| .. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 |
| |
| .. _virtiofs_index: |
| |
| =================================================== |
| virtiofs: virtio-fs host<->guest shared file system |
| =================================================== |
| |
| - Copyright (C) 2019 Red Hat, Inc. |
| |
| Introduction |
| ============ |
| The virtiofs file system for Linux implements a driver for the paravirtualized |
| VIRTIO "virtio-fs" device for guest<->host file system sharing. It allows a |
| guest to mount a directory that has been exported on the host. |
| |
| Guests often require access to files residing on the host or remote systems. |
| Use cases include making files available to new guests during installation, |
| booting from a root file system located on the host, persistent storage for |
| stateless or ephemeral guests, and sharing a directory between guests. |
| |
| Although it is possible to use existing network file systems for some of these |
| tasks, they require configuration steps that are hard to automate and they |
| expose the storage network to the guest. The virtio-fs device was designed to |
| solve these problems by providing file system access without networking. |
| |
| Furthermore the virtio-fs device takes advantage of the co-location of the |
| guest and host to increase performance and provide semantics that are not |
| possible with network file systems. |
| |
| Usage |
| ===== |
| Mount file system with tag ``myfs`` on ``/mnt``: |
| |
| .. code-block:: sh |
| |
| guest# mount -t virtiofs myfs /mnt |
| |
| Please see https://virtio-fs.gitlab.io/ for details on how to configure QEMU |
| and the virtiofsd daemon. |
| |
| Mount options |
| ------------- |
| |
| virtiofs supports general VFS mount options, for example, remount, |
| ro, rw, context, etc. It also supports FUSE mount options. |
| |
| atime behavior |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| The atime-related mount options, for example, noatime, strictatime, |
| are ignored. The atime behavior for virtiofs is the same as the |
| underlying filesystem of the directory that has been exported |
| on the host. |
| |
| Internals |
| ========= |
| Since the virtio-fs device uses the FUSE protocol for file system requests, the |
| virtiofs file system for Linux is integrated closely with the FUSE file system |
| client. The guest acts as the FUSE client while the host acts as the FUSE |
| server. The /dev/fuse interface between the kernel and userspace is replaced |
| with the virtio-fs device interface. |
| |
| FUSE requests are placed into a virtqueue and processed by the host. The |
| response portion of the buffer is filled in by the host and the guest handles |
| the request completion. |
| |
| Mapping /dev/fuse to virtqueues requires solving differences in semantics |
| between /dev/fuse and virtqueues. Each time the /dev/fuse device is read, the |
| FUSE client may choose which request to transfer, making it possible to |
| prioritize certain requests over others. Virtqueues have queue semantics and |
| it is not possible to change the order of requests that have been enqueued. |
| This is especially important if the virtqueue becomes full since it is then |
| impossible to add high priority requests. In order to address this difference, |
| the virtio-fs device uses a "hiprio" virtqueue specifically for requests that |
| have priority over normal requests. |