The project HermitCore is a new unikernel targeting a scalable and predictable runtime for high-performance and cloud computing. HermitCore extends the multi-kernel approach (like McKernel) with unikernel features for a better programmability and scalability for hierarchical systems.
On the startup of HermitCore applications, cores are isolated from the Linux system enabling bare-metal execution of on these cores. This approach achieves lower OS jitter and a better scalability compared to full-weight kernels. Inter-kernel communication between HermitCore applications and the Linux system is realized by means of an IP interface.
In addition to the multi-kernel approach described above, HermitCore can be used as a classical standalone unikernel as well. In this case, HermitCore runs a single-kernel exclusively on the hardware or within a virtual machine. This reduces the resource demand and loweres the boot time which is critical for cloud computing applications. It is the result of a research project at RWTH Aachen University and is currently an experimental approach, i.e., not production ready. Please use it with caution.
HermitCore is being developed on GitHub. Create your own fork, send us a pull request, and chat with us on Slack.
The build process works currently only on x86-based Linux systems. To build the HermitCore kernel and applications you need:
- CMake
- Netwide Assember (NASM)
- recent host compiler such as GCC
- HermitCore cross-toolchain, i.e. Binutils, GCC, newlib, pthreads
We provide prebuilt packages (currently Debian-based only) of the HermitCore toolchain, which can be installed as follows:
$ echo "deb [trusted=yes] https://dl.bintray.com/rwth-os/hermitcore vivid main" | sudo tee -a /etc/apt/sources.list
$ sudo apt-get -qq update
$ sudo apt-get install binutils-hermit newlib-hermit pthread-embedded-hermit gcc-hermit libhermit
For non-Debian based systems, a docker image with the complete toolchain is provided and can be installed as follows:
$ docker pull rwthos/hermitcore
The following commad starts within the new docker container a shell and mounts from the host system the directory ~/src
to /src
:
$ docker run -i -t -v ~/src:/src rwthos/hermitcore:latest
Within the shell the croos toolchain can be used to build HermitCore applications.
If you want to build the toolchain yourself, have a look at the repository hermit-toolchain, which contains scripts to build the whole toolchain.
Depending on how you want to use HermitCore, you might need additional packages such as:
- QEMU (
apt-get install qemu-system-x86
)
To build HermitCore from source (without compiler), the repository with its submodules has to be cloned.
$ git clone [email protected]:RWTH-OS/HermitCore.git
$ cd HermitCore
$ git submodule init
$ git submodule update
We require a fairly recent version of CMake (3.7
) which is not yet present in
most Linux distributions. We therefore provide a helper script that fetches the
required CMake binaries from the upstream project and stores them locally, so
you only need to download it once.
$ . cmake/local-cmake.sh
-- Downloading CMake
--2017-03-28 16:13:37-- https://cmake.org/files/v3.7/cmake-3.7.2-Linux-x86_64.tar.gz
Loaded CA certificate '/etc/ssl/certs/ca-certificates.crt'
Resolving cmake.org... 66.194.253.19
Connecting to cmake.org|66.194.253.19|:443... connected.
HTTP request sent, awaiting response... 200 OK
Length: 30681434 (29M) [application/x-gzip]
Saving to: ‘cmake-3.7.2-Linux-x86_64.tar.gz’
cmake-3.7.2-Linux-x86_64.tar.gz 100%[===================>] 29,26M 3,74MB/s in 12s
2017-03-28 16:13:50 (2,48 MB/s) - ‘cmake-3.7.2-Linux-x86_64.tar.gz’ saved [30681434/30681434]
-- Unpacking CMake
-- Local CMake v3.7.2 installed to cmake/cmake-3.7.2-Linux-x86_64
-- Next time you source this script, no download will be neccessary
So before you build HermitCore you have to source the local-cmake.sh
script
everytime you open a new terminal.
To build HermitCore go to the directory with the source code, create a build
directory and call cmake
followed by make
.
$ mkdir build
$ cd build
$ cmake ..
