From e10fbcf66724e22bf4a2b6a5109538cee21e48fc Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Alexander Graf Date: Tue, 10 Jul 2012 20:40:55 +0200 Subject: [PATCH] linux-user: Run multi-threaded code on a single core Running multi-threaded code can easily expose some of the fundamental breakages in QEMU's design. It's just not a well supported scenario. So if we pin the whole process to a single host CPU, we guarantee that we will never have concurrent memory access actually happen. We can still get scheduled away at any time, so it's no complete guarantee, but apparently it reduces the odds well enough to get my test cases to pass. This gets Java 1.7 working for me again on my test box. Signed-off-by: Alexander Graf --- linux-user/syscall.c | 9 +++++++++ 1 files changed, 9 insertions(+), 0 deletions(-) diff --git a/linux-user/syscall.c b/linux-user/syscall.c index b73c23c..0c3d4c5 100644 --- a/linux-user/syscall.c +++ b/linux-user/syscall.c @@ -4352,6 +4352,15 @@ static int do_fork(CPUArchState *env, unsigned int flags, abi_ulong newsp, if (nptl_flags & CLONE_SETTLS) cpu_set_tls (new_env, newtls); + /* agraf: Pin ourselves to a single CPU when running multi-threaded. + This turned out to improve stability for me. */ + { + cpu_set_t mask; + CPU_ZERO(&mask); + CPU_SET(0, &mask); + sched_setaffinity(0, sizeof(mask), &mask); + } + /* Grab a mutex so that thread setup appears atomic. */ pthread_mutex_lock(&clone_lock);