Skip to content

A specialized hypervisor for Hermit.

License

Apache-2.0, MIT licenses found

Licenses found

Apache-2.0
LICENSE-APACHE
MIT
LICENSE-MIT
Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

hermit-os/uhyve

Repository files navigation

Uhyve - A minimal hypervisor for Hermit

crates.io Zulip Badge

Uhyve is a small hypervisor specialized for the Hermit kernel.

Installation

  1. Install the Rust toolchain. The Rust Foundation provides installation instructions.
  2. Install Uhyve:
cargo install --locked uhyve

Requirements

Linux

To check if your system supports virtualization, you can use the following command:

if egrep -c '(vmx|svm)' /proc/cpuinfo > /dev/null; then echo "Virtualization support found"; fi

Uhyve on Linux depends on the virtualization solution KVM (Kernel-based Virtual Machine). If the following command gives you some output, you are ready to go!

lsmod | grep kvm

Note

If the above steps don't work, make sure that you have enabled virtualization in your UEFI/BIOS settings.

macOS

Warning

Currently, Uhyve is mainly developed for Linux. The macOS version has not been tested extensively and does not support all features of the Linux version.

You can install Apple's Xcode Command Line Tools using the following command:

xcode-select --install

Additionally, the included hypervisor bases on the Hypervisor Framework depending on OS X Yosemite (10.10) or newer.

To verify if your processor is able to support this framework, run the following in your Terminal:

sysctl kern.hv_support

The output kern.hv_support: 1 indicates virtualization support.

Starting with Big Sur, all processes using the Hypervisor API must have the com.apple.security.hypervisor entitlement and therefore must be signed.

Building from source

To build from source, simply checkout the code and use cargo build:

git clone https://github.com/hermitcore/uhyve.git
cd uhyve
cargo build --release

macOS Big Sur: Signing Uhyve

uhyve can be self-signed using the following command:

codesign -s - --entitlements app.entitlements --force path_to_uhyve/uhyve

The file app.entitlements must have following content:

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<!DOCTYPE plist PUBLIC "-//Apple//DTD PLIST 1.0//EN" "http://www.apple.com/DTDs/PropertyList-1.0.dtd">
<plist version="1.0">
<dict>
    <key>com.apple.security.hypervisor</key>
    <true/>
</dict>
</plist>

For further information, please consult Apple's Documentation.

Usage

Running Hermit apps within Uhyve

Assuming that you have installed Uhyve, run the hypervisor to start the unikernel:

uhyve /path/to/the/unikernel/binary

Note

This repository ships a few binaries that can be used for testing.

If you want to compile Hermit binaries yourself (or create your own), take a look at the following repositories:

Configuration

Uhyve can be configured using environment variables. The following variables are supported:

  • HERMIT_CPUS: specifies the number of cores the virtual machine may use.
  • HERMIT_MEM: defines the memory size of the virtual machine. The suffixes M and G can be used to specify a value in megabytes or gigabytes, respectively.
  • HERMIT_GDB_PORT=port activate a gdb server for the application running inside Uhyve. See below

By default, the loader initializes a system with one core and 512 MiB RAM.

Example: the following command starts the demo application in a virtual machine, which has 4 cores and 8GiB memory:

HERMIT_CPUS=4 HERMIT_MEM=8G uhyve /path/to/the/unikernel/binary

Known issues

  • Uhyve isn't able to pass more than 128 environment variables to the unikernel.

Licensing

Licensed under either of

at your option.

Unless you explicitly state otherwise, any contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion in the work by you, as defined in the Apache-2.0 license, shall be dual licensed as above, without any additional terms or conditions.


Contributing

Testing Hermit apps using cargo run

As mentioned above, the Uhyve repository ships some binaries that can be used for testing purposes.

cargo run -- data/x86_64/rusty_demo
cargo run -- data/x86_64/hello_world
cargo run -- data/x86_64/hello_c

Debugging Hermit apps

Basic support of (single-core) applications is already integrated into Uhyve.

By specifying variable HERMIT_GDB_PORT=port, Uhyve is working as gdbserver and is waiting on port port for a connection to a gdb. For instance, with the following command Uhyve is waiting on port 6677 for a connection.

HERMIT_GDB_PORT=6677 uhyve /path_to_the_unikernel/hello_world

In principle, every gdb-capable IDE should be able to debug Hermit applications. (Eclipse, VSCode, ...)

Visual Studio Code / VSCodium

The repository hermit-rs provides example configuration files to debug a Hermit application with Visual Studio Code, VSCodium or derivatives of Eclipse Theia.

Debugging Hermit apps