| ============================== |
| Running nested guests with KVM |
| ============================== |
| |
| A nested guest is the ability to run a guest inside another guest (it |
| can be KVM-based or a different hypervisor). The straightforward |
| example is a KVM guest that in turn runs on a KVM guest (the rest of |
| this document is built on this example):: |
| |
| .----------------. .----------------. |
| | | | | |
| | L2 | | L2 | |
| | (Nested Guest) | | (Nested Guest) | |
| | | | | |
| |----------------'--'----------------| |
| | | |
| | L1 (Guest Hypervisor) | |
| | KVM (/dev/kvm) | |
| | | |
| .------------------------------------------------------. |
| | L0 (Host Hypervisor) | |
| | KVM (/dev/kvm) | |
| |------------------------------------------------------| |
| | Hardware (with virtualization extensions) | |
| '------------------------------------------------------' |
| |
| Terminology: |
| |
| - L0 – level-0; the bare metal host, running KVM |
| |
| - L1 – level-1 guest; a VM running on L0; also called the "guest |
| hypervisor", as it itself is capable of running KVM. |
| |
| - L2 – level-2 guest; a VM running on L1, this is the "nested guest" |
| |
| .. note:: The above diagram is modelled after the x86 architecture; |
| s390x, ppc64 and other architectures are likely to have |
| a different design for nesting. |
| |
| For example, s390x always has an LPAR (LogicalPARtition) |
| hypervisor running on bare metal, adding another layer and |
| resulting in at least four levels in a nested setup — L0 (bare |
| metal, running the LPAR hypervisor), L1 (host hypervisor), L2 |
| (guest hypervisor), L3 (nested guest). |
| |
| This document will stick with the three-level terminology (L0, |
| L1, and L2) for all architectures; and will largely focus on |
| x86. |
| |
| |
| Use Cases |
| --------- |
| |
| There are several scenarios where nested KVM can be useful, to name a |
| few: |
| |
| - As a developer, you want to test your software on different operating |
| systems (OSes). Instead of renting multiple VMs from a Cloud |
| Provider, using nested KVM lets you rent a large enough "guest |
| hypervisor" (level-1 guest). This in turn allows you to create |
| multiple nested guests (level-2 guests), running different OSes, on |
| which you can develop and test your software. |
| |
| - Live migration of "guest hypervisors" and their nested guests, for |
| load balancing, disaster recovery, etc. |
| |
| - VM image creation tools (e.g. ``virt-install``, etc) often run |
| their own VM, and users expect these to work inside a VM. |
| |
| - Some OSes use virtualization internally for security (e.g. to let |
| applications run safely in isolation). |
| |
| |
| Enabling "nested" (x86) |
| ----------------------- |
| |
| From Linux kernel v4.20 onwards, the ``nested`` KVM parameter is enabled |
| by default for Intel and AMD. (Though your Linux distribution might |
| override this default.) |
| |
| In case you are running a Linux kernel older than v4.19, to enable |
| nesting, set the ``nested`` KVM module parameter to ``Y`` or ``1``. To |
| persist this setting across reboots, you can add it in a config file, as |
| shown below: |
| |
| 1. On the bare metal host (L0), list the kernel modules and ensure that |
| the KVM modules:: |
| |
| $ lsmod | grep -i kvm |
| kvm_intel 133627 0 |
| kvm 435079 1 kvm_intel |
| |
| 2. Show information for ``kvm_intel`` module:: |
| |
| $ modinfo kvm_intel | grep -i nested |
| parm: nested:bool |
| |
| 3. For the nested KVM configuration to persist across reboots, place the |
| below in ``/etc/modprobed/kvm_intel.conf`` (create the file if it |
| doesn't exist):: |
| |
| $ cat /etc/modprobe.d/kvm_intel.conf |
| options kvm-intel nested=y |
| |
| 4. Unload and re-load the KVM Intel module:: |
| |
| $ sudo rmmod kvm-intel |
| $ sudo modprobe kvm-intel |
| |
| 5. Verify if the ``nested`` parameter for KVM is enabled:: |
| |
| $ cat /sys/module/kvm_intel/parameters/nested |
| Y |
| |
| For AMD hosts, the process is the same as above, except that the module |
| name is ``kvm-amd``. |
| |
| |
| Additional nested-related kernel parameters (x86) |
| ------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| If your hardware is sufficiently advanced (Intel Haswell processor or |
| higher, which has newer hardware virt extensions), the following |
| additional features will also be enabled by default: "Shadow VMCS |
| (Virtual Machine Control Structure)", APIC Virtualization on your bare |
| metal host (L0). Parameters for Intel hosts:: |
| |
| $ cat /sys/module/kvm_intel/parameters/enable_shadow_vmcs |
| Y |
| |
| $ cat /sys/module/kvm_intel/parameters/enable_apicv |
| Y |
| |
| $ cat /sys/module/kvm_intel/parameters/ept |
| Y |
| |
| .. note:: If you suspect your L2 (i.e. nested guest) is running slower, |
| ensure the above are enabled (particularly |
| ``enable_shadow_vmcs`` and ``ept``). |
| |
| |
| Starting a nested guest (x86) |
