This is not an official Google product.
novm is a legacy-free, type 2 hypervisor written in Go. Its goal is to provide an alternate, high-performance Linux hypervisor for cloud workloads.
novm is unique because it exposes a filesystem-device as a primary mechanism for running guests. This allows you to easily manage independent software and data bundles independently and combine them into a single virtual machine instance.
novm leverages the excellent Linux Kernel Virtual Machine (KVM) interface to run guest instances.
novm changes the rules of virtualization by principally exposing a flexible filesystem interface instead of virtual block devices. This eliminates the pain of managing virtual disk images and allows much greater flexibility to how software is bundled and deployed. A virtual machine is no longer a heavyweight instance, but rather a hardware-enforced container around a collection of files and services defined on-the-fly.
novm also focuses only on high-performance paravirtualized devices, and drops support for legacy hardware and most emulation. This makes it inappropriate for running legacy applications, but ideal for modern cloud-based virtualization use cases. novm was originally called pervirt, but this name was changed after it was suggested that this name could be misconstrued.
novm aims to provide the best of both containers and hardware virtualization.
- You can run any compatible kernel.
You have much more freedom as a result of the fact that the guest kernel is decoupled from the host.
For example: You can hold back your guest kernel if necessary, or upgrade to the latest and greatest. Combined with migration, you can have a stable, long-running guest while still applying critical fixes and updates to the hosts. If you need filesystem or networking modules, you can freely load them in a guest. If a particular application requires a specific kernel, it's very straight-forward to use it.
- You have real, hardware-enforced isolation.
The only interface exposed is the x86 ABI and the hypervisor. Containers are more likely to suffer from security holes as the guest can access the entire kernel system call interface.
In multi-tenant environments, strong isolation is very important. Beyond security holes, containers likely present countless opportunities for subtle information leaks between guest instances.
- You can mix and match technologies.
Want a docker-style novm? Want a disk-based novm? Sure. Both co-exist easily and use resources in the same way. There's no need to manage two separate networking systems, bridges, management daemons, etc. Everything is managed in one way.
- Performance.
Okay, so there's a non-trivial hit. If your workload is very I/O intensive (massive disk or network usage), you will see a small but measurable drop in performance. But most workloads will not see a difference.
(Note that this project is still experimental, and there's plenty of performance work still to be done. The above should be considered a forward-looking statement.)
- File-based provisioning.
Instead of opaque disk images, novm allows you to easily combine directory trees to create a VM in real-time. This allows an administrator to very easily tweak files and fire up VMs without dealing with the headaches of converting disk images or using proprietary tools.
- Legacy hardware support.
We only support a very limited number of devices. This means that guests must be VirtIO-aware and not depend on the presence of any BIOS functionality post-boot.
For new workloads, this isn't a problem. But it means you can't migrate your untouchable, ancient IT system over to novm.
- Arbitrary guest OS support.
novm only supports the guests we know how to boot. For the time being, that means Linux only. It would be straight forward to add support for multiboot guests, like FreeBSD.
novm requires at least go 1.1 in order to build.
novm also requires at least Linux 3.8, with appropriate headers. If your
headers are not recent enough, you may see compilation errors related to
KVM_SIGNAL_MSI
or KVM_CAP_SIGNAL_MSI
.
To build novm, simply clone the repo and run make
.
Optionally, you can build packages by running make deb
or make rpm
.
To run novm, use scripts/novm
, or if you've installed packages, just type novm
.
For information on using the command line, just type novm
. You may use
novm <command> --help
for detailed information on any specific command.
The first thing you'll need is a kernel. You can create a kernel bundle using
the running kernel by running novm-import-kernel
.
To create a novm instance, try using novm create --com1 /bin/ls
.
Currently, the in-built bootloader supports only modern Linux kernels.
It follows the Linux boot convention by setting the vcpu directly into 32-bit protected mode and jumping to the ELF entry point. Or, if it finds a 64-bit kernel, it will do a bit of additional setup (creating an identity-mapped page table) and then jumps directly into 64-bit long mode at the entry point.
For full details on this convention see: https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/x86/boot.txt
The embedded bootloader works different than traditional bootloaders, such as GRUB or LILO. Unlike other bootloaders, the embedded bootloader requires the ELF kernel binary (vmlinux), not the compressed image (bzImage).
This is because the compressed image (bzImage) contains a compressed version of the ELF kernel binary, real-mode setup code, and a small setup sector. Traditional bootloaders typically lay these components out in memory and execute the real-mode code. The real-mode setup code will construct a few basic data structures via BIOS calls, extract the vmlinux binary into memory and finally jump into 32-bit protected mode in the newly uncompressed code.
This is a sensible approach, as the real-mode kernel code will be able to execute arbitrary BIOS calls and probe the hardware in arbitrary ways before finally switching to protected mode. However, for a virtualized environment where the hardware is fixed and known to the hypervisor, the bootloader itself can lay out the necessary data structures in memory and start directly in 32-bit protected mode. In addition to skipping a batch of real-mode execution and emulation, this allows us to avoid having to build a BIOS at all.
If a bzImage is provided, the ELF binary will be extracted and cached using a simple script derived from the script found in the Linux tree.
Given a vmlinux binary file, we load the file directly into memory as specified by the ELF program headers. For example:
Type Offset VirtAddr PhysAddr
FileSiz MemSiz Flags Align
LOAD 0x0000000000200000 0xffffffff81000000 0x0000000001000000
0x0000000000585000 0x0000000000585000 R E 200000
LOAD 0x0000000000800000 0xffffffff81600000 0x0000000001600000
0x000000000009d0f0 0x000000000009d0f0 RW 200000
LOAD 0x0000000000a00000 0x0000000000000000 0x000000000169e000
0x0000000000014bc0 0x0000000000014bc0 RW 200000
LOAD 0x0000000000ab3000 0xffffffff816b3000 0x00000000016b3000
0x00000000000d5000 0x00000000005dd000 RWE 200000
NOTE 0x000000000058efd0 0xffffffff8138efd0 0x000000000138efd0
0x000000000000017c 0x000000000000017c 4
We also note the entry point for the binary (here it happens to be 0x1000000).
Before we are able to jump to the entry point, we need to setup some basic requirements that would normally be done by the real-mode setup code:
- Need a simple GDT and BOOT_CS and BOOT_DS.
- An empty IDT is fine.
- Interrupts need to be disabled.
- CR0 is set appropriately to enable protected mode.
- Registers are cleared appropriately (per boot convention).
- Boot params structure is initialized and pointed to (see below).
As part of this setup process, any provided initial ram disk is also loaded into memory. This is pointed to as part of the boot parameters, and decompression is handled by the kernel.
The device model implemented by this kernel is substantially different from most VMs. Instead of attemping to emulate a legacy machine, we instead to support only the mechanisms which make sense for a next generation purpose-built Virtual Machine.