The Firecracker Jailer
Disclaimer
The jailer is designed to work only with statically linked binaries (with the default musl toolchain) and will not work with experimental gnu builds.
Jailer Usage
The jailer is invoked in this manner:
idis the unique VM identification string, which may contain alphanumeric characters and hyphens. The maximumidlength is currently 64 characters.numa_noderepresents the NUMA node the process gets assigned to. More details are available below.exec_fileis the path to the Firecracker binary that will be exec-ed by the jailer. The user can provide a path to any binary, but the interaction with the jailer is mostly Firecracker specific.uidandgidare the uid and gid the jailer switches to as it execs the target binary.cgroupcgroups can be passed to the jailer to let it set the values when the microVM process is spawned. The--cgroupargument must follow this format:<cgroup_file>=<value>(e.g cpuset.cpus=0). This argument can be used multiple times to set multiple cgroups. This is useful to avoid providing privileged permissions to another process for setting the cgroups before or after the jailer is executed. The--cgroupflag can help as well to set Firecracker process cgroups before the VM starts running, with no need to create the entire cgroup hierarchy manually (which requires privileged permissions).chroot_baserepresents the base folder where chroot jails are built. The default is/srv/jailer.netnsrepresents the path to a network namespace handle. If present, the jailer will use this to join the associated network namespace.When present, the
--daemonizeflag causes the jailer to calsetsid()and redirect all three standard I/O file descriptors to/dev/null.When present, the
--new-pid-nsflag causes the jailer tofork()and then exec the provided binary into a new PID namespace. As a result, the jailer and the process running the exec file have different PIDs. The PID of the child process is stored in the jail root directory inside<exec_file_name>.pid.The jailer adheres to the "end of command options" convention, meaning all parameters specified after
--are forwarded to Firecracker. For example, this can be paired with the--config-fileFirecracker argument to specify a configuration file when starting Firecracker via the jailer (the file path and the resources referenced within must be valid relative to a jailed Firecracker). Please note the jailer already passes--idparameter to the Firecracker process.
Jailer Operation
After starting, the Jailer goes through the following operations:
Validate all provided paths and the VM
id.Close all open file descriptors based on
/proc/<jailer-pid>/fdexcept input, output and error.Create the
<chroot_base>/<exec_file_name>/<id>/rootfolder, which will be henceforth referred to aschroot_dir.exec_file_nameis the last path component ofexec_file(for example, that would befirecrackerfor/usr/bin/firecracker). Nothing is done if the path already exists (it should not, sinceidis supposed to be unique).Copy
exec_fileto<chroot_base>/<exec_file_name>/<id>/root/<exec_file_name>.Create the
cgroupsub-folders. At the moment, the jailer usescgroup v1. On most systems, this is mounted by default in/sys/fs/cgroup(should be mounted by the user otherwise). The jailer will parse/proc/mountsto detect where each of the controllers required in--cgroupcan be found (multiple controllers may share the same path). For each identified location (referred to as<cgroup_base>), the jailer creates the<cgroup_base>/<exec_file_name>/<id>subfolder, and writes the current pid to<cgroup_base>/<exec_file_name>/<id>/tasks. Also, the value passed for each<cgroup_file>is written to the file. If--nodeis used the corresponding values are written to the appropriatecpuset.memsandcpuset.cpusfiles.Call
unshare()into a new mount namespace, usepivot_root()to switch the old system root mount point with a new one base inchroot_dir, switch the current working directory to the new root, unmount the old root mount point, and callchrootinto the current directory.Use
mknodto create a/dev/net/tunequivalent inside the jail.Use
mknodto create a/dev/kvmequivalent inside the jail.Use
chownto change ownership of thechroot_dir(root path/as seen by the jailed firecracker),/dev/net/tun,/dev/kvm. The ownership is changed to the provideduid:gid.If
--netns <netns>is present, attempt to join the specified network namespace.If
--daemonizeis specified, callsetsid()and redirectSTDIN,STDOUT, andSTDERRto/dev/null.If
--new-pid-nsis specified, callunshare()into a new PID namespace. This will not have any effect on the current process, but its first child will assume the role of init(1) in the new namespace. Next, the jailer is duplicated by afork()call, so that the child process belongs to the previously created PID namespace. The parent will store child's PID inside<exec_file_name>.pid, while the child drops privileges andexec()s into the<exec_file_name>, as described below.Drop privileges via setting the provided
uidandgid.Exec into
<exec_file_name> --id=<id> --start-time-us=<opaque> --start-time-cpu-us=<opaque>(and also forward any extra arguments provided to the jailer after--, as mentioned in the Jailer Usage section), where:id: (string) - Theidargument provided to jailer.opaque: (number) time calculated by the jailer that it spent doing its work.
Example Run and Notes
Let’s assume Firecracker is available as /usr/bin/firecracker, and the jailer can be found at /usr/bin/jailer. We pick the unique id 551e7604-e35c-42b3-b825-416853441234, and we choose to run on NUMA node 0 (in order to isolate the process in the 0th NUMA node we need to set cpuset.mems=0 and cpuset.cpus equals to the CPUs of that NUMA node), using uid 123, and gid 100. For this example, we are content with the default /srv/jailer chroot base dir.
