xref: /dragonfly/share/man/man7/vkernel.7 (revision de78d61c)
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32.Dd January 5, 2019
33.Dt VKERNEL 7
34.Os
35.Sh NAME
36.Nm vkernel ,
37.Nm vcd ,
38.Nm vkd ,
39.Nm vke
40.Nd virtual kernel architecture
41.Sh SYNOPSIS
42.Cd "platform vkernel64 # for 64 bit vkernels"
43.Cd "device vcd"
44.Cd "device vkd"
45.Cd "device vke"
46.Pp
47.Pa /var/vkernel/boot/kernel/kernel
48.Op Fl hdstUvz
49.Op Fl c Ar file
50.Op Fl e Ar name Ns = Ns Li value : Ns Ar name Ns = Ns Li value : Ns ...
51.Op Fl i Ar file
52.Op Fl I Ar interface Ns Op Ar :address1 Ns Oo Ar :address2 Oc Ns Oo Ar /netmask Oc Ns Oo Ar =mac Oc
53.Op Fl l Ar cpulock
54.Op Fl m Ar size
55.Op Fl n Ar numcpus Ns Op Ar :lbits Ns Oo Ar :cbits Oc
56.Op Fl p Ar pidfile
57.Op Fl r Ar file Ns Op Ar :serno
58.Op Fl R Ar file Ns Op Ar :serno
59.Sh DESCRIPTION
60The
61.Nm
62architecture allows for running
63.Dx
64kernels in userland.
65.Pp
66The following options are available:
67.Bl -tag -width ".Fl m Ar size"
68.It Fl c Ar file
69Specify a readonly CD-ROM image
70.Ar file
71to be used by the kernel, with the first
72.Fl c
73option defining
74.Li vcd0 ,
75the second one
76.Li vcd1 ,
77and so on.
78The first
79.Fl r ,
80.Fl R ,
81or
82.Fl c
83option specified on the command line will be the boot disk.
84The CD9660 filesystem is assumed when booting from this media.
85.It Fl d
86Disables hardware pagetable for
87.Nm .
88.It Fl e Ar name Ns = Ns Li value : Ns Ar name Ns = Ns Li value : Ns ...
89Specify an environment to be used by the kernel.
90This option can be specified more than once.
91.It Fl h
92Shows a list of available options, each with a short description.
93.It Fl i Ar file
94Specify a memory image
95.Ar file
96to be used by the virtual kernel.
97If no
98.Fl i
99option is given, the kernel will generate a name of the form
100.Pa /var/vkernel/memimg.XXXXXX ,
101with the trailing
102.Ql X Ns s
103being replaced by a sequential number, e.g.\&
104.Pa memimg.000001 .
105.It Fl I Ar interface Ns Op Ar :address1 Ns Oo Ar :address2 Oc Ns Oo Ar /netmask Oc Ns Oo Ar =MAC Oc
106Create a virtual network device, with the first
107.Fl I
108option defining
109.Li vke0 ,
110the second one
111.Li vke1 ,
112and so on.
113.Pp
114The
115.Ar interface
116argument is the name of a
117.Xr tap 4
118device node or the path to a
119.Xr vknetd 8
120socket.
121The
122.Pa /dev/
123path prefix does not have to be specified and will be automatically prepended
124for a device node.
125Specifying
126.Cm auto
127will pick the first unused
128.Xr tap 4
129device.
130.Pp
131The
132.Ar address1
133and
134.Ar address2
135arguments are the IP addresses of the
136.Xr tap 4
137and
138.Nm vke
139interfaces.
140Optionally,
141.Ar address1
142may be of the form
143.Li bridge Ns Em X
144in which case the
145.Xr tap 4
146interface is added to the specified
147.Xr bridge 4
148interface.
149The
150.Nm vke
151address is not assigned until the interface is brought up in the guest.
152.Pp
153The
154.Ar netmask
155argument applies to all interfaces for which an address is specified.
156.Pp
157The
158.Ar MAC
159argument is the MAC address of the
160.Xr vke 4
161interface.
162If not specified, a pseudo-random one will be generated.
