+
+/*G:035 Notice the lazy_hcall() above, rather than hcall(). This is our first
+ * real optimization trick!
+ *
+ * When lazy_mode is set, it means we're allowed to defer all hypercalls and do
+ * them as a batch when lazy_mode is eventually turned off. Because hypercalls
+ * are reasonably expensive, batching them up makes sense. For example, a
+ * large munmap might update dozens of page table entries: that code calls
+ * paravirt_enter_lazy_mmu(), does the dozen updates, then calls
+ * lguest_leave_lazy_mode().
+ *
+ * So, when we're in lazy mode, we call async_hcall() to store the call for
+ * future processing: */
+static void lazy_hcall(unsigned long call,
+ unsigned long arg1,
+ unsigned long arg2,
+ unsigned long arg3)
+{
+ if (paravirt_get_lazy_mode() == PARAVIRT_LAZY_NONE)
+ hcall(call, arg1, arg2, arg3);
+ else
+ async_hcall(call, arg1, arg2, arg3);
+}
+
+/* When lazy mode is turned off reset the per-cpu lazy mode variable and then
+ * issue the do-nothing hypercall to flush any stored calls. */
+static void lguest_leave_lazy_mode(void)
+{
+ paravirt_leave_lazy(paravirt_get_lazy_mode());
+ hcall(LHCALL_FLUSH_ASYNC, 0, 0, 0);
+}