246 lines
8.6 KiB
Diff
246 lines
8.6 KiB
Diff
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From 026160bc76bab26772c2a80bd50ae55119e3b60b Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
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Message-Id: <026160bc76bab26772c2a80bd50ae55119e3b60b@dist-git>
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From: Viktor Mihajlovski <mihajlov@linux.ibm.com>
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Date: Wed, 24 Jun 2020 13:16:23 +0200
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Subject: [PATCH] docs: Describe protected virtualization guest setup
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MIME-Version: 1.0
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Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8
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Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
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Protected virtualization/IBM Secure Execution for Linux protects
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guest memory and state from the host.
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Add some basic information about technology and a brief guide
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on setting up secure guests with libvirt.
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Signed-off-by: Viktor Mihajlovski <mihajlov@linux.ibm.com>
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Signed-off-by: Boris Fiuczynski <fiuczy@linux.ibm.com>
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Reviewed-by: Paulo de Rezende Pinatti <ppinatti@linux.ibm.com>
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Reviewed-by: Erik Skultety <eskultet@redhat.com>
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(cherry picked from commit f0d0cd6179709461b026f24569a688065e90d766)
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https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1848997
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https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1850351
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Signed-off-by: Jiri Denemark <jdenemar@redhat.com>
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Message-Id: <cf598d01d242bb56e64e14bfc32cece69341d949.1592996194.git.jdenemar@redhat.com>
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Reviewed-by: Ján Tomko <jtomko@redhat.com>
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---
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docs/kbase.html.in | 3 +
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docs/kbase/s390_protected_virt.rst | 189 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
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2 files changed, 192 insertions(+)
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create mode 100644 docs/kbase/s390_protected_virt.rst
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diff --git a/docs/kbase.html.in b/docs/kbase.html.in
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index f2975960f6..05773db16d 100644
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--- a/docs/kbase.html.in
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+++ b/docs/kbase.html.in
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@@ -14,6 +14,9 @@
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<dt><a href="kbase/secureusage.html">Secure usage</a></dt>
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<dd>Secure usage of the libvirt APIs</dd>
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+ <dt><a href="kbase/s390_protected_virt.html">Protected virtualization on s390</a></dt>
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+ <dd>Running secure s390 guests with IBM Secure Execution</dd>
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+
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<dt><a href="kbase/launch_security_sev.html">Launch security</a></dt>
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<dd>Securely launching VMs with AMD SEV</dd>
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diff --git a/docs/kbase/s390_protected_virt.rst b/docs/kbase/s390_protected_virt.rst
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new file mode 100644
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index 0000000000..f38d16d743
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--- /dev/null
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+++ b/docs/kbase/s390_protected_virt.rst
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@@ -0,0 +1,189 @@
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+================================
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+Protected Virtualization on s390
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+================================
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+
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+.. contents::
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+
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+Overview
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+========
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+
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+Protected virtualization, also known as IBM Secure Execution is a
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+hardware-based privacy protection technology for s390x (IBM Z).
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+It allows to execute virtual machines such that the host system
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+has no access to a VM's state and memory contents.
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+
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+Unlike other similar technologies, the memory of a running guest
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+is not encrypted but protected by hardware access controls, which
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+may only be manipulated by trusted system firmware, called
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+ultravisor.
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+
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+For the cases where the host needs access to guest memory (e.g. for
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+paging), it can request pages to be exported to it. The exported page
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+will be encrypted with a unique key for the running guest by the
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+ultravisor. The ultravisor also computes an integrity value for
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+the page, and stores it in a special table, together with the page
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+index and a counter. This way it can verify the integrity of
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+the page content upon re-import into the guest.
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+
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+In other cases it may be necessary for a guest to grant the host access
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+to dedicated memory regions (e.g. for I/O). The guest can request
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+that the ultravisor removes the memory protection from individual
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+pages, so that they can be shared with the host. Likewise, the
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+guest can undo the sharing.
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+
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+A secure guest will initially start in a regular non-protected VM.
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+The start-up is controlled by a small bootstrap program loaded
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+into memory together with encrypted operating system components and
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+a control structure (the PV header).
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+The operating system components (e.g. Linux kernel, initial RAM
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+file system, kernel parameters) are encrypted and integrity
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+protected. The component encryption keys and integrity values are
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+stored in the PV header.
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+The PV header is wrapped with a public key belonging to a specific
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+system (in fact it can be wrapped with multiple such keys). The
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+matching private key is only accessible by trusted hardware and
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+firmware in that specific system.
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+Consequently, such a secure guest boot image can only be run on the
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+systems it has been prepared for. Its contents can't be decrypted
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+without access to the private key and it can't be modified as
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+it is integrity protected.
