All resources are used for demonstration purposes and are not intended for production.
You can check if your system meets the requirements by running
firecracker/tools/devtool checkenv
.
An opinionated way to run Firecracker is to launch an
EC2 c5.metal
instance with Ubuntu 22.04.
Firecracker requires the KVM Linux kernel module to perform its virtualization and emulation tasks.
We exclusively use .metal
instance types, because EC2 only supports KVM on
.metal
instance types.
Firecracker supports x86_64 and aarch64 Linux, see specific supported kernels.
Firecracker requires read/write access to /dev/kvm
exposed by the KVM module.
The presence of the KVM module can be checked with:
lsmod | grep kvm
An example output where it is enabled:
kvm_intel 348160 0
kvm 970752 1 kvm_intel
irqbypass 16384 1 kvm
Some Linux distributions use the kvm
group to manage access to /dev/kvm
,
while others rely on access control lists. If you have the ACL package for your
distro installed, you can grant Read+Write access with:
sudo setfacl -m u:${USER}:rw /dev/kvm
Otherwise, if access is managed via the kvm
group:
[ $(stat -c "%G" /dev/kvm) = kvm ] && sudo usermod -aG kvm ${USER} \
&& echo "Access granted."
If none of the above works, you will need to either install the file system ACL
package for your distro and use the setfacl
command as above, or run
Firecracker as root
(via sudo
).
You can check if you have access to /dev/kvm
with:
[ -r /dev/kvm ] && [ -w /dev/kvm ] && echo "OK" || echo "FAIL"
In production, Firecracker is designed to be run securely inside an execution
jail, set up by the jailer
binary. This is how our
integration test suite does it.
For simplicity, this guide will not use the jailer
.
To successfully start a microVM, you will need an uncompressed Linux kernel binary, and an ext4 file system image (to use as rootfs). This guide uses a 5.10 kernel image with a Ubuntu 22.04 rootfs from our CI:
ARCH="$(uname -m)"
latest=$(wget "http://spec.ccfc.min.s3.amazonaws.com/?prefix=firecracker-ci/v1.9/x86_64/vmlinux-5.10&list-type=2" -O - 2>/dev/null | grep "(?<=<Key>)(firecracker-ci/v1.9/x86_64/vmlinux-5\.10\.[0-9]{3})(?=</Key>)" -o -P)
# Download a linux kernel binary
wget https://s3.amazonaws.com/spec.ccfc.min/${latest}
# Download a rootfs
wget https://s3.amazonaws.com/spec.ccfc.min/firecracker-ci/v1.9/${ARCH}/ubuntu-22.04.ext4
# Download the ssh key for the rootfs
wget https://s3.amazonaws.com/spec.ccfc.min/firecracker-ci/v1.9/${ARCH}/ubuntu-22.04.id_rsa
# Set user read permission on the ssh key
chmod 400 ./ubuntu-22.04.id_rsa
There are two options for getting a firecracker binary:
- Downloading an official firecracker release from our release page, or
- Building firecracker from source.
To download the latest firecracker release, run:
ARCH="$(uname -m)"
release_url="https://github.com/firecracker-microvm/firecracker/releases"
latest=$(basename $(curl -fsSLI -o /dev/null -w %{url_effective} ${release_url}/latest))
curl -L ${release_url}/download/${latest}/firecracker-${latest}-${ARCH}.tgz \
| tar -xz
# Rename the binary to "firecracker"
mv release-${latest}-$(uname -m)/firecracker-${latest}-${ARCH} firecracker
To instead build firecracker from source, you will need to have docker
installed:
ARCH="$(uname -m)"
