No description
Find a file
Zach Reizner 20d71f8928 gpu_display: provides wayland based output for virtio-gpu
This provides virtual display style output, useful for debugging
virtio-gpu. Although using virtio-gpu for display purposes clashes with
the more integreated virtio-wayland support, it is nonetheless helpful
for debugging virtio-gpu, and is technically required to fully implement
that device.

TEST=cargo build -p gpu_display
BUG=chromium:837073
CQ-DEPEND=CL:1096300

Change-Id: I59f895e951ef593d4119e7558168dd34223519ee
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/1043446
Commit-Ready: Zach Reizner <zachr@chromium.org>
Tested-by: Zach Reizner <zachr@chromium.org>
Reviewed-by: Zach Reizner <zachr@chromium.org>
2018-07-09 15:48:21 -07:00
aarch64 Remove the device manager and use the new resource allocator 2018-06-29 17:50:17 -07:00
arch Remove the device manager and use the new resource allocator 2018-06-29 17:50:17 -07:00
crosvm_plugin plugin: allow retrieving and setting XCR VCPU states 2018-05-18 20:08:21 -07:00
data_model volatile_memory: Fix usize/u64 confusion in doc test 2018-02-05 23:05:37 -08:00
devices sys_util: move round_to_page_size to sys_util 2018-06-21 16:31:43 -07:00
fuzz Add kernel_loader fuzzing 2018-01-12 22:37:48 -08:00
gpu_buffer virtwl: better multi-plane DMABuf support 2018-05-26 10:19:50 -07:00
gpu_display gpu_display: provides wayland based output for virtio-gpu 2018-07-09 15:48:21 -07:00
io_jail io_jail: fix missing null terminator for close_fds test 2018-05-11 23:22:19 -07:00
kernel_cmdline crosvm: move kernel_cmdline to it's own crate 2018-02-02 23:53:42 -08:00
kernel_loader kernel_loader: implement error trait 2018-02-27 22:26:08 -08:00
kvm kvm: fix test for getting and setting xcrs 2018-05-17 03:24:28 -07:00
kvm_sys kvm: fix definition of KVM_SET_XCRS ioctl 2018-05-16 05:08:21 -07:00
net_sys net_util: add tap support for mac address 2018-02-21 01:06:42 -08:00
net_util net: Allow passing in a configured tap fd on the command line 2018-06-12 00:36:27 -07:00
p9 p9: Fix file and directory creation mode 2018-06-27 22:07:22 -07:00
plugin_proto crosvm: Switch to cc crate. 2018-05-18 23:07:28 -07:00
qcow qcow: Call fsync(2) when we want to flush to disk 2018-05-18 20:08:31 -07:00
qcow_utils fix some clippy errors that are default deny 2018-03-07 19:47:11 -08:00
resources Remove the device manager and use the new resource allocator 2018-06-29 17:50:17 -07:00
seccomp virtwl: implement dmabuf sync support 2018-06-19 14:38:53 -07:00
src Remove the device manager and use the new resource allocator 2018-06-29 17:50:17 -07:00
sys_util sys_util: move round_to_page_size to sys_util 2018-06-21 16:31:43 -07:00
syscall_defines fix armv7a and aarch64 build errors and warnings 2017-09-01 12:39:18 -07:00
tests plugin: allow retrieving and setting XCR VCPU states 2018-05-18 20:08:21 -07:00
vhost hw/virtio/vhost: Add simple tests backed by fakes 2018-02-02 16:32:12 -08:00
virtio_sys Implement virtio-vsock 2017-09-18 16:48:43 -07:00
vm_control Remove the device manager and use the new resource allocator 2018-06-29 17:50:17 -07:00
x86_64 x86_64: fill cache info in cpuid, stop spoofing CPU vendor id 2018-07-09 12:42:42 -07:00
.gitignore gitignore: Remove Cargo.lock 2017-06-17 01:12:44 -07:00
build_test add build_test script to automate crosvm test running 2017-09-01 12:39:19 -07:00
build_test.py Remove the device manager and use the new resource allocator 2018-06-29 17:50:17 -07:00
Cargo.lock gpu_display: provides wayland based output for virtio-gpu 2018-07-09 15:48:21 -07:00
Cargo.toml gpu_display: provides wayland based output for virtio-gpu 2018-07-09 15:48:21 -07:00
LICENSE add LICENSE and README 2017-04-17 14:06:21 -07:00
README.md README: use /run paths 2017-10-23 18:22:24 -07:00

crosvm - The Chrome OS Virtual Machine Monitor

This component, known as crosvm, runs untrusted operating systems along with virtualized devices. No actual hardware is emulated. This only runs VMs through the Linux's KVM interface. What makes crosvm unique is a focus on safety within the programming language and a sandbox around the virtual devices to protect the kernel from attack in case of an exploit in the devices.

Usage

To see the usage information for your version of crosvm, run crosvm or crosvm run --help.

Boot a Kernel

To run a very basic VM with just a kernel and default devices:

$ crosvm run "${KERNEL_PATH}"

The uncompressed kernel image, also known as vmlinux, can be found in your kernel build directory in the case of x86 at arch/x86/boot/compressed/vmlinux.

Rootfs

In most cases, you will want to give the VM a virtual block device to use as a root file system:

$ crosvm run -r "${ROOT_IMAGE}" "${KERNEL_PATH}"

The root image must be a path to a disk image formatted in a way that the kernel can read. Typically this is a squashfs image made with mksquashfs or an ext4 image made with mkfs.ext4. By using the -r argument, the kernel is automatically told to use that image as the root, and therefore can only be given once. More disks can be given with -d or --rwdisk if a writable disk is desired.

