Certain processors provide hardware assistance for CPU virtualization.

When using this assistance, the guest can use a separate mode of execution called guest mode. The guest code, whether application code or privileged code, runs in the guest mode. On certain events, the processor exits out of guest mode and enters root mode. The hypervisor executes in the root mode, determines the reason for the exit, takes any required actions, and restarts the guest in guest mode.

When you use hardware assistance for virtualization, there is no need to translate the code. As a result, system calls or trap-intensive workloads run very close to native speed. Some workloads, such as those involving updates to page tables, lead to a large number of exits from guest mode to root mode. Depending on the number of such exits and total time spent in exits, hardware-assisted CPU virtualization can speed up execution significantly.