• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Yellow Bricks

by Duncan Epping

  • Home
  • Unexplored Territory Podcast
  • HA Deepdive
  • ESXTOP
  • Stickers/Shirts
  • Privacy Policy
  • About
  • Show Search
Hide Search

Whitepaper: Performance Evaluation of AMD RVI Hardware Assist

Duncan Epping · Mar 17, 2009 ·

I recently discussed the effect of RVI/Virtualized MMU on Transparent page Sharing, and just 5 days later VMware published this extensive PDF:”Performance Evaluation of AMD RVI Hardware Assist“.

AMD recently introduced its second generation of hardware support for virtualization, incorporating MMU virtualization called Rapid Virtualization Indexing (RVI). Hardware support for MMU virtualization can improve performance, particularly for MMU-intensive workloads.

VMware ESX 3.5 leverages this RVI support in AMD processors. This paper compares the performance with and without RVI of a number of industry-standard benchmarks and microbenchmarks running in VMware ESX 3.5, Update 2 on AMD Opteron 8384 (“Shanghai”) processors.

Read the PDF for more indepth info, but I think the most important bit is:”The improvement provided by RVI increases with larger numbers of vCPUs; in the four vCPU case RVI performed 42% better than BT.” And that’s just for one of the benchmarks. If you’ve got an AMD processor or Intel Processor that supports virtualized MMU, be sure to do a benchmark and it probably will be beneficial to turn it on.

Related

Server, Various ESX, esxi, performance

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Cody Bunch says

    17 March, 2009 at 10:48

    This is certainly timely.

  2. larstr says

    17 March, 2009 at 11:42

    That document isn’t new, but the revision says March 11th, so it’s an updated one. Not sure what is new in this revision, because the numbers look very similar to the original document that was released back in November: http://www.virtualization.info/2008/11/whitepaper-performance-of-amd-rapid.html

    Lars

  3. Duncan Epping says

    17 March, 2009 at 11:54

    That’s weird… I knew I’d seen a similar document but couldn’t find it anymore, but this explains why. thanks lars,

Primary Sidebar

About the Author

Duncan Epping is a Chief Technologist and Distinguished Engineering Architect at Broadcom. Besides writing on Yellow-Bricks, Duncan is the co-author of the vSAN Deep Dive and the vSphere Clustering Deep Dive book series. Duncan is also the host of the Unexplored Territory Podcast.

Follow Us

  • X
  • Spotify
  • RSS Feed
  • LinkedIn

Recommended Book(s)

Advertisements




Copyright Yellow-Bricks.com © 2025 · Log in