--- wikisrc/ports/xen/howto.mdwn 2014/12/26 13:10:00 1.42 +++ wikisrc/ports/xen/howto.mdwn 2014/12/26 20:00:44 1.48 @@ -181,6 +181,10 @@ NetBSD, which is not yet a dom0, and the NetBSD install to a dom0 install by just changing the kernel and boot configuration. +For experimenting with Xen, a machine with as little as 1G of RAM and +100G of disk can work. For running many domUs in productions, far +more will be needed. + Styles of dom0 operation ------------------------ @@ -301,6 +305,11 @@ is using xm or xl. Note that xend is fo only be used if you plan on using "xm". Do NOT enable xend if you plan on using "xl" as it will cause problems. +The installation of NetBSD should already have created devices for xen +(xencons, xenevt), but if they are not present, create them: + + cd /dev && sh MAKEDEV xen + TODO: Give 3.1 advice (or remove it from pkgsrc). For 3.3 (and thus xm), add to rc.conf (but note that you should have @@ -329,13 +338,17 @@ For 4.2 with xl (preferred), add to rc.c TODO: Recommend for/against xen-watchdog. -After you have configured the daemons and eitehr started them or +After you have configured the daemons and either started them or rebooted, run the following (or use xl) to inspect Xen's boot messages, available resources, and running domains: - xm dmesg - xm info - xm list + # xm dmesg + [xen's boot info] + # xm info + [available memory, etc.] + # xm list + Name Id Mem(MB) CPU State Time(s) Console + Domain-0 0 64 0 r---- 58.1 anita (for testing NetBSD) -------------------------- @@ -412,16 +425,84 @@ mediated by Xen, and configured in the d Entropy in domUs can be an issue; physical disks and network are on the dom0. NetBSD's /dev/random system works, but is often challenged. +Config files +------------ + +There is no good order to present config files and the concepts +surrounding what is being configured. We first show an example config +file, and then in the various sections give details. + +See (at least in xentools41) /usr/pkg/share/examples/xen/xmexample*, +for a large number of well-commented examples, mostly for running +GNU/Linux. + +The following is an example minimal domain configuration file +"/usr/pkg/etc/xen/foo". It is (with only a name change) an actual +known working config file on Xen 4.1 (NetBSD 5 amd64 dom0 and NetBSD 5 +i386 domU). The domU serves as a network file server. + + # -*- mode: python; -*- + + kernel = "/netbsd-XEN3PAE_DOMU-i386-foo.gz" + memory = 1024 + vif = [ 'mac=aa:00:00:d1:00:09,bridge=bridge0' ] + disk = [ 'file:/n0/xen/foo-wd0,0x0,w', + 'file:/n0/xen/foo-wd1,0x1,w' ] + +The domain will have the same name as the file. The kernel has the +host/domU name in it, so that on the dom0 one can update the various +domUs independently. The vif line causes an interface to be provided, +with a specific mac address (do not reuse MAC addresses!), in bridge +mode. Two disks are provided, and they are both writable; the bits +are stored in files and Xen attaches them to a vnd(4) device in the +dom0 on domain creation. The system treates xbd0 as the boot device +without needing explicit configuration. + +By default xm looks for domain config files in /usr/pkg/etc/xen. Note +that "xm create" takes the name of a config file, while other commands +take the name of a domain. To create the domain, connect to the +console, create the domain while attaching the console, shutdown the +domain, and see if it has finished stopping, do (or xl with Xen >= +4.2): + + xm create foo + xm console foo + xm create -c foo + xm shutdown foo + xm list + +Typing ^] will exit the console session. Shutting down a domain is +equivalent to pushing the power button; a NetBSD domU will receive a +power-press event and do a clean shutdown. Shutting down the dom0 +will trigger controlled shutdowns of all configured domUs. + +domU kernels +------------ + +On a physical computer, the BIOS reads sector 0, and a chain of boot +loaders finds and loads a kernel. Normally this comes from the root +filesystem. With Xen domUs, the process is totally different. The +normal path is for the domU kernel to be a file in the dom0's +filesystem. At the request of the dom0, Xen loads that kernel into a +new domU instance and starts execution. While domU kernels can be +anyplace, reasonable places to store domU kernels on the dom0 are in / +(so they are near the dom0 kernel), in /usr/pkg/etc/xen (near the +config files), or in /u0/xen (where the vdisks are). + +See the VPS section near the end for discussion of alternate ways to +obtain domU kernels. + CPU and memory -------------- -A domain is provided with some number of vcpus, less than the -number of cpus seen by the hypervisor. For a dom0, this is controlled -by the boot argument "dom0_max_vcpus=1". For a domU, it is controlled -from the config file. - -A domain is provided with memory, In the straightforward case, the sum -of the the memory allocated to the dom0 and all domUs must be less +A domain is provided with some number of vcpus, less than the number +of cpus seen by the hypervisor. (For a dom0, this is controlled by +the boot argument "dom0_max_vcpus=1".) For a domU, it is controlled +from the config file by the "vcpus = N" directive. + +A domain is provided with memory; this is controlled in the config +file by "memory = N" (in megabytes). In the straightforward case, the +sum of the the memory allocated to the dom0 and all domUs must be less than the available memory. Xen also provides a "balloon" driver, which can be used to let domains @@ -447,23 +528,55 @@ create an empty 4G virtual disk, simply dd if=/dev/zero of=foo-xbd0 bs=1m count=4096 With the lvm style, one creates logical devices. They are then used -similarly to vnds. +similarly to vnds. TODO: Add an example with lvm. -Virtual Networking ------------------- +In domU config files, the disks are defined as a sequence of 3-tuples. +The first element is "method:/path/to/disk". Common methods are +"file:" for file-backed vnd. and "phy:" for something that is already +a (TODO: character or block) device. + +The second element is an artifact of how virtual disks are passed to +Linux, and a source of confusion with NetBSD Xen usage. Linux domUs +are given a device name to associate with the disk, and values like +"hda1" or "sda1" are common. In a NetBSD domU, the first disk appears +as xbd0, the second as xbd1, and so on. However, xm/xl demand a +second argument. The name given is converted to a major/minor by +consulting /dev and this is passed to the domU (TODO: check this). In +the general case, the dom0 and domU can be different operating +systems, and it is an unwarranted assumption that they have consistent +numbering in /dev, or even that the dom0 OS has a /dev. With NetBSD +as both dom0 and domU, using values of 0x0 for the first disk and 0x1 +for the second works fine and avoids this issue. -TODO: explain xvif concept, and that it's general. +The third element is "w" for writable disks, and "r" for read-only +disks. -There are two normal styles: bridging and NAT. +Virtual Networking +------------------ -With bridging, the domU perceives itself to be on the same network as -the dom0. For server virtualization, this is usually best. +Xen provides virtual ethernets, each of which connects the dom0 and a +domU. For each virtual network, there is an interface "xvifN.M" in +the dom0, and in domU index N, a matching interface xennetM (NetBSD +name). The interfaces behave as if there is an Ethernet with two +adaptors connected. From this primitive, one can construct various +configurations. We focus on two common and useful cases for which +there are existing scripts: bridging and NAT. + +With bridging (in the example above), the domU perceives itself to be +on the same network as the dom0. For server virtualization, this is +usually best. Bridging is accomplished by creating a bridge(4) device +and adding the dom0's physical interface and the various xvifN.0 +interfaces to the bridge. One specifies "bridge=bridge0" in the domU +config file. The bridge must be set up already in the dom0; an +example /etc/ifconfig.bridge0 is: + + create + up + !brconfig bridge0 add wm0 With NAT, the domU perceives itself to be behind a NAT running on the dom0. This is often appropriate when running Xen on a workstation. - -One can construct arbitrary other configurations, but there is no -script support. +TODO: NAT appears to be configured by "vif = [ '' ]". Sizing domains -------------- @@ -477,63 +590,28 @@ create a new file and vnconfig it (or lv just like updating physical disks, but without having to be there and without those pesky connectors. -domU kernels ------------- - -On a physical computer, the BIOS reads sector 0, and a chain of boot -loaders finds and loads a kernel. Normally this comes from the root -filesystem. With Xen domUs, the process is totally different. The -normal path is for the domU kernel to be a file in the dom0's -filesystem. At the request of the dom0, Xen loads that kernel into a -new domU instance and starts execution. While domU kernels can be -anyplace, reasonable places to store domU kernels on the dom0 are in / -(so they are near the dom0 kernel), in /usr/pkg/etc/xen (near the -config files), or in /u0/xen (where the vdisks are). - -See the VPS section near the end for discussion of alternate ways to -obtain domU kernels. - -Config files ------------- +Starting domains automatically +------------------------------ -TODO: give example config files. Use both lvm and vnd. +To start domains foo at bar at boot and shut them down cleanly on dom0 +shutdown, in rc.conf add: -TODO: explain the mess with 3 arguments for disks and how to cope (0x1). - -Starting domains ----------------- - -TODO: Explain "xm start" and "xl start". Explain rc.d/xendomains. + xendomains="foo bar" TODO: Explain why 4.1 rc.d/xendomains has xl, when one should use xm -on 4.1. +on 4.1. Or fix the xentools41 package to have xm Creating specific unprivileged domains (domU) ============================================= Creating domUs is almost entirely independent of operating system. We first explain NetBSD, and then differences for Linux and Solaris. +Note that you must have already completed the dom0 setup so that "xm +list" (or "xl list") works. Creating an unprivileged NetBSD domain (domU) --------------------------------------------- -Once you have *domain0* running, you need to start the xen tool daemon -(`/usr/pkg/share/examples/rc.d/xend start`) and the xen backend daemon -(`/usr/pkg/share/examples/rc.d/xenbackendd start` for Xen3\*, -`/usr/pkg/share/examples/rc.d/xencommons start` for Xen4.\*). Make sure -that `/dev/xencons` and `/dev/xenevt` exist before starting `xend`. You -can create them with this command: - - # cd /dev && sh MAKEDEV xen - -xend will write logs to `/var/log/xend.log` and -`/var/log/xend-debug.log`. You can then control xen with the xm tool. -'xm list' will show something like: - - # xm list - Name Id Mem(MB) CPU State Time(s) Console - Domain-0 0 64 0 r---- 58.1 - 'xm create' allows you to create a new domain. It uses a config file in PKG\_SYSCONFDIR for its parameters. By default, this file will be in `/usr/pkg/etc/xen/`. On creation, a kernel has to be specified, which @@ -657,7 +735,7 @@ working vif-bridge is also provided with #!/bin/sh #============================================================================ - # $NetBSD: howto.mdwn,v 1.41 2014/12/26 13:04:31 gdt Exp $ + # $NetBSD: howto.mdwn,v 1.47 2014/12/26 18:35:45 gdt Exp $ # # /usr/pkg/etc/xen/vif-bridge # @@ -1047,3 +1125,12 @@ TODO: Perhaps reference panix, prmgr, am TODO: Somewhere, discuss pvgrub and py-grub to load the domU kernel from the domU filesystem. + +Using npf +--------- + +In standard kernels, npf is a module, and thus cannot be loadeed in a +DOMU kernel. + +TODO: explain how to compile npf into a custom kernel, answering: +http://mail-index.netbsd.org/netbsd-users/2014/12/26/msg015576.html