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32.\" $DragonFly: src/share/man/man7/vkernel.7,v 1.29 2007/08/18 08:46:32 swildner Exp $
33.\"
34.Dd August 18, 2007
35.Dt VKERNEL 7
36.Os
37.Sh NAME
38.Nm vkernel ,
39.Nm vcd ,
40.Nm vkd ,
41.Nm vke
42.Nd virtual kernel architecture
43.Sh SYNOPSIS
44.Cd "platform vkernel"
45.Cd "device vcd"
46.Cd "device vkd"
47.Cd "device vke"
48.Pp
49.Pa /usr/obj/usr/src/sys/VKERNEL/kernel.debug
50.Op Fl sUv
51.Op Fl c Ar file
52.Op Fl e Ar name Ns = Ns Li value : Ns Ar name Ns = Ns Li value : Ns ...
53.Op Fl i Ar file
54.Op Fl I Ar interface Ns Op Ar :address1 Ns Oo Ar :address2 Oc Ns Oo Ar /netmask Oc
55.Op Fl l Ar cpulock
56.Op Fl m Ar size
57.Op Fl n Ar numcpus
58.Op Fl p Ar file
59.Op Fl r Ar file
60.Sh DESCRIPTION
61The
62.Nm
63architecture allows for running
64.Dx
65kernels in userland.
66.Pp
67The following options are available:
68.Bl -tag -width ".Fl m Ar size"
69.It Fl c Ar file
70Specify a readonly CD-ROM image
71.Ar file
72to be used by the kernel, with the first
73.Fl c
74option defining
75.Li vcd0 ,
76the second one
77.Li vcd1 ,
78and so on. The first
79.Fl r
80or
81.Fl c
82option specified on the command line will be the boot disk.
83The CD9660 filesystem is assumed when booting from this media.
84.It Fl e Ar name Ns = Ns Li value : Ns Ar name Ns = Ns Li value : Ns ...
85Specify an environment to be used by the kernel.
86.It Fl i Ar file
87Specify a memory image
88.Ar file
89to be used by the virtual kernel.
90If no
91.Fl i
92option is given, the kernel will generate a name of the form
93.Pa /var/vkernel/memimg.XXXXXX ,
94with the trailing
95.Ql X Ns s
96being replaced by a sequential number, e.g.\&
97.Pa memimg.000001 .
98.It Fl I Ar interface Ns Op Ar :address1 Ns Oo Ar :address2 Oc Ns Oo Ar /netmask Oc
99Create a virtual network device, with the first
100.Fl I
101option defining
102.Li vke0 ,
103the second one
104.Li vke1 ,
105and so on.
106.Pp
107The
108.Ar interface
109argument is the name of a
110.Xr tap 4
111device node.
112The
113.Pa /dev/
114path prefix does not have to be specified and will be automatically prepended.
115Specifying
116.Cm auto
117will pick the first unused
118.Xr tap 4
119device.
120.Pp
121The
122.Ar address1
123and
124.Ar address2
125arguments are the IP addresses of the
126.Xr tap 4
127and
128.Nm vke
129interfaces.
130Optionally,
131.Ar address1
132may be of the form
133.Li bridge Ns Em X
134in which case the
135.Xr tap 4
136interface is added to the specified
137.Xr bridge 4
138interface.
139.Pp
140The
141.Ar netmask
142argument applies to all interfaces for which an address is specified.
143.It Fl l Ar cpulock
144Specify which, if any, real CPUs to lock virtual CPUs to.
145.Ar cpulock
146is one of
147.Cm any ,
148.Cm map Ns Op Ns , Ns Ar startCPU ,
149or
150.Ar CPU .
151.Pp
152.Cm any
153does not map virtual CPUs to real CPUs.
154This is the default.
155.Pp
156.Cm map Ns Op Ns , Ns Ar startCPU
157maps each virtual CPU to a real CPU starting with real CPU 0 or
158.Ar startCPU
159if specified.
160.Pp
161.Ar CPU
162locks all virtual CPUs to the real CPU specified by
163.Ar CPU .
164.It Fl m Ar size
165Specify the amount of memory to be used by the kernel in bytes,
166.Cm K
167.Pq kilobytes ,
168.Cm M
169.Pq megabytes
170or
171.Cm G
172.Pq gigabytes .
173Lowercase versions of
174.Cm K , M ,
175and
176.Cm G
177are allowed.
178.It Fl n Ar numcpus
179Specify the number of CPUs you wish to emulate.
180Up to 31 CPUs are supported.
181The virtual kernel must be built with
182.Cd options SMP
183to use this option and will default to 2 CPUs unless otherwise specified.
184.It Fl p Ar file
185Specify a file in which to store the process ID.
186A warning is issued if this file cannot be opened for writing.
187.It Fl r Ar file
188Specify a R/W disk image
189.Ar file
190to be used by the kernel, with the first
191.Fl r
192option defining
193.Li vkd0 ,
194the second one
195.Li vkd1 ,
196and so on. The first
197.Fl r
198or
199.Fl c
200option specified on the command line will be the boot disk.
201.It Fl s
202Boot into single-user mode.
203.It Fl U
204Enable writing to kernel memory and module loading.
205By default, those are disabled for security reasons.
206.It Fl v
207Turn on verbose booting.
208.El
209.Sh DEVICES
210A number of virtual device drivers exist to supplement the virtual kernel.
211.Ss Disk device
212The
213.Nm vkd
214driver allows for up to 16
215.Xr vn 4
216based disk devices.
217The root device will be
218.Li vkd0
219(see
220.Sx EXAMPLES
221for further information on how to prepare a root image).
