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Re: [Xen-devel] [RFC 7/7] libxl: Wait for QEMU startup in stubdomain



On Fri, Feb 6, 2015 at 6:16 AM, Wei Liu <wei.liu2@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> Thanks for posting.
>
> ...
>
> FWIW  we are now experiencing problem with this startup protocol (not
> Linux stubdom specific) -- that path that libxl waiting for is wrong.

I simply used the code already present in the QEMU upstream code,
which is writing to that particular ath to indicate "running."  Since
it is distinct from the path used by the QEMU instance running in
Dom0, it works for my intended purpose: ensuring the device model is
running before unpausing the HVM guest.  When you say it is "wrong,"
is that just because you ultimately intend to rearchitect this and use
something different?  If so, maybe the path I am using is "good
enough" until that happens.  Otherwise, can you suggest a better path
or mechanism?

> Unfortunately this problem can't be solved without putting in
> significant effort and time (involves redesign of protocol and handle
> all the compatibility issues). We can't say for sure when the solution
> is going to land.

I noticed some discussion about this on xen-devel.  Unfortunately, I
was unable to find anything that laid out specifically what the
problems are - can you point me to a bug report or such?  The libxl
startup code - with callbacks on top of callbacks, callbacks within
callbacks, and callbacks stashed away in little places only to be
called _much_ later - is really convoluted, I suspect particularly so
for stubdom startup.  I am not surprised it got broken - who can
remember how it works?

While working on these patches reviving Anthony's work, I consistently
ran into HVM starup problems with QEMU upstream in a stub domain (it
always failed).  What I could not figure out is why QEMU-traditional
did not have a similar problem; it seemed to me that the same race
existed for QEMU-traditional stubdom.  I wrote it off as either (1)
MiniOS startup was so much faster than Linux that QEMU-traditional
always won the race, or (2) there was some implicit mechanism in
QEMU-traditional that ensured the HVM guest would wait for the device
model to be in place.  It sounds like maybe the race ctually is being
lost in 4.5.

If the problem you are contending with is that the HVM guest is being
unpaused before the device model is in place, I suggest that this
patch, or someting much like it, should address it.  I note that I
merely verified it did not break QEMU-traditional stubdom, but it is
just a matter of ensuring QEMU-traditional writes to _some_ xenstore
path when it is ready (it might do this already, in fact), and that
this patch waits on that path.  Also, it should be pretty easy to
extend this concept to ensure any additional stubdoms, such as vTPM,
are up and running before leaving the code im libxl_dm.c and unpausing
the HVM domain - we just chain through additional callbacks as needed.

There may be a desire to do a major rework of libxl_dm.c, etc., but
this patch might be a reasonable bandaid now for Xen 4.5.1.

> Also upstream QEMU stubdom, as you already notice, doesn't have a
> critical functionality -- save / restore. Adding that in might involve
> upstreaming some changes to QEMU, which has a time frame that is out of
> our control.

Xen maintains a separate repo for the QEMU code it uses.  I presume
this is because there is always something a little out of sync with
the mainstream QEMU release.  I do not understand why we cannot rely
on this to make available any needed changes to QEMU pending their
incorporation into QEMU proper.

> So my hunch is that we're not going to make it in time for
> 4.6. :-/
>
> Wei.

4.5 was _just_ released, and Xen is on a ~10 month release cycle.  Why
can't this get done?  Someone just has to take a little time to sit
down and think about this.  I remain baffled why Xen did not
transition to QEMU-upstream stubdom 2 years ago.  Running the device
model directly in Dom0 is an obvious and significant security concern
- the QEMU codebase is in constant flux, is too big, and is too
complex to be allowed to be part of the TCB.  I do not think this, or
even chroot jailing the device model (which I understand has been done
for some Xen-based projects), meets the standards for security
demonstrated by the rest of the project.

Can we arrive at an agreement that a Linux-based QEMU-upstream stubdom
should _at least_ be a technical preview for Xen 4.6?  A year ago,
George kicked around the idea that QEMU-upstream stubdom should be a
blocker for Xen 4.5 - clearly this notion fell through the cracks.
For a reasonable number of users, specifically those wishing to use
Xen as a desktop solution, save/restore is not required, and could be
omitted in 4.6.  I understand that rumpkernel has been a preferred
route, but realistically that looks like a Xen 5.0 feature - I have
seen no indication we are anywhere near making that happen, whereas
Linux will work now, with very few technical hurdles to overcome
(right now, the main issues seem to be getting xenfb hooked up
correctly, and deciding how we wish to handle certain elements of the
build process).

Best,
Eric

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