$ make
$ sudo make install
If your toolchain is not located in /opt/hermit/bin
then you have to supply
its location to the cmake
command above like so:
$ cmake -DTOOLCHAIN_BIN_DIR=/home/user/hermit/bin ..
assuming that binaries like x86_64-hermit-gcc
and friends are located in that
directory. To install your new version in the same directory, you have to set the installation path and to install HermitCore as follows:
$ cmake -DTOOLCHAIN_BIN_DIR=/home/user/hermit/bin -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=/home/user/hermit ..
$ make
$ make install
Note: If you use the cross compiler outside of this repository, the compiler uses per default the library operating systems located by the toolchain (e.g. /opt/hermit/x86_64-hermit/lib/libhermit.a
).
$ cd build
$ make qemu
$ # or 'make qemu-dep' to build HermitCore dependencies before
Within the QEMU session you can start HermitCore application just the same as traditional Linux programs:
(QEMU) $ /hermit/x86_64-hermit/extra/tests/hello
smpboot: CPU 1 is now offline
Hello World!!!
argv[0] = /hermit/x86_64-hermit/extra/tests/hello
Receive signal with number 30
Hostname: hermit.localdomain
x86: Booting SMP configuration:
smpboot: Booting Node 0 Processor 1 APIC 0x1
Per default, the virtual machine has 10 cores, 2 NUMA nodes, and 8 GiB RAM.
Inside the VM runs a small Linux system, which already includes the patches for
HermitCore. Per NUMA node (= HermitCore isle) there is a directory called
isleX
under /sys/hermit
, where X
represents the NUMA node ID.
The demo applications are located in the directories
/hermit/x86_64-hermit/extra/{tests,benchmarks}
. A HermitCore loader is already registered.
By starting a HermitCore application, a proxy will be executed on the Linux
system, while the HermitCore binary will be started on isle 0 with cpu 1. To
change the default behavior, the environment variable HERMIT_ISLE
is used to
specify the (memory) location of the isle, while the environment variable
HERMIT_CPUS
is used to specify the cores.
For instance, HERMIT_ISLE=1 HERMIT_CPUS="3-5" /hermit/x86_64-hermit/extra/tests/hello
starts
a HelloWorld demo on the HermitCore isle 1, which uses the cores 3 to 5. The
output messages are forwarded to the Linux proxy and printed on the Linux
system.
HermitCore's kernel messages of isleX
are available via cat /sys/hermit/isleX/log
.
There is a virtual IP device for the communication between the HermitCore isles
and the Linux system (see output of ifconfig
). Per default, the Linux system
has the IP address 192.168.28.1
. The HermitCore isles starts with the IP
address 192.168.28.2
for isle 0 and is increased by one for every isle.
More HermitCore applications are available at /hermit/usr/{tests,benchmarks}
which is a shared directory between the host and QEMU.
HermitCore applications can be directly started as standalone kernel within a virtual machine. In this case, iRCCE is not supported.
$ cd build
$ make install DESTDIR=~/hermit-build
$ cd ~/hermit-build/opt/hermit
$ # using QEMU
$ HERMIT_ISLE=qemu bin/proxy x86_64-hermit/extra/tests/hello
$ # using uHyve
$ HERMIT_ISLE=uhyve bin/proxy x86_64-hermit/extra/tests/hello
With HERMIT_ISLE=qemu
, the application will be started within a QEMU VM.
Please note that the loader requires QEMU and uses per default KVM.
Furthermore, it expects that the executable is called qemu-system-x86_64
.
With HERMIT_ISLE=hyve
, the application will be started within a thin
hypervisor powered by Linux's KVM API and therefore requires KVM support.
uHyve has a considerably smaller startup time than QEMU, but lacks some features
such as GDB debugging.
In this context, the environment variable HERMIT_CPUS
specifies the number of
cpus (and no longer a range of core ids). Furthermore, the variable HERMIT_MEM
defines the memory size of the virtual machine. The suffix of M or G can be
used to specify a value in megabytes or gigabytes respectively. Per default, the
loader initializes a system with one core and 2 GiB RAM.