163.Pp
164When running multiple vkernels it is often more convenient to simply
165connect to a
166.Xr vknetd 8
167socket and let vknetd deal with the tap and/or bridge.
168An example of this would be
169.Pa /var/run/vknet:0.0.0.0:10.2.0.2/16 .
170.It Fl l Ar cpulock
171Specify which, if any, real CPUs to lock virtual CPUs to.
172.Ar cpulock
173is one of
174.Cm any ,
175.Cm map Ns Op Ns , Ns Ar startCPU ,
176or
177.Ar CPU .
178.Pp
179.Cm any
180does not map virtual CPUs to real CPUs.
181This is the default.
182.Pp
183.Cm map Ns Op Ns , Ns Ar startCPU
184maps each virtual CPU to a real CPU starting with real CPU 0 or
185.Ar startCPU
186if specified.
187.Pp
188.Ar CPU
189locks all virtual CPUs to the real CPU specified by
190.Ar CPU .
191.Pp
192Locking the vkernel to a set of cpus is recommended on multi-socket systems
193to improve NUMA locality of reference.
194.It Fl m Ar size
195Specify the amount of memory to be used by the kernel in bytes,
196.Cm K
197.Pq kilobytes ,
198.Cm M
199.Pq megabytes
200or
201.Cm G
202.Pq gigabytes .
203Lowercase versions of
204.Cm K , M ,
205and
206.Cm G
207are allowed.
208.It Fl n Ar numcpus Ns Op Ar :lbits Ns Oo Ar :cbits Oc
209.Ar numcpus
210specifies the number of CPUs you wish to emulate.
211Up to 16 CPUs are supported with 2 being the default unless otherwise
212specified.
213.Pp
214.Ar lbits
215specifies the number of bits within APICID(=CPUID) needed for representing
216the logical ID.
217Controls the number of threads/core (0 bits - 1 thread, 1 bit - 2 threads).
218This parameter is optional (mandatory only if
219.Ar cbits
220is specified).
221.Pp
222.Ar cbits
223specifies the number of bits within APICID(=CPUID) needed for representing
224the core ID.
225Controls the number of core/package (0 bits - 1 core, 1 bit - 2 cores).
226This parameter is optional.
227.It Fl p Ar pidfile
228Specify a pidfile in which to store the process ID.
229Scripts can use this file to locate the vkernel pid for the purpose of
230shutting down or killing it.
231.Pp
232The vkernel will hold a lock on the pidfile while running.
233Scripts may test for the lock to determine if the pidfile is valid or
234stale so as to avoid accidentally killing a random process.
235Something like '/usr/bin/lockf -ks -t 0 pidfile echo -n' may be used
236to test the lock.
237A non-zero exit code indicates that the pidfile represents a running
238vkernel.
239.Pp
240An error is issued and the vkernel exits if this file cannot be opened for
241writing or if it is already locked by an active vkernel process.
242.It Fl r Ar file Ns Op Ar :serno
243Specify a R/W disk image
244.Ar file
245to be used by the kernel, with the first
246.Fl r
247option defining
248.Li vkd0 ,
249the second one
250.Li vkd1 ,
251and so on.
252A serial number for the virtual disk can be specified in
253.Ar serno .
254.Pp
255The first
256.Fl r
257or
258.Fl c
259option specified on the command line will be the boot disk.
260.It Fl R Ar file Ns Op Ar :serno
261Works like
262.Fl r
263but treats the disk image as copy-on-write.  This allows
264a private copy of the image to be modified but does not
265modify the image file.  The image file will not be locked
266in this situation and multiple vkernels can run off the
267same image file if desired.
268.Pp
269Since modifications are thrown away, any data you wish
270to retain across invocations needs to be exported over
271the network prior to shutdown.
272This gives you the flexibility to mount the disk image
273either read-only or read-write depending on what is
274convenient.
275However, keep in mind that when mounting a COW image
276read-write, modifications will eat system memory and
277swap space until the vkernel is shut down.
278.It Fl s
279Boot into single-user mode.
