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Fairly new to VirtualBox but not to Hypervisors.
I've been trying to gain more insight into VirtualBox by reading through various
forum entries. There seems to be a consensus that a guest should not have the
same number of virtual processors assigned to it as there are real processors.
An example quote is :
you have a dual core host and you assigned both cores to the VM, leaving 0 cores for the host

I'm a little mystified by this, for the following reasons :
In the above example of a two-way real processor, what is the difference between running a guest
with two virtual cpus (thus potentially using both real processors) or running two guests, both defined
with a single virtual processor, which I would assume could both be dispatched simultaneously and
therefore also use both real cpus ?
The argument seems to be that the virtual cpus will somehow block out the host. However, the host will
only ever dispatch the guests virtual cpu when it's ready to do so. It's the host driving the guest.
Even so, I can see that there may be moments when both real cpus are executing guest virtual cpus and
the host - whether it's VirtualBox or the true Host (say Linux) - need to execute. Firstly, I would assume
these instances do not occur often and it's far more likely that the guests are regularly leaving VT-X operation
by a VM exit. Even if they are not, I thought that's what the VT-X pre-emption timer was for, so that the
Host (VirtualBox) can regain control after a specified time interval. Also, Host I/O interrupts are likely
to be happening almost all the time, thus resulting a VM exit on the processor fielding the interrupt.
If all else fails, I would expect the true host (Linux say), would always regain control via a timer-pop as it's
based on a pre-emptive time-slice dispatcher. It would then dispatch tasks based on priority/readiness.
The biggest problem I've seen with Hypervisors is not the Host being blocked but a multi-processor guest
having one or more of its (virtual) processors not being dispatched frequently enough. Thus usually results
in spin-lock type problems in the guest.
My previous experience of Hypervisors involved bare-metal types, so I'm assuming a hosted type such as VirtualBox
has different scheduling/dispatching considerations ?
Any insight to the operation of VirtualBox that relates to the recommendation of the number of virtual cpus
in relation to the number of real cpus would be most welcome.Fairly new to VirtualBox but not to Hypervisors.
I've been trying to gain more insight into VirtualBox by reading through various
forum entries. There seems to be a consensus that a guest should not have the
same number of virtual processors assigned to it as there are real processors.Wonyun
An example quote is :
you have a dual core host and you assigned both cores to the VM, leaving 0 cores for the host

I'm a little mystified by this, for the following reasons :
In the above example of a two-way real processor, what is the difference between running a guest
with two virtual cpus (thus potentially using both real processors) or running two guests, both defined
with a single virtual processor, which I would assume could both be dispatched simultaneously and
therefore also use both real cpus ?
The argument seems to be that the virtual cpus will somehow block out the host. However, the host will
only ever dispatch the guests virtual cpu when it's ready to do so. It's the host driving the guest.
Even so, I can see that there may be moments when both real cpus are executing guest virtual cpus and
the host - whether it's VirtualBox or the true Host (say Linux) - need to execute. Firstly, I would assume
these instances do not occur often and it's far more likely that the guests are regularly leaving VT-X operation
by a VM exit. Even if they are not, I thought that's what the VT-X pre-emption timer was for, so that the
Host (VirtualBox) can regain control after a specified time interval. Also, Host I/O interrupts are likely
to be happening almost all the time, thus resulting a VM exit on the processor fielding the interrupt.
If all else fails, I would expect the true host (Linux say), would always regain control via a timer-pop as it's

Wonyun Trench Run Mac Os 11

based on a pre-emptive time-slice dispatcher. It would then dispatch tasks based on priority/readiness.
The biggest problem I've seen with Hypervisors is not the Host being blocked but a multi-processor guest
having one or more of its (virtual) processors not being dispatched frequently enough. Thus usually results
in spin-lock type problems in the guest.
My previous experience of Hypervisors involved bare-metal types, so I'm assuming a hosted type such as VirtualBox
has different scheduling/dispatching considerations ?

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Any insight to the operation of VirtualBox that relates to the recommendation of the number of virtual cpus
in relation to the number of real cpus would be most welcome.