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+
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+Host Requirements
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+=================
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+
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+IBM Secure Execution for Linux has some hardware and firmware
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+requirements. The system hardware must be an IBM z15 (or newer),
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+or an IBM LinuxONE III (or newer).
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+
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+It is also necessary that the IBM Secure Execution feature is
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+enabled for that system. With libvirt >= 6.5.0 you can run
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+``libvirt-host--validate`` or otherwise check for facility '158', e.g.
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+
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+::
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+
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+ $ grep facilities /proc/cpuinfo | grep 158
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+
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+The kernel must include the protected virtualization support
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+which can be verified by checking for the presence of directory
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+``/sys/firmware/uv``. It will only be present when both the
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+hardware and the kernel support are available.
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+
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+Finally, the host operating system must donate some memory to
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+the ultravisor needed to store memory security information.
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+This is achieved by specifying the following kernel command
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+line parameter to the host boot configuration
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+
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+::
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+
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+ prot_virt=1
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+
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+
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+Guest Requirements
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+==================
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+
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+Guest Boot
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+----------
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+
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+To start a guest in protected virtualization secure mode, the
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+boot image must have been prepared first with the program
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+``genprotimg`` using the correct public key for this host.
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+``genprotimg`` is part of the package ``s390-tools``, or
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+``s390-utils``, depending on the Linux distribution being used.
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+It can also be found at
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+`<https://github.com/ibm-s390-tools/s390-tools/tree/master/genprotimg>`_
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+
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+The guests have to be configured to use the host CPU model, which
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+must contain the ``unpack`` facility indicating ultravisor guest support.
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+
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+With the following command it's possible to check whether the host
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+CPU model satisfies the requirement
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+
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+::
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+
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+ $ virsh domcapabilities | grep unpack
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+
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+which should return
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+
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+::
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+
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+ <feature policy='require' name='unpack'/>
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+
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+Note that on hosts with libvirt < 6.5.0 if the check fails despite
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+the host system actually supporting protected virtualization guests,
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+this can be caused by a stale libvirt capabilities cache.
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+To recover, run the following commands
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+
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+::
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+
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+ $ systemctl stop libvirtd
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+ $ rm /var/cache/libvirt/qemu/capabilities/*.xml
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+ $ systemctl start libvirtd
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+
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+
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+Guest I/O
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+---------
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+
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+Protected virtualization guests support I/O using virtio devices.
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+As the virtio data structures of secure guests are not accessible
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+by the host, it is necessary to use shared memory ('bounce buffers').
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+
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+To enable virtio devices to use shared buffers, it is necessary
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+to configure them with platform_iommu enabled. This can done by adding
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+``iommu='on'`` to the driver element of a virtio device definition in the
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+guest's XML, e.g.
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+
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+::
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+
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+ <interface type='network'>
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+ <source network='default'/>
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+ <model type='virtio'/>
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+ <driver name='vhost' iommu='on'/>
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+ </interface>
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+
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+It is mandatory to define all virtio bus devices in this way to
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+prevent the host from attempting to access protected memory.
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+Ballooning will not work and is fenced by QEMU. It should be
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+disabled by specifying
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+
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+::
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+
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+ <memballoon model='none'/>
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+
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+Finally, the guest Linux must be instructed to allocate I/O
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+buffers using memory shared between host and guest using SWIOTLB.
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+This is done by adding ``swiotlb=nnn`` to the guest's kernel command
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+line string, where ``nnn`` stands for the number of statically
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+allocated 2K entries. A commonly used value for swiotlb is 262144.
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+
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+Example guest definition
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+========================
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+
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+Minimal domain XML for a protected virtualization guest, essentially
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+it's mostly about the ``iommu`` property
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+
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+::
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+
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+ <domain type='kvm'>
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+ <name>protected</name>
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+ <memory unit='KiB'>2048000</memory>
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+ <currentMemory unit='KiB'>2048000</currentMemory>
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+ <vcpu>1</vcpu>
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+ <os>
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+ <type arch='s390x'>hvm</type>
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+ </os>
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+ <cpu mode='host-model'/>
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+ <devices>
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+ <disk type='file' device='disk'>
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+ <driver name='qemu' type='qcow2' cache='none' io='native' iommu='on'>
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+ <source file='/var/lib/libvirt/images/protected.qcow2'/>
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+ <target dev='vda' bus='virtio'/>
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+ </disk>
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+ <interface type='network'>
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+ <driver iommu='on'/>
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+ <source network='default'/>
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+ <model type='virtio'/>
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+ </interface>
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+ <console type='pty'/>
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+ <memballoon model='none'/>
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+ </devices>
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+ </domain>
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--
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2.27.0
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