The virtual machine opens two TCP/IP ports. One is used for the communication
between HermitCore application and its proxy. The second port is used to create
a connection via telnet to QEMU's system monitor. With the environment variable
HERMIT_PORT
, the default port (18766) can be changed for the communication
between the HermitCore application and its proxy. The connection to the system
monitor used automatically HERMIT_PORT+1
, i.e., the default port is 18767.
The following command starts the stream benchmark in a virtual machine, which has 4 cores and 6GB memory.
$ HERMIT_ISLE=qemu HERMIT_CPUS=4 HERMIT_MEM=6G bin/proxy x86_64-hermit/extra/benchmarks/stream
Note: to launch HermitCore applications, root privileges are required.
A modified Linux kernel has to be installed.
Afterwards switch to the branch hermit
for a relative new vanilla kernel or to
centos
, which is compatible to the current CentOS 7 kernel. Configure the
kernel with make menuconfig
for your system. Be sure, that the option
CONFIG_HERMIT_CORE
in Processor type and features
is enabled.
$ git clone https://github.com/RWTH-OS/linux
$ cd linux
$ # see comments above
$ git checkout hermit
$ make menuconfig
$ make
Install the Linux kernel and its initial ramdisk on your system (see
descriptions of your Linux distribution). We recommend to disable Linux NO_HZ
feature by setting the kernel parameter nohz=off
.
Install HermitCore to your system (by default to /opt/hermit
):
$ cd build
$ sudo make install
$ ls -l /opt/hermit
After a reboot of the system, register the HermitCore loader at your system with following command:
$ sudo -c sh 'echo ":hermit:M:7:\\x42::/opt/hermit/bin/proxy:" > /proc/sys/fs/binfmt_misc/register'
The IP device between HermitCore and Linux currently does not support IPv6. Consequently, disable it (might be slightly different on your distribution):
$ echo 'net.ipv6.conf.mmnif.disable_ipv6 = 1' | sudo tee /etc/sysctl.conf
Per default, the IP device uses a static IP address range. Linux has to use
162.168.28.1
, where HermitCore isles start with 192.168.28.2
(isle 0). The
interface is mmnif
.
Please configure your network accordingly. For CentOS, you have to create the
file /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-mmnif
:
DEVICE=mmnif
BOOTPROTO=none
ONBOOT=yes
NETWORK=192.168.28.0
NETMASK=255.255.255.0
IPADDR=192.168.28.1
NM_CONTROLLED=yes
You can now start applications the same way as from within a virtual machine (see description above).
You can take usr/tests
as a starting point to build your own applications. All
that is required is that you include
[...]/HermitCore/cmake/HermitCore-Application.cmake
in your application's
CMakeLists.txt
. It doesn't have to reside inside the HermitCore repository.
Other than that, it should behave like normal CMake.
We provide profiling support via the XRay profiler. See usr/xray/README.md
for
more information on how to use it.
If the application is started via make qemu
, debugging via GDB is enabled by
default on port 1234. When run via proxy (HERMIT_ISLE=qemu
), set
HERMIT_DEBUG=1
.
$ gdb x86_64-hermit/extra/tests/hello
(gdb) target extended-remote :1234
Remote debugging using :1234
0xffffffff8100b542 in ?? ()
You can configure the -mtune=name
compiler flag by adding -DMTUNE=name
to
the cmake
command when configuring the project.
Please note, if the applications is started within a VM, the hypervisor has to support the specified architecture name.
If QEMU is started by our proxy and the environment variable HERMIT_KVM
is set
to 0
, the virtual machine will be not accelerated by KVM. In this case, the
-mtune
flag should be avoided.
With the environment variable HERMIT_APP_PORT
, an additional port can be open
to establish an TCP/IP connection with your application.
By setting the environment variable HERMIT_VERBOSE
to 1
, the proxy prints at
termination the kernel log messages onto the screen.
By setting the environment variable HERMIT_CAPTURE_NET
to 1
and
HERMIT_ISLE
to qemu
, QEMU captures the network traffic and creates the trace
file qemu-vlan0.pcap. For instance with Wireshark
you are able to analyze the file.
If HERMIT_MONITOR
is set to 1
and HERMIT_ISLE
to qemu
, QEMU establishes
a monitor which is available via telnet at port 18767.