280.It Fl t
281Tell the vkernel to use a precise host timer when calculating clock values.
282If the TSC isn't used, this will impose higher overhead on the vkernel as it
283will have to make a system call to the real host every time it wants to get
284the time.
285However, the more precise timer might be necessary for your application.
286.Pp
287By default, the vkernel uses the TSC cpu timer if possible, or an imprecise
288(host-tick-resolution) timer which uses a user-mapped kernel page and does
289not have any syscall overhead.
290To disable the TSC cpu timer, use the
291.Fl e Ar hw.tsc_cputimer_enable=0
292flag.
293.It Fl U
294Enable writing to kernel memory and module loading.
295By default, those are disabled for security reasons.
296.It Fl v
297Turn on verbose booting.
298.It Fl z
299Force the vkernel's ram to be pre-zerod.  Useful for benchmarking on
300single-socket systems where the memory allocation does not have to be
301NUMA-friendly.
302This options is not recommended on multi-socket systems or when the
303.Fl l
304option is used.
305.El
306.Sh DEVICES
307A number of virtual device drivers exist to supplement the virtual kernel.
308.Ss Disk device
309The
310.Nm vkd
311driver allows for up to 16
312.Xr vn 4
313based disk devices.
314The root device will be
315.Li vkd0
316(see
317.Sx EXAMPLES
318for further information on how to prepare a root image).
319.Ss CD-ROM device
320The
321.Nm vcd
322driver allows for up to 16 virtual CD-ROM devices.
323Basically this is a read only
324.Nm vkd
325device with a block size of 2048.
326.Ss Network interface
327The
328.Nm vke
329driver supports up to 16 virtual network interfaces which are associated with
330.Xr tap 4
331devices on the host.
332For each
333.Nm vke
334device, the per-interface read only
335.Xr sysctl 3
336variable
337.Va hw.vke Ns Em X Ns Va .tap_unit
338holds the unit number of the associated
339.Xr tap 4
340device.
341.Pp
342By default, half of the total mbuf clusters available is distributed equally
343among all the vke devices up to 256.
344This can be overridden with the tunable
345.Va hw.vke.max_ringsize .
346Take into account the number passed will be aligned to the lower power of two.
347.Sh SIGNALS
348The virtual kernel only enables
349.Dv SIGQUIT
350and
351.Dv SIGTERM
352while operating in regular console mode.
353Sending
354.Ql \&^\e
355.Pq Dv SIGQUIT
356to the virtual kernel causes the virtual kernel to enter its internal
357.Xr ddb 4
358debugger and re-enable all other terminal signals.
359Sending
360.Dv SIGTERM
361to the virtual kernel triggers a clean shutdown by passing a
362.Dv SIGUSR2
363to the virtual kernel's
364.Xr init 8
365process.
366.Sh DEBUGGING
367It is possible to directly gdb the virtual kernel's process.
368It is recommended that you do a
369.Ql handle SIGSEGV noprint
370to ignore page faults processed by the virtual kernel itself and
371.Ql handle SIGUSR1 noprint
372to ignore signals used for simulating inter-processor interrupts.
373.Sh FILES
374.Bl -tag -width ".It Pa /sys/config/VKERNEL64" -compact
375.It Pa /dev/vcdX
376.Nm vcd
377device nodes
378.It Pa /dev/vkdX
379.Nm vkd
380device nodes
381.It Pa /sys/config/VKERNEL64
382.El
383.Pp
384.Nm
385configuration file, for
386.Xr config 8 .
387.Sh CONFIGURATION FILES
388Your virtual kernel is a complete
389.Dx
390system, but you might not want to run all the services a normal kernel runs.
391Here is what a typical virtual kernel's
392.Pa /etc/rc.conf
393file looks like, with some additional possibilities commented out.
