On 2/1/19 7:04 PM, Daniel Henrique Barboza wrote:
Hi,
I'm facing a strange behavior when running Libvirt from source code,
latest upstream, on an Ubuntu 18.04.1 LTS Power 9 server. My QEMU
guest - which is using VFIO and GPU passthrough - breaks on boot when
trying to allocate a DMA window inside KVM.
Debugging the code, I've found out that the problem is related to the
process
not having CAP_IPC_LOCK - at least from the host kernel perspective.
This is strange because:
- the same VM running directly from QEMU command line works
- the same VM running in the system Libvirt (v4.0.0, Ubuntu version)
also works
What am I missing? My understanding on Linux process is that a process
running as root should inherit the same capabilities of the user, which
includes
CAP_IPC_LOCK. Running Libvirt from source code should grant ipc_lock
to it ... right?
No. Ideally, you trust libvirt and want it to manage devices on your
system thus it needs all the capabilities. But qemu spawn by libvirt
should have no capabilities as libvirt set up everything that's needed
for qemu to run. But this is hard to get right - qemu changes and so
does the capabilities it may require (these depend on domain
configuration anyway). Therefore, it is possible to set libvirt so it
does not drop capabilities for qemu process - see
clear_emulator_capabilities in qemu.conf - but then libvirt can't
guarantee that a compromised qemu does no harm.
This corresponds with your finding about ./configure - if there is no
libncap-ng found there's no way for libvirt to drop capabilities and
thus it doesn't do that.
Michal
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