222.Ss CD-ROM device
223The
224.Nm vcd
225driver allows for up to 16 virtual CD-ROM devices.
226Basically this is a read only
227.Nm vkd
228device with a block size of 2048.
229.Ss Network interface
230The
231.Nm vke
232driver supports up to 16 virtual network interfaces which are associated with
233.Xr tap 4
234devices on the host.
235For each
236.Nm vke
237device, the per-interface read only
238.Xr sysctl 3
239variable
240.Va hw.vke Ns Em X Ns Va .tap_unit
241holds the unit number of the associated
242.Xr tap 4
243device.
244.Sh SIGNALS
245The virtual kernel only enables
246.Dv SIGQUIT
247and
248.Dv SIGTERM
249while operating in regular console mode.
250Sending
251.Ql \&^\e
252.Pq Dv SIGQUIT
253to the virtual kernel causes the virtual kernel to enter its internal
254.Xr ddb 4
255debugger and re-enable all other terminal signals.
256Sending
257.Dv SIGTERM
258to the virtual kernel triggers a clean shutdown by passing a
259.Dv SIGUSR2
260to the virtual kernel's
261.Xr init 8
262process.
263.Sh DEBUGGING
264It is possible to directly gdb the virtual kernel's process.
265It is recommended that you do a
266.Ql handle SIGSEGV noprint
267to ignore page faults processed by the virtual kernel itself.
268.Sh EXAMPLES
269A couple of steps are necessary in order to prepare the system to build and
270run a virtual kernel.
271.Ss Setting up the filesystem
272The
273.Nm
274architecture needs a number of files which reside in
275.Pa /var/vkernel .
276Since these files tend to get rather big and the
277.Pa /var
278partition is usually of limited size, we recommend the directory to be
279created in the
280.Pa /home
281partition with a link to it in
282.Pa /var :
283.Bd -literal
284mkdir /home/var.vkernel
285ln -s /home/var.vkernel /var/vkernel
286.Ed
287.Pp
288Next, a filesystem image to be used by the virtual kernel has to be
289created and populated (assuming world has been built previously):
290.Bd -literal
291dd if=/dev/zero of=/var/vkernel/rootimg.01 bs=1m count=2048
292vnconfig -c -s labels vn0 /var/vkernel/rootimg.01
293disklabel -r -w vn0s0 auto
294disklabel -e vn0s0 # edit the label to create a vn0s0a partition
295newfs /dev/vn0s0a
296mount /dev/vn0s0a /mnt
297cd /usr/src
298make installworld DESTDIR=/mnt
299cd etc
300make distribution DESTDIR=/mnt
301echo '/dev/vkd0s0a / ufs rw 1 1' >/mnt/etc/fstab
302echo 'proc /proc procfs rw 0 0' >>/mnt/etc/fstab
303.Ed
304.Pp
305Edit
306.Pa /mnt/etc/ttys
307and replace the
308.Li console
309entry with the following line and turn off all other gettys.
310.Bd -literal
311console "/usr/libexec/getty Pc" cons25 on secure
312.Ed
313.Pp
314Then, unmount the disk.
315.Bd -literal
316umount /mnt
317vnconfig -u vn0
318.Ed
319.Ss Compiling the virtual kernel
320In order to compile a virtual kernel use the
321.Li VKERNEL
322kernel configuration file residing in
323.Pa /usr/src/sys/config
324(or a configuration file derived thereof):
325.Bd -literal
326cd /usr/src
327make -DNO_MODULES buildkernel KERNCONF=VKERNEL
328.Ed
329.Ss Enabling virtual kernel operation
330A special
331.Xr sysctl 8 ,
332.Va vm.vkernel_enable ,
333must be set to enable
334.Nm
335operation:
336.Bd -literal
337sysctl vm.vkernel_enable=1
338.Ed
339.Ss Configuring the network on the host system
340In order to access a network interface of the host system from the
341.Nm ,
342you must add the interface to a
343.Xr bridge 4
344device which will then be passed to the
345.Fl I
346option:
347.Bd -literal
348kldload if_bridge.ko
349kldload if_tap.ko
350ifconfig bridge0 create
351ifconfig bridge0 addm re0 # assuming re0 is the host's interface
352ifconfig bridge0 up
353.Ed
354.Ss Running the kernel
355Finally, the virtual kernel can be run:
356.Bd -literal
357cd /usr/obj/usr/src/sys/VKERNEL
358\&./kernel.debug -m 64m -r /var/vkernel/rootimg.01 -I auto:bridge0
359.Ed
360.Pp
361The
362.Xr reboot 8
363command can be used to stop a virtual kernel.
364.Sh BUILDING THE WORLD UNDER A VKERNEL
365The virtual kernel platform does not have all the header files expected
366by a world build, so the easiest thing to do right now is to specify a
367pc32 target when building the world under a virtual kernel, like this:
368.Bd -literal
369vkernel# make MACHINE_PLATFORM=pc32 buildworld
370vkernel# make MACHINE_PLATFORM=pc32 installworld
371.Ed
372.Sh SEE ALSO
373.Xr bridge 4 ,
374.Xr tap 4 ,
375.Xr vn 4 ,
376.Xr build 7 ,
377.Xr disklabel 8 ,
378.Xr ifconfig 8 ,
379.Xr vnconfig 8
380.Sh HISTORY
381Virtual kernels were introduced in
382.Dx 1.7 .
383.Sh AUTHORS
384.An -nosplit
385.An Matt Dillon
386thought up and implemented the
387.Nm
388architecture and wrote the
389.Nm vkd
390device driver.
391.An Sepherosa Ziehau
392wrote the
393.Nm vke
394device driver.
395This manual page was written by
396.An Sascha Wildner .