394.Bd -literal
395hostname="vkernel"
396network_interfaces="lo0 vke0"
397ifconfig_vke0="DHCP"
398sendmail_enable="NO"
399#syslog_enable="NO"
400blanktime="NO"
401.Ed
402.Sh BOOT DRIVE SELECTION
403You can override the default boot drive selection and filesystem
404using a kernel environment variable.  Note that the filesystem
405selected must be compiled into the vkernel and not loaded as
406a module.  You need to escape some quotes around the variable data
407to avoid mis-interpretation of the colon in the
408.Fl e
409option.  For example:
410.Pp
411.Fl e
412vfs.root.mountfrom=\\"hammer:vkd0s1d\\"
413.Sh DISKLESS OPERATION
414To boot a
415.Nm
416from a NFS root, a number of tunables need to be set:
417.Bl -tag -width indent
418.It Va boot.netif.ip
419IP address to be set in the vkernel interface.
420.It Va boot.netif.netmask
421Netmask for the IP to be set.
422.It Va boot.netif.name
423Network interface name inside the vkernel.
424.It Va boot.nfsroot.server
425Host running
426.Xr nfsd 8 .
427.It Va boot.nfsroot.path
428Host path where a world and distribution
429targets are properly installed.
430.El
431.Pp
432See an example on how to boot a diskless
433.Nm
434in the
435.Sx EXAMPLES
436section.
437.Sh EXAMPLES
438A couple of steps are necessary in order to prepare the system to build and
439run a virtual kernel.
440.Ss Setting up the filesystem
441The
442.Nm
443architecture needs a number of files which reside in
444.Pa /var/vkernel .
445Since these files tend to get rather big and the
446.Pa /var
447partition is usually of limited size, we recommend the directory to be
448created in the
449.Pa /home
450partition with a link to it in
451.Pa /var :
452.Bd -literal
453mkdir -p /home/var.vkernel/boot
454ln -s /home/var.vkernel /var/vkernel
455.Ed
456.Pp
457Next, a filesystem image to be used by the virtual kernel has to be
458created and populated (assuming world has been built previously).
459If the image is created on a UFS filesystem you might want to pre-zero it.
460On a HAMMER filesystem you should just truncate-extend to the image size
461as HAMMER does not re-use data blocks already present in the file.
462.Bd -literal
463vnconfig -c -S 2g -T vn0 /var/vkernel/rootimg.01
464disklabel -r -w vn0s0 auto
465disklabel -e vn0s0	# add `a' partition with fstype `4.2BSD'
466newfs /dev/vn0s0a
467mount /dev/vn0s0a /mnt
468cd /usr/src
469make installworld DESTDIR=/mnt
470cd etc
471make distribution DESTDIR=/mnt
472echo '/dev/vkd0s0a	/	ufs	rw	1  1' >/mnt/etc/fstab
473echo 'proc		/proc	procfs	rw	0  0' >>/mnt/etc/fstab
474.Ed
475.Pp
476Edit
477.Pa /mnt/etc/ttys
478and replace the
479.Li console
480entry with the following line and turn off all other gettys.
481.Bd -literal
482console	"/usr/libexec/getty Pc"		cons25	on  secure
483.Ed
484.Pp
485Replace
486.Li \&Pc
487with
488.Li al.Pc
489if you would like to automatically log in as root.
490.Pp
491Then, unmount the disk.
492.Bd -literal
493umount /mnt
494vnconfig -u vn0
495.Ed
496.Ss Compiling the virtual kernel
497In order to compile a virtual kernel use the
498.Li VKERNEL64
499kernel configuration file residing in
500.Pa /sys/config
501(or a configuration file derived thereof):
502.Bd -literal
503cd /usr/src
504make -DNO_MODULES buildkernel KERNCONF=VKERNEL64
505make -DNO_MODULES installkernel KERNCONF=VKERNEL64 DESTDIR=/var/vkernel
506.Ed
507.Ss Enabling virtual kernel operation
508A special
509.Xr sysctl 8 ,
510.Va vm.vkernel_enable ,
511must be set to enable
512.Nm
513operation:
514.Bd -literal
515sysctl vm.vkernel_enable=1
516.Ed
517.Ss Configuring the network on the host system
518In order to access a network interface of the host system from the
519.Nm ,
520you must add the interface to a
521.Xr bridge 4
522device which will then be passed to the
523.Fl I
524option:
525.Bd -literal
526kldload if_bridge.ko
527kldload if_tap.ko
528ifconfig bridge0 create
529ifconfig bridge0 addm re0	# assuming re0 is the host's interface
530ifconfig bridge0 up
531.Ed
532.Ss Running the kernel
533Finally, the virtual kernel can be run:
534.Bd -literal
535cd /var/vkernel
536\&./boot/kernel/kernel -m 1g -r rootimg.01 -I auto:bridge0
537.Ed
538.Pp
539You can issue the
540.Xr reboot 8 ,
541.Xr halt 8 ,
542or
543.Xr shutdown 8
544commands from inside a virtual kernel.
