On October 3, 2022 3:21:23 PM PDT, Ali Raza <aliraza@xxxxxx> wrote: >Unikernel Linux (UKL) is a research project aimed at integrating >application specific optimizations to the Linux kernel. This RFC aims to >introduce this research to the community. Any feedback regarding the idea, >goals, implementation and research is highly appreciated. > >Unikernels are specialized operating systems where an application is linked >directly with the kernel and runs in supervisor mode. This allows the >developers to implement application specific optimizations to the kernel, >which can be directly invoked by the application (without going through the >syscall path). An application can control scheduling and resource >management and directly access the hardware. Application and the kernel can >be co-optimized, e.g., through LTO, PGO, etc. All of these optimizations, >and others, provide applications with huge performance benefits over >general purpose operating systems. > >Linux is the de-facto operating system of today. Applications depend on its >battle tested code base, large developer community, support for legacy >code, a huge ecosystem of tools and utilities, and a wide range of >compatible hardware and device drivers. Linux also allows some degree of >application specific optimizations through build time config options, >runtime configuration, and recently through eBPF. But still, there is a >need for even more fine-grained application specific optimizations, and >some developers resort to kernel bypass techniques. > >Unikernel Linux (UKL) aims to get the best of both worlds by bringing >application specific optimizations to the Linux ecosystem. This way, >unmodified applications can keep getting the benefits of Linux while taking >advantage of the unikernel-style optimizations. Optionally, applications >can be modified to invoke deeper optimizations. > >There are two steps to unikernel-izing Linux, i.e., first, equip Linux with >a unikernel model, and second, actually use that model to implement >application specific optimizations. This patch focuses on the first part. >Through this patch, unmodified applications can be built as Linux >unikernels, albeit with only modest performance advantages. Like >unikernels, UKL would allow an application to be statically linked into the >kernel and executed in supervisor mode. However, UKL preserves most of the >invariants and design of Linux, including a separate page-able application >portion of the address space and a pinned kernel portion, the ability to >run multiple processes, and distinct execution modes for application and >kernel code. Kernel execution mode and application execution mode are >different, e.g., the application execution mode allows application threads >to be scheduled, handle signals, etc., which do not apply to kernel >threads. Application built as a Linux unikernel will have its text and data >loaded with the kernel at boot time, while the rest of the address space >would remain unchanged. These applications invoke the system call >functionality through a function call into the kernel system call entry >point instead of through the syscall assembly instruction. UKL would >support a normal userspace so the UKL application can be started, managed, >profiled, etc., using normal command line utilities. > >Once Linux has a unikernel model, different application specific >optimizations are possible. We have tried a few, e.g., fast system call >transitions, shared stacks to allow LTO, invoking kernel functions >directly, etc. We have seen huge performance benefits, details of which are >not relevant to this patch and can be found in our paper. >(https://arxiv.org/pdf/2206.00789.pdf) > >UKL differs significantly from previous projects, e.g., UML, KML and LKL. >User Mode Linux (UML) is a virtual machine monitor implemented on syscall >interface, a very different goal from UKL. Kernel Mode Linux (KML) allows >applications to run in kernel mode and replaces syscalls with function >calls. While KML stops there, UKL goes further. UKL links applications and >kernel together which allows further optimizations e.g., fast system call >transitions, shared stacks to allow LTO, invoking kernel functions directly >etc. Details can be found in the paper linked above. Linux Kernel Library >(LKL) harvests arch independent code from Linux, takes it to userspace as a >library to be linked with applications. A host needs to provide arch >dependent functionality. This model is very different from UKL. A detailed >discussion of related work is present in the paper linked above. > >See samples/ukl for a simple TCP echo server example which can be built as >a normal user space application and also as a UKL application. In the Linux >config options, a path to the compiled and partially linked application >binary can be specified. Kernel built with UKL enabled will search this >location for the binary and link with the kernel. Applications and required >libraries need to be compiled with -mno-red-zone -mcmodel=kernel flags >because kernel mode execution can trample on application red zones and in >order to link with the kernel and be loaded in the high end of the address >space, application should have the correct memory model. Examples of other >applications like Redis, Memcached etc along with glibc and libgcc etc., >can be found at https://github.com/unikernelLinux/ukl > >List of authors and contributors: >================================= > >Ali Raza - aliraza@xxxxxx >Thomas Unger - tommyu@xxxxxx >Matthew Boyd - mboydmcse@xxxxxxxxx >Eric Munson - munsoner@xxxxxx >Parul Sohal - psohal@xxxxxx >Ulrich Drepper - drepper@xxxxxxxxxx >Richard W.M. Jones - rjones@xxxxxxxxxx >Daniel Bristot de Oliveira - bristot@xxxxxxxxxx >Larry Woodman - lwoodman@xxxxxxxxxx >Renato Mancuso - rmancuso@xxxxxx >Jonathan Appavoo - jappavoo@xxxxxx >Orran Krieger - okrieg@xxxxxx > >Ali Raza (9): > kbuild: Add sections and symbols to linker script for UKL support > x86/boot: Load the PT_TLS segment for Unikernel configs > sched: Add task_struct tracking of kernel or application execution > x86/entry: Create alternate entry path for system calls > x86/uaccess: Make access_ok UKL aware > x86/fault: Skip checking kernel mode access to user address space for > UKL > x86/signal: Adjust signal handler register values and return frame > exec: Make exec path for starting UKL application > Kconfig: Add config option for enabling and sample for testing UKL > >Eric B Munson (1): > exec: Give userspace a method for starting UKL process > > Documentation/index.rst | 1 + > Documentation/ukl/ukl.rst | 104 +++++++++++++++++++++++ > Kconfig | 2 + > Makefile | 4 + > arch/x86/boot/compressed/misc.c | 3 + > arch/x86/entry/entry_64.S | 133 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ > arch/x86/include/asm/elf.h | 9 +- > arch/x86/include/asm/uaccess.h | 8 ++ > arch/x86/kernel/process.c | 13 +++ > arch/x86/kernel/process_64.c | 49 ++++++++--- > arch/x86/kernel/signal.c | 22 +++-- > arch/x86/kernel/vmlinux.lds.S | 98 ++++++++++++++++++++++ > arch/x86/mm/fault.c | 7 +- > fs/binfmt_elf.c | 28 +++++++ > fs/exec.c | 75 +++++++++++++---- > include/asm-generic/sections.h | 4 + > include/asm-generic/vmlinux.lds.h | 32 ++++++- > include/linux/sched.h | 26 ++++++ > kernel/Kconfig.ukl | 41 +++++++++ > samples/ukl/Makefile | 16 ++++ > samples/ukl/README | 17 ++++ > samples/ukl/syscall.S | 28 +++++++ > samples/ukl/tcp_server.c | 99 ++++++++++++++++++++++ > scripts/mod/modpost.c | 4 + > 24 files changed, 785 insertions(+), 38 deletions(-) > create mode 100644 Documentation/ukl/ukl.rst > create mode 100644 kernel/Kconfig.ukl > create mode 100644 samples/ukl/Makefile > create mode 100644 samples/ukl/README > create mode 100644 samples/ukl/syscall.S > create mode 100644 samples/ukl/tcp_server.c > > >base-commit: 4fe89d07dcc2804c8b562f6c7896a45643d34b2f This is basically taking Linux and turning it into a whole new operating system, while expecting the Linux kernel community to carry the support burden thereof. We have seen this before, notably with Xen. It is *expensive* and *painful* for the maintenance of the mainstream kernel. Linux already has a notion of "kernel mode applications", they are called kernel modules and kernel threads. It seems to me that you are trying to introduce a user space compatibility layer into the kernel, with the only benefit being avoiding the syscall overhead. The latter is bigger than we would like, which is why we are changing the x86 hardware architecture to improve it. In my opinion, this would require *enormous* justification to put it into mainline.