| ----------------------------- |
| |
| Once your bare metal host (L0) is configured for nesting, you should be |
| able to start an L1 guest with:: |
| |
| $ qemu-kvm -cpu host [...] |
| |
| The above will pass through the host CPU's capabilities as-is to the |
| gues); or for better live migration compatibility, use a named CPU |
| model supported by QEMU. e.g.:: |
| |
| $ qemu-kvm -cpu Haswell-noTSX-IBRS,vmx=on |
| |
| then the guest hypervisor will subsequently be capable of running a |
| nested guest with accelerated KVM. |
| |
| |
| Enabling "nested" (s390x) |
| ------------------------- |
| |
| 1. On the host hypervisor (L0), enable the ``nested`` parameter on |
| s390x:: |
| |
| $ rmmod kvm |
| $ modprobe kvm nested=1 |
| |
| .. note:: On s390x, the kernel parameter ``hpage`` is mutually exclusive |
| with the ``nested`` paramter — i.e. to be able to enable |
| ``nested``, the ``hpage`` parameter *must* be disabled. |
| |
| 2. The guest hypervisor (L1) must be provided with the ``sie`` CPU |
| feature — with QEMU, this can be done by using "host passthrough" |
| (via the command-line ``-cpu host``). |
| |
| 3. Now the KVM module can be loaded in the L1 (guest hypervisor):: |
| |
| $ modprobe kvm |
| |
| |
| Live migration with nested KVM |
| ------------------------------ |
| |
| Migrating an L1 guest, with a *live* nested guest in it, to another |
| bare metal host, works as of Linux kernel 5.3 and QEMU 4.2.0 for |
| Intel x86 systems, and even on older versions for s390x. |
| |
| On AMD systems, once an L1 guest has started an L2 guest, the L1 guest |
| should no longer be migrated or saved (refer to QEMU documentation on |
| "savevm"/"loadvm") until the L2 guest shuts down. Attempting to migrate |
| or save-and-load an L1 guest while an L2 guest is running will result in |
| undefined behavior. You might see a ``kernel BUG!`` entry in ``dmesg``, a |
| kernel 'oops', or an outright kernel panic. Such a migrated or loaded L1 |
| guest can no longer be considered stable or secure, and must be restarted. |
| Migrating an L1 guest merely configured to support nesting, while not |
| actually running L2 guests, is expected to function normally even on AMD |
| systems but may fail once guests are started. |
| |
| Migrating an L2 guest is always expected to succeed, so all the following |
| scenarios should work even on AMD systems: |
| |
| - Migrating a nested guest (L2) to another L1 guest on the *same* bare |
| metal host. |
| |
| - Migrating a nested guest (L2) to another L1 guest on a *different* |
| bare metal host. |
| |
| - Migrating a nested guest (L2) to a bare metal host. |
| |
| Reporting bugs from nested setups |
| ----------------------------------- |
| |
| Debugging "nested" problems can involve sifting through log files across |
| L0, L1 and L2; this can result in tedious back-n-forth between the bug |
| reporter and the bug fixer. |
| |
| - Mention that you are in a "nested" setup. If you are running any kind |
| of "nesting" at all, say so. Unfortunately, this needs to be called |
| out because when reporting bugs, people tend to forget to even |
| *mention* that they're using nested virtualization. |
| |
| - Ensure you are actually running KVM on KVM. Sometimes people do not |
| have KVM enabled for their guest hypervisor (L1), which results in |
| them running with pure emulation or what QEMU calls it as "TCG", but |
| they think they're running nested KVM. Thus confusing "nested Virt" |
| (which could also mean, QEMU on KVM) with "nested KVM" (KVM on KVM). |
| |
| Information to collect (generic) |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| The following is not an exhaustive list, but a very good starting point: |
| |
| - Kernel, libvirt, and QEMU version from L0 |
| |
| - Kernel, libvirt and QEMU version from L1 |
| |
| - QEMU command-line of L1 -- when using libvirt, you'll find it here: |
| ``/var/log/libvirt/qemu/instance.log`` |
| |
| - QEMU command-line of L2 -- as above, when using libvirt, get the |
| complete libvirt-generated QEMU command-line |
| |
| - ``cat /sys/cpuinfo`` from L0 |
| |
| - ``cat /sys/cpuinfo`` from L1 |
| |
| - ``lscpu`` from L0 |
| |
| - ``lscpu`` from L1 |
| |
| - Full ``dmesg`` output from L0 |
| |
| - Full ``dmesg`` output from L1 |
| |
| x86-specific info to collect |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| Both the below commands, ``x86info`` and ``dmidecode``, should be |
| available on most Linux distributions with the same name: |
| |
| - Output of: ``x86info -a`` from L0 |
| |
| - Output of: ``x86info -a`` from L1 |
| |
| - Output of: ``dmidecode`` from L0 |
| |
| - Output of: ``dmidecode`` from L1 |
| |
| s390x-specific info to collect |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| Along with the earlier mentioned generic details, the below is |
| also recommended: |
| |
| - ``/proc/sysinfo`` from L1; this will also include the info from L0 |