Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
484 lines (363 loc) · 14.1 KB

README.md

File metadata and controls

484 lines (363 loc) · 14.1 KB

Python3 on Unikraft

This application starts a Python3 web application with Unikraft. Follow the instructions below to set up, configure, build and run Python3.

To get started immediately, you can use Unikraft's companion command-line companion tool, kraft. Start by running the interactive installer:

curl --proto '=https' --tlsv1.2 -sSf https://get.kraftkit.sh | sudo sh

Once installed, clone this repository and run kraft build:

git clone https://github.com/unikraft/app-python3 python3
cd python3/
kraft build

This will guide you through an interactive build process where you can select one of the available targets (architecture/platform combinations). Otherwise, we recommend building for qemu/x86_64 like so:

kraft build --arch x86_64 --plat qemu

Once built, you can instantiate the unikernel via:

tar xvf rootfs.tar.gz -C rootfs/
kraft run --initrd rootfs/ -M 256M

When left without any input flags, you'll be queried for the desired target architecture/platform.

If you are running on a virtual machine, or a system without KVM support, disable hardware acceleration by using the -W command line flag:

kraft run -W --initrd rootfs/ -M 256M

This starts a Python3 console in a virtual machine. Note that KraftKit currently doesn't provide you the means to interact with the Python3 console in the virtual machine. For that, see more below.

Quick Setup (aka TLDR)

For a quick setup, run the commands below. Note that you still need to install the requirements.

For building and running everything for x86_64, follow the steps below:

git clone https://github.com/unikraft/app-python3 python3
cd python3/
./script/setup.sh
wget https://raw.githubusercontent.com/unikraft/app-testing/staging/scripts/generate.py -O scripts/generate.py
chmod a+x scripts/generate.py
./scripts/generate.py
./scripts/build/make-qemu-x86_64-9pfs.sh
./scripts/run/qemu-x86_64-9pfs-interp.sh

This will configure, build and run the Python3 application, resulting in a Python3 console being started.

The same can be done for AArch64, by running the commands below:

git clone https://github.com/unikraft/app-python3 python3
cd python3/
./scripts/setup.sh
wget https://raw.githubusercontent.com/unikraft/app-testing/staging/scripts/generate.py -O scripts/generate.py
chmod a+x scripts/generate.py
./scripts/generate.py
./scripts/build/make-qemu-arm64-9pfs.sh
./scripts/run/qemu-arm64-9pfs-interp.sh

Close the QEMU instance by using the Ctrl+a x keyboard combination. That is, press Ctrl and a simultaneously, then release and press x.

Information about every step is detailed below.

Requirements

In order to set up, configure, build and run Python3 on Unikraft, the following packages are required:

  • build-essential / base-devel / @development-tools (the meta-package that includes make, gcc and other development-related packages)
  • sudo
  • flex
  • bison
  • git
  • wget
  • uuid-runtime
  • qemu-system-x86
  • qemu-system-arm
  • qemu-kvm
  • sgabios
  • gcc-aarch64-linux-gnu

GCC >= 8 is required to build Python3 on Unikraft.

On Ubuntu/Debian or other apt-based distributions, run the following command to install the requirements:

sudo apt install -y --no-install-recommends \
  build-essential \
  sudo \
  gcc-aarch64-linux-gnu \
  libncurses-dev \
  libyaml-dev \
  flex \
  bison \
  git \
  wget \
  uuid-runtime \
  qemu-kvm \
  qemu-system-x86 \
  qemu-system-arm \
  sgabios

In case you require networking support, such as starting a Python HTTP server, a specific configuration must be enabled for QEMU. Run the commands below to enable that configuration (for the network bridge to work):

sudo mkdir /etc/qemu/
echo "allow all" | sudo tee /etc/qemu/bridge.conf

Set Up

The following repositories are required for Python3:

Follow the steps below for the setup:

  1. First clone the app-python3 repository in the python3/ directory:

    git clone https://github.com/unikraft/app-python3 python3

    Enter the python3/ directory:

    cd python3/
    ls -F

    This will show you the contents of the repository:

    defconfigs/  kraft.cloud.yaml  kraft.yaml  Makefile  Makefile.uk  README.md  rootfs.tar.gz  scripts/
    
  2. While inside the python3/ directory, clone all required repositories by using the setup.sh script:

    ./scripts/setup.sh
  3. Use the tree command to inspect the contents of the workdir/ directory. It should print something like this:

    tree -F -L 2 workdir/

    The layout of the workdir/ directory should look something like this:

    workdir/
    |-- libs/
    |   |-- compiler-rt/
    |   |-- lwip/
    |   |-- musl/
    |   `-- python3/
    `-- unikraft/
        |-- arch/
        |-- Config.uk
        |-- CONTRIBUTING.md
        |-- COPYING.md
        |-- include/
        |-- lib/
        |-- Makefile
        |-- Makefile.uk
        |-- plat/
        |-- README.md
        |-- support/
        `-- version.mk
    
    10 directories, 7 files
    

Scripted Building and Running

To build and run Unikraft images, it's easiest to generate build and running scripts and use those.

First of all, grab the generate.py script and place it in the scripts/ directory by running:

wget https://raw.githubusercontent.com/unikraft/app-testing/staging/scripts/generate.py -O scripts/generate.py
chmod a+x scripts/generate.py

Now, run the generate.py script. You must run it in the root directory of this repository:

./scripts/generate.py

Running the script will generate build and run scripts in the scripts/build/ and the scripts/run/ directories:

scripts/
|-- build/
|   |-- kraft-fc-arm64-initrd.sh*
|   |-- kraft-fc-x86_64-initrd.sh*
|   |-- kraft-qemu-arm64-9pfs.sh*
|   |-- kraft-qemu-arm64-initrd.sh*
|   |-- kraft-qemu-x86_64-9pfs.sh*
|   |-- kraft-qemu-x86_64-initrd.sh*
|   |-- make-fc-arm64-initrd.sh*
|   |-- make-fc-x86_64-initrd.sh*
|   |-- make-qemu-arm64-9pfs.sh*
|   |-- make-qemu-arm64-initrd.sh*
|   |-- make-qemu-x86_64-9pfs.sh*
|   `-- make-qemu-x86_64-initrd.sh*
|-- generate.py*
|-- run/
|   |-- fc-arm64-initrd-http-server.json
|   |-- fc-arm64-initrd-http-server.sh*
[...]
|   |-- kraft-qemu-arm64-initrd-http-server.sh*
|   |-- kraft-qemu-arm64-initrd-interp.sh*
|   |-- kraft-qemu-x86_64-9pfs-http-server.sh*
[...]
|   |-- qemu-x86_64-initrd-http-server.sh*
|   `-- qemu-x86_64-initrd-interp.sh*
|-- run.yaml
`-- setup.sh*

They are shell scripts, so you can use an editor or a text viewer to check their contents:

cat scripts/run/qemu-x86_64-initrd-http-server.sh

You can now build and run images for different configurations

For example, to build and run for Firecracker on x86_64, run:

./scripts/build/make-fc-x86_64-initrd.sh
./scripts/run/fc-x86_64-initrd-interp.sh

To build and run for QEMU on x86_64 using KraftKit, run:

./scripts/build/kraft-qemu-x86_64-9pfs.sh
./scripts/run/kraft-qemu