# Clone the firecracker repository
git clone https://github.com/firecracker-microvm/firecracker firecracker_src
# Start docker
sudo systemctl start docker
# Build firecracker
#
# It is possible to build for gnu, by passing the arguments '-l gnu'.
#
# This will produce the firecracker and jailer binaries under
# `./firecracker/build/cargo_target/${toolchain}/debug`.
#
sudo ./firecracker_src/tools/devtool build
# Rename the binary to "firecracker"
sudo cp ./firecracker_src/build/cargo_target/${ARCH}-unknown-linux-musl/debug/firecracker firecracker
Running firecracker will require two terminals, the first one running the firecracker binary, and a second one for communicating with the firecracker process via HTTP requests:
API_SOCKET="/tmp/firecracker.socket"
# Remove API unix socket
sudo rm -f $API_SOCKET
# Run firecracker
sudo ./firecracker --api-sock "${API_SOCKET}"
In a new terminal (do not close the 1st one):
TAP_DEV="tap0"
TAP_IP="172.16.0.1"
MASK_SHORT="/30"
# Setup network interface
sudo ip link del "$TAP_DEV" 2> /dev/null || true
sudo ip tuntap add dev "$TAP_DEV" mode tap
sudo ip addr add "${TAP_IP}${MASK_SHORT}" dev "$TAP_DEV"
sudo ip link set dev "$TAP_DEV" up
# Enable ip forwarding
sudo sh -c "echo 1 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_forward"
HOST_IFACE="eth0"
# Set up microVM internet access
sudo iptables -t nat -D POSTROUTING -o "$HOST_IFACE" -j MASQUERADE || true
sudo iptables -D FORWARD -m conntrack --ctstate RELATED,ESTABLISHED -j ACCEPT \
|| true
sudo iptables -D FORWARD -i "$TAP_DEV" -o "$HOST_IFACE" -j ACCEPT || true
sudo iptables -t nat -A POSTROUTING -o "$HOST_IFACE" -j MASQUERADE
sudo iptables -I FORWARD 1 -m conntrack --ctstate RELATED,ESTABLISHED -j ACCEPT
sudo iptables -I FORWARD 1 -i "$TAP_DEV" -o "$HOST_IFACE" -j ACCEPT
API_SOCKET="/tmp/firecracker.socket"
LOGFILE="./firecracker.log"
# Create log file
touch $LOGFILE
# Set log file
sudo curl -X PUT --unix-socket "${API_SOCKET}" \
--data "{
\"log_path\": \"${LOGFILE}\",
\"level\": \"Debug\",
\"show_level\": true,
\"show_log_origin\": true
}" \
"http://localhost/logger"
KERNEL="./$(ls vmlinux* | tail -1)"
KERNEL_BOOT_ARGS="console=ttyS0 reboot=k panic=1 pci=off"
ARCH=$(uname -m)
if [ ${ARCH} = "aarch64" ]; then
KERNEL_BOOT_ARGS="keep_bootcon ${KERNEL_BOOT_ARGS}"
fi
# Set boot source
sudo curl -X PUT --unix-socket "${API_SOCKET}" \
--data "{
\"kernel_image_path\": \"${KERNEL}\",
\"boot_args\": \"${KERNEL_BOOT_ARGS}\"
}" \
"http://localhost/boot-source"
ROOTFS="./ubuntu-22.04.ext4"
# Set rootfs
sudo curl -X PUT --unix-socket "${API_SOCKET}" \
--data "{
\"drive_id\": \"rootfs\",
\"path_on_host\": \"${ROOTFS}\",
\"is_root_device\": true,
\"is_read_only\": false
}" \
"http://localhost/drives/rootfs"