We start by running:
After opening the file descriptors mentioned in the previous section, the jailer will create the following resources (and all their prerequisites, such as the path which contains them):
/srv/jailer/firecracker/551e7604-e35c-42b3-b825-416853441234/root/firecracker(copied from/usr/bin/firecracker)
We are going to refer to /srv/jailer/firecracker/551e7604-e35c-42b3-b825-416853441234/root as <chroot_dir>.
Let’s also assume the, cpuset cgroups are mounted at /sys/fs/cgroup/cpuset. The jailer will create the following subfolder (which will inherit settings from the parent cgroup):
/sys/fs/cgroup/cpuset/firecracker/551e7604-e35c-42b3-b825-416853441234
It’s worth noting that, whenever a folder already exists, nothing will be done, and we move on to the next directory that needs to be created. This should only happen for the common firecracker subfolder (but, as for creating the chroot path before, we do not issue an error if folders directly associated with the supposedly unique id already exist).
The jailer then writes the current pid to /sys/fs/cgroup/cpuset/firecracker/551e7604-e35c-42b3-b825-416853441234/tasks, It also writes 0 to /sys/fs/cgroup/cpuset/firecracker/551e7604-e35c-42b3-b825-416853441234/cpuset.mems, And the corresponding CPUs to /sys/fs/cgroup/cpuset/firecracker/551e7604-e35c-42b3-b825-416853441234/cpuset.cpus.
Since the --netns parameter is specified in our example, the jailer opens /var/run/netns/my_netns to get a file descriptor fd, uses setns(fd, CLONE_NEWNET) to join the associated network namespace, and then closes fd.
The --daemonize flag is also present, so the jailers opens /dev/null as RW and keeps the associate file descriptor as dev_null_fd (we do this before going inside the jail), to be used later.
Build the chroot jail. First, the jailer uses unshare() to enter a new mount namespace, and changes the propagation of all mount points in the new namespace to private using mount(NULL, “/”, NULL, MS_PRIVATE | MS_REC, NULL), as a prerequisite to pivot_root(). Another required operation is to bind mount <chroot_dir> on top of itself using mount(<chroot_dir>, <chroot_dir>, NULL, MS_BIND, NULL). At this point, the jailer creates the folder <chroot_dir>/old_root, changes the current directory to <chroot_dir>, and calls syscall(SYS_pivot_root, “.”, “old_root”). The final steps of building the jail are unmounting old_root using umount2(“old_root”, MNT_DETACH), deleting old_root with rmdir, and finally calling chroot(“.”) for good measure. From now, the process is jailed in <chroot_dir>.
Create the special file /dev/net/tun, using mknod(“/dev/net/tun”, S_IFCHR | S_IRUSR | S_IWUSR, makedev(10, 200)), and then call chown(“/dev/net/tun”, 123, 100), so Firecracker can use it after dropping privileges. This is required to use multiple TAP interfaces when running jailed. Do the same for /dev/kvm.
Change ownership of <chroot_dir> to uid:gid so that Firecracker can create its API socket there.
Since the --daemonize flag is present, call setsid() to join a new session, a new process group, and to detach from the controlling terminal. Then, redirect standard file descriptors to /dev/null by calling dup2(dev_null_fd, STDIN), dup2(dev_null_fd, STDOUT), and dup2(dev_null_fd, STDERR). Close dev_null_fd, because it is no longer necessary.
Finally, the jailer switches the uid to 123, and gid to 100, and execs
Now firecracker creates the socket at /srv/jailer/firecracker/551e7604-e35c-42b3-b825-416853441234/root/<api-sock> to interact with the VM.
Note: default value for <api-sock> is /run/firecracker.socket.
Observations
The user must create hard links for (or copy) any resources which will be provided to the VM via the API (disk images, kernel images, named pipes, etc) inside the jailed root folder. Also, permissions must be properly managed for these resources; for example the user which Firecracker runs as must have both read and write permissions to the backing file for a RW block device.
By default the VMs are not asigned to any NUMA node or pinned to any CPU. The user must manage any fine tuning of resource partitioning via cgroups, by using the
--cgroupcommand line argument or by using the--nodeargument.It’s up to the user to handle cleanup after running the jailer. One way to do this involves registering handlers with the cgroup
notify_on_releasemechanism, while being wary about potential race conditions (the instance crashing before the subscription process is complete, for example).For extra resilience, the
--new-pid-nsflag enables the Jailer to exec the binary file in a new PID namespace, in order to become a pseudo-init process. Alternatively, the user can spawn the jailer in a new PID namespace via a combination ofclone()with theCLONE_NEWPIDflag andexec().When running with
--daemonize, the jailer will fail to start if it's a process group leader, becausesetsid()returns an error in this case. Spawning the jailer viaclone()andexec()also ensures it cannot be a process group leader.We run the jailer as the
rootuser; it actually requires a more restricted set of capabilities, but that's to be determined as features stabilize.The jailer can only log messages to stdout/err for now, which is why the logic associated with
--daemonizeruns towards the end, instead of the very beginning. We are working on adding better logging capabilities.
Caveats
If all the cgroup controllers are bunched up on a single mount point using the "all" option, our current program logic will complain it cannot detect individual controller mount points.