Signed-off-by: Wei Liu <liuwe@microsoft.com>
3.0 KiB
How to use virtio-fs
In the context of virtualization, it is always convenient to be able to share a directory from the host with the guest.
virtio-fs, also known as vhost-user-fs is a virtual device defined by the VIRTIO specification which allows any VMM to perform filesystem sharing.
Pre-requisites
The daemon
This virtual device relies on the vhost-user protocol, which assumes the backend (device emulation) is handled by a dedicated process running on the host. This daemon is called virtiofsd and needs to be present on the host.
Build virtiofsd
git clone https://gitlab.com/virtio-fs/virtiofsd
pushd virtiofsd
cargo build --release
sudo setcap cap_sys_admin+epi target/release/virtiofsd
Create shared directory
mkdir /tmp/shared_dir
Run virtiofsd
./virtiofsd \
--log-level debug \
--socket-path=/tmp/virtiofs \
--shared-dir=/tmp/shared_dir \
--cache=never \
--thread-pool-size=$N
The cache=never
option is the default when using virtiofsd
with
Cloud Hypervisor. This prevents from using the host page cache, reducing the
overall footprint on host memory. This increases the maximum density of virtual
machines that can be launched on a single host.
The cache=always
option will allow the host page cache to be used, which can
result in better performance for the guest's workload at the cost of increasing
the footprint on host memory.
The thread-pool-size
option controls how many IO threads are spawned. For
very fast storage like NVMe spawning enough worker threads is critical to
getting an acceptable performance compared to native.
Kernel support
Modern Linux kernels (at least v5.10) have support for virtio-fs. Use of older kernels, with additional patches, are not supported.
How to share directories with cloud-hypervisor
Start the VM
Once the daemon is running, the option --fs
from Cloud Hypervisor needs
to be used.
Both direct kernel boot and EFI firmware can be used to boot a VM with virtio-fs, given that the cloud image contains a recent enough kernel.
Correct functioning of --fs
requires --memory shared=on
to facilitate
interprocess memory sharing.
Assuming you have focal-server-cloudimg-amd64.raw
and vmlinux
on your
system, here is the Cloud Hypervisor command you need to run:
./cloud-hypervisor \
--cpus boot=1 \
--memory size=1G,shared=on \
--disk path=focal-server-cloudimg-amd64.raw \
--kernel vmlinux \
--cmdline "console=hvc0 root=/dev/vda1 rw" \
--fs tag=myfs,socket=/tmp/virtiofs,num_queues=1,queue_size=512
Mount the shared directory
The last step is to mount the shared directory inside the guest, using the
virtiofs
filesystem type.
mkdir mount_dir
mount -t virtiofs myfs mount_dir/
The tag
needs to be consistent with what has been provided through the
Cloud Hypervisor command line, which happens to be myfs
in this example.
DAX feature
Given the DAX feature is not stable yet from a daemon standpoint, it is not available in Cloud Hypervisor.