integer of 8 bits. 38 39_Example_ 40 41``` 42--cpus boot=2 43``` 44 45### `max` 46 47Maximum number of vCPUs. 48 49This option defines the maximum number of vCPUs that can be assigned to the VM. 50In particular, this option is used when looking for CPU hotplug as it lets the 51provide an indication about how many vCPUs might be needed later during the 52runtime of the VM. 53For instance, if booting the VM with 2 vCPUs and a maximum of 6 vCPUs, it means 54up to 4 vCPUs can be added later at runtime by resizing the VM. 55 56The value must be greater than or equal to the number of boot vCPUs. 57The value is an unsigned integer of 8 bits. 58 59By default this option takes the value of `boot`, meaning vCPU hotplug is not 60expected and can't be performed. 61 62_Example_ 63 64``` 65--cpus max=3 66``` 67 68### `topology` 69 70Topology of the guest platform. 71 72This option gives the user a way to describe the exact topology that should be 73exposed to the guest. It can be useful to describe to the guest the same 74topology found on the host as it allows for proper usage of the resources and 75is a way to achieve better performances. 76 77The topology is described through the following structure: 78 79```rust 80struct CpuTopology { 81 threads_per_core: u8, 82 cores_per_die: u8, 83 dies_per_package: u8, 84 packages: u8, 85} 86``` 87 88or the following syntax through the CLI: 89 90``` 91topology=<threads_per_core>:<cores_per_die>:<dies_per_package>:<packages> 92``` 93 94By default the topology will be `1:1:1:1`. 95 96_Example_ 97 98``` 99--cpus boot=2,topology=1:1:2:1 100``` 101 102### `kvm_hyperv` 103 104Enable KVM Hyper-V emulation. 105 106When turned on, this option relies on KVM to emulate the synthetic interrupt 107controller (SynIC) along with synthetic timers expected by a Windows guest. 108A Windows guest usually runs on top of Microsoft Hyper-V, therefore expects 109these synthetic devices to be present. That's why KVM provides a way to emulate 110them and avoids failures running a Windows guest with Cloud Hypervisor. 111 112By default this option is turned off. 113 114_Example_ 115 116``` 117--cpus kvm_hyperv=on 118``` 119 120### `max_phys_bits` 121 122Maximum size for guest's addressable space. 123 124This option defines the maximum number of physical bits for all vCPUs, which 125sets a limit for the size of the guest's addressable space. This is mainly 126useful for debug purpose. 127 128The value is an unsigned integer of 8 bits. 129 130_Example_ 131 132``` 133--cpus max_phys_bits=40 134``` 135 136### `affinity` 137 138Affinity of each vCPU. 139 140This option gives the user a way to provide the host CPU set associated with 141each vCPU. It is useful for achieving CPU pinning, ensuring multiple VMs won't 142affect the performance of each other. It might also be used in the context of 143NUMA as it is way of making sure the VM can run on a specific host NUMA node. 144In general, this option is used to increase the performances of a VM depending 145on the host platform and the type of workload running in the guest. 146 147The affinity is described through the following structure: 148 149```rust 150struct CpuAffinity { 151 vcpu: u8, 152 host_cpus: Vec<u8>, 153} 154``` 155 156or the following syntax through the CLI: 157 158``` 159affinity=[<vcpu_id1>@[<host_cpu_id1>, <host_cpu_id2>], <vcpu_id2>@[<host_cpu_id3>, <host_cpu_id4>]] 160``` 161 162The outer brackets define the list of vCPUs. And for each vCPU, the inner 163brackets attached to `@` define the list of host CPUs the vCPU is allowed to 164run onto. 165 166Multiple values can be provided to define each list. Each value is an unsigned 167integer of 8 bits. 168 169For instance, if one needs to run vCPU 0 on host CPUs from 0 to 4, the syntax 170using `-` will help define a contiguous range with `affinity=0@[0-4]`. The 171same example could also be described with `affinity=0@[0,1,2,3,4]`. 172 173A combination of both `-` and `,` separators is useful when one might need to 174describe a list containing host CPUs from 0 to 99 and the host CPU 255, as it 175could simply be described with `affinity=0@[0-99,255]`. 176 177As soon as one tries to describe a list of values, `[` and `]` must be used to 178demarcate the list. 179 180By default each vCPU runs on the entire host CPU set. 181 182_Example_ 183 184``` 185--cpus boot=3,affinity=[0@[2,3],1@[0,1]] 186``` 187 188In this example, assuming the host has 4 CPUs, vCPU 0 will run exclusively on 189host CPUs 2 and 3, while vCPU 1 will run exclusively on host CPUs 0 and 1. 190Because nothing is defined for vCPU 2, it can run on any of the 4 host CPUs. 191 192### `features` 193 194Set of CPU features to enable. 195 196This option allows the user to enable a set of CPU features that are disabled 197by default otherwise. 198 199The currently available feature set is: `amx`. 200 201The `amx` feature will enable the x86 extension adding hardware units for 202matrix operations (int and float dot products). The goal of the extension is to 203provide performance enhancements for these common operations. 204 205_Example_ 206 207``` 208--cpus features=amx 209``` 210 211In this example the amx CPU feature will be enabled for the VMM. 212