545After doing a clean shutdown the
546.Xr reboot 8
547command will re-exec the virtual kernel binary while the other two will
548cause the virtual kernel to exit.
549.Ss Diskless operation (vkernel as a NFS client)
550Booting a
551.Nm
552with a
553.Xr vknetd 8
554network configuration.  The line continuation backslashes have been
555omitted.  For convenience and to reduce confusion I recommend mounting
556the server's remote vkernel root onto the host running the vkernel binary
557using the same path as the NFS mount.  It is assumed that a full system
558install has been made to /var/vkernel/root using a kernel KERNCONF=VKERNEL64
559for the kernel build.
560.Bd -literal
561\&/var/vkernel/root/boot/kernel/kernel
562	-m 1g -n 4 -I /var/run/vknet
563	-e boot.netif.ip=10.100.0.2
564	-e boot.netif.netmask=255.255.0.0
565	-e boot.netif.gateway=10.100.0.1
566	-e boot.netif.name=vke0
567	-e boot.nfsroot.server=10.0.0.55
568	-e boot.nfsroot.path=/var/vkernel/root
569.Ed
570.Pp
571In this example vknetd is assumed to have been started as shown below, before
572running the vkernel, using an unbridged TAP configuration routed through
573the host.
574IP forwarding must be turned on, and in this example the server resides
575on a different network accessible to the host executing the vkernel but not
576directly on the vkernel's subnet.
577.Bd -literal
578kldload if_tap
579sysctl net.inet.ip.forwarding=1
580vknetd -t tap0 10.100.0.1/16
581.Ed
582.Pp
583You can run multiple vkernels trivially with the same NFS root as long as
584you assign each one a different IP on the subnet (2, 3, 4, etc).  You
585should also be careful with certain directories, particularly /var/run
586and possibly also /var/db depending on what your vkernels are going to be
587doing.
588This can complicate matters with /var/db/pkg.
589.Sh BUILDING THE WORLD UNDER A VKERNEL
590The virtual kernel platform does not have all the header files expected
591by a world build, so the easiest thing to do right now is to specify a
592pc64 (in a 64 bit vkernel) target when building the world under a virtual
593kernel, like this:
594.Bd -literal
595vkernel# make MACHINE_PLATFORM=pc64 buildworld
596vkernel# make MACHINE_PLATFORM=pc64 installworld
597.Ed
598.Sh SEE ALSO
599.Xr vknet 1 ,
600.Xr bridge 4 ,
601.Xr ifmedia 4 ,
602.Xr tap 4 ,
603.Xr vn 4 ,
604.Xr sysctl.conf 5 ,
605.Xr build 7 ,
606.Xr config 8 ,
607.Xr disklabel 8 ,
608.Xr ifconfig 8 ,
609.Xr vknetd 8 ,
610.Xr vnconfig 8
611.Rs
612.%A Aggelos Economopoulos
613.%D March 2007
614.%T "A Peek at the DragonFly Virtual Kernel"
615.Re
616.Sh HISTORY
617Virtual kernels were introduced in
618.Dx 1.7 .
619.Sh AUTHORS
620.An -nosplit
621.An Matt Dillon
622thought up and implemented the
623.Nm
624architecture and wrote the
625.Nm vkd
626device driver.
627.An Sepherosa Ziehau
628wrote the
629.Nm vke
630device driver.
631This manual page was written by
632.An Sascha Wildner .
633