To run crosvm with a writable rootfs:

WARNING: Writable disks are at risk of corruption by a malicious or malfunctioning guest OS.

crosvm run --rwdisk "${ROOT_IMAGE}" -p "root=/dev/vda" vmlinux

NOTE: If more disks arguments are added prior to the desired rootfs image, the root=/dev/vda must be adjusted to the appropriate letter.

Control Socket

If the control socket was enabled with -s, the main process can be controlled while crosvm is running. To tell crosvm to stop and exit, for example:

NOTE: If the socket path given is for a directory, a socket name underneath that path will be generated based on crosvm's PID.

$ crosvm run -s /run/crosvm.sock ${USUAL_CROSVM_ARGS}
    <in another shell>
$ crosvm stop /run/crosvm.sock

WARNING: The guest OS will not be notified or gracefully shutdown.

This will cause the original crosvm process to exit in an orderly fashion, allowing it to clean up any OS resources that might have stuck around if crosvm were terminated early.

Multiprocess Mode

By default crosvm runs in multiprocess mode. Each device that supports running inside of a sandbox will run in a jailed child process of crosvm. The appropriate minijail seccomp policy files must be present either in /usr/share/policy/crosvm or in the path specified by the --seccomp-policy-dir argument. The sandbox can be disabled for testing with the '--disable-sandbox` option.

Virtio Wayland

Virtio Wayland support requires special support on the part of the guest and as such is unlikely to work out of the box unless you are using a Chrome OS kernel along with a termina rootfs.

To use it, ensure that the XDG_RUNTIME_DIR enviroment variable is set and that the path $XDG_RUNTIME_DIR/wayland-0 points to the socket of the Wayland compositor you would like the guest to use.

Defaults

The following are crosvm's default arguments and how to override them.

  • 256MB of memory (set with -m)
  • 1 virtual CPU (set with -c)
  • no block devices (set with -r, -d, or --rwdisk)
  • no network (set with --host_ip, --netmask, and --mac)
  • virtio wayland support if XDG_RUNTIME_DIR enviroment variable is set (disable with --no-wl)
  • only the kernel arguments necessary to run with the supported devices (add more with -p)
  • run in single process mode (run in multiprocess mode with -u)
  • no control socket (set with -s)

System Requirements

A Linux kernel with KVM support (check for /dev/kvm) is required to run crosvm. In order to run certain devices, there are additional system requirements:

  • virtio-wayland - The memfd_create syscall, introduced in Linux 3.17, and a Wayland compositor.
  • vsock - Host Linux kernel with vhost-vsock support, introduced in Linux 4.8.
  • multiprocess - Host Linux kernel with seccomp-bpf and Linux namespaceing support.
  • virtio-net - Host Linux kernel with TUN/TAP support (check for /dev/net/tun) and running with CAP_NET_ADMIN privileges.

Emulated Devices

Device Description
CMOS/RTC Used to get the current calendar time.
i8042 Used by the guest kernel to exit crosvm.
serial x86 I/O port driven serial devices that print to stdout and take input from stdin.
virtio-block Basic read/write block device.
virtio-net Device to interface the host and guest networks.
virtio-rng Entropy source used to seed guest OS's entropy pool.
virtio-vsock Enabled VSOCKs for the guests.
virtio-wayland Allowed guest to use host Wayland socket.

Contributing

Code Health

build_test

There are no automated tests run before code is committed to crosvm. In order to maintain sanity, please execute build_test before submitting code for review. All tests should be passing or ignored and there should be no compiler warnings or errors. All supported architectures are built, but only tests for x86_64 are run. In order to build everything without failures, sysroots must be supplied for each architecture. See build_test -h for more information.

rustfmt

New code should be run with rustfmt, but not all currently checked in code has already been autoformatted. If running rustfmt causes a lot of churn for a file, do not check in lines unrelated to your change.

Dependencies

With a few exceptions, external dependencies inside of the Cargo.toml files are not allowed. The reason being that community made crates tend to explode the binary size by including dozens of transitive dependencies. All these dependencies also must be reviewed to ensure their suitability to the crosvm project. Currently allowed crates are:

  • byteorder - A very small library used for endian swaps.
  • gcc - Build time dependency needed to build C source code used in crosvm.
  • libc - Required to use the standard library, this crate is a simple wrapper around libc's symbols.

Code Overview

The crosvm source code is written in Rust and C. To build, crosvm requires rustc v1.20 or later.

Source code is organized into crates, each with their own unit tests. These crates are:

  • crosvm - The top-level binary front-end for using crosvm.
  • devices - Virtual devices exposed to the guest OS.
  • io_jail - Creates jailed process using libminijail.
  • kernel_loader - Loads elf64 kernel files to a slice of memory.
  • kvm_sys - Low-level (mostly) auto-generated structures and constants for using KVM.
  • kvm - Unsafe, low-level wrapper code for using kvm_sys.
  • net_sys - Low-level (mostly) auto-generated structures and constants for creating TUN/TAP devices.
  • net_util - Wrapper for creating TUN/TAP devices.
  • sys_util - Mostly safe wrappers for small system facilities such as eventfd or syslog.
  • syscall_defines - Lists of syscall numbers in each architecture used to make syscalls not supported in libc.
  • vhost - Wrappers for creating vhost based devices.
  • virtio_sys - Low-level (mostly) auto-generated structures and constants for interfacing with kernel vhost support.
  • vm_control - IPC for the VM.
  • x86_64 - Support code specific to 64 bit intel machines.

The seccomp folder contains minijail seccomp policy files for each sandboxed device. Because some syscalls vary by architecturs, the seccomp policies are split by architecture.