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Mastering KVM Virtualization

You're reading from   Mastering KVM Virtualization Dive in to the cutting edge techniques of Linux KVM virtualization, and build the virtualization solutions your datacentre demands

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Product type Paperback
Published in Aug 2016
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781784399054
Length 468 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Tools
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Toc

Table of Contents (17) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Understanding Linux Virtualization 2. KVM Internals FREE CHAPTER 3. Setting Up Standalone KVM Virtualization 4. Getting Started with libvirt and Creating Your First Virtual Machines 5. Network and Storage 6. Virtual Machine Lifecycle Management 7. Templates and Snapshots 8. Kimchi – An HTML5-Based Management Tool for KVM/libvirt 9. Software-Defined Networking for KVM Virtualization 10. Installing and Configuring the Virtual Datacenter Using oVirt 11. Starting Your First Virtual Machine in oVirt 12. Deploying OpenStack Private Cloud backed by KVM Virtualization 13. Performance Tuning and Best Practices in KVM 14. V2V and P2V Migration Tools A. Converting a Virtual Machine into a Hypervisor Index

Getting acquainted with Kernel Same Page merging

According to the KVM official documentation:

KSM is a memory-saving deduplication feature that merges anonymous (private) pages (not pagecache ones). Although it started this way, KSM is currently suitable for more than Virtual Machine use, as it can be useful to any application that generates many instances of the same data

http://www.Linux-kvm.org/page/KSM

As is well understood from the earlier quote, KSM is a feature that allows sharing identical pages between the different processes running in the system. We may presume that the identical pages may exist due to certain reasons—for example, if there are multiple processes spawned from the same binary or something similar. There is no rule like that though. KSM scans these identical memory pages and consolidates a Copy on write (COW) shared page. Well, if you don't know what I meant by COW, it is nothing but a mechanism by which, when there is an attempt to change a memory region...

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