# The IP address of a guest is derived from its MAC address with
# `fcnet-setup.sh`, this has been pre-configured in the guest rootfs. It is
# important that `TAP_IP` and `FC_MAC` match this.
FC_MAC="06:00:AC:10:00:02"
# Set network interface
sudo curl -X PUT --unix-socket "${API_SOCKET}" \
--data "{
\"iface_id\": \"net1\",
\"guest_mac\": \"$FC_MAC\",
\"host_dev_name\": \"$TAP_DEV\"
}" \
"http://localhost/network-interfaces/net1"
# API requests are handled asynchronously, it is important the configuration is
# set, before `InstanceStart`.
sleep 0.015s
# Start microVM
sudo curl -X PUT --unix-socket "${API_SOCKET}" \
--data "{
\"action_type\": \"InstanceStart\"
}" \
"http://localhost/actions"
# API requests are handled asynchronously, it is important the microVM has been
# started before we attempt to SSH into it.
sleep 2s
# Setup internet access in the guest
ssh -i ./ubuntu-22.04.id_rsa [email protected] "ip route add default via 172.16.0.1 dev eth0"
# Setup DNS resolution in the guest
ssh -i ./ubuntu-22.04.id_rsa [email protected] "echo 'nameserver 8.8.8.8' > /etc/resolv.conf"
# SSH into the microVM
ssh -i ./ubuntu-22.04.id_rsa [email protected]
# Use `root` for both the login and password.
# Run `reboot` to exit.
Issuing a reboot
command inside the guest will gracefully shutdown
Firecracker. This is due to the fact that Firecracker doesn't implement guest
power management.
You can boot a guest without using the API socket by passing the parameter
--config-file
to the Firecracker process. E.g.:
sudo ./firecracker --api-sock /tmp/firecracker.socket --config-file <path_to_the_configuration_file>
path_to_the_configuration_file
is the path to a JSON file with the
configuration for all of the microVM's resources. The JSON must contain the
configuration for the guest kernel and rootfs, all of the other resources are
optional. This configuration method will also start the microVM, as such you
need to specify all desired pre-boot configurable resources in the JSON. The
names of the resources can be seen in [firecracker.yaml
]
(../src/firecracker/swagger/firecracker.yaml) and the names of their fields are
the same that are used in the API requests.
An example of configuration file is provided:
tests/framework/vm_config.json
.
Once the guest is booted, refer network-setup to bring up the network in the guest machine.
After the microVM is started you can still use the socket to send API requests for post-boot operations.
SSH can be used to work with libraries from private git repos by passing the
--ssh-keys
flag to specify the paths to your public and private SSH keys on
the host. Both are required for git authentication when fetching the
repositories.
tools/devtool build --ssh-keys ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub ~/.ssh/id_rsa
Only a single set of credentials is supported. devtool
cannot fetch multiple
private repos which rely on different credentials.
tools/devtool build
builds in debug
to build release binaries pass
--release
e.g. tools/devtool build --release
Documentation on devtool
can be seen with tools/devtool --help
.
Integration tests can be run with tools/devtool test
.
The test suite is designed to ensure our SLA parameters
as measured on EC2 .metal instances, as such performance tests may fail when not
run on these machines. Specifically, don't be alarmed if you see
tests/integration_tests/performance/test_process_startup_time.py
failing when
not run on an EC2 .metal instance. You can skip performance tests with:
./tools/devtool test -- --ignore integration_tests/performance
If you run the integration tests on an EC2 .metal instance, and encounter failures such as the following
FAILED integration_tests/style/test_markdown.py::test_markdown_style - requests.exceptions.ReadTimeout: HTTPConnectionPool(host='169.254.169.254', port=80): Read timed out. (read timeout=2)
try running
aws ec2 modify-instance-metadata-options --instance-id i-<your instance id> --http-put-response-hop-limit 2
.
The integration tests framework uses IMDSv2 to determine information such as
instance type. The additional hop is needed because the IMDS requests will pass
through docker.
Points to check to confirm the API socket is running and accessible:
- Check that the user running the Firecracker process and the user using
curl
have equivalent privileges. For example, if you run Firecracker with sudo that you runcurl
with sudo as well. - SELinux can regulate
access to sockets on RHEL based distributions. How user's permissions are
configured is environmentally specific, but for the purposes of
troubleshooting you can check if it is enabled in
/etc/selinux/config
. - With the Firecracker process running using
--api-sock /tmp/firecracker.socket
, confirm that the socket is open:ss -a | grep '/tmp/firecracker.socket'
- If you have socat available, try
socat - UNIX-CONNECT:/tmp/firecracker.socket
This will throw an explicit error if the socket is inaccessible, or it will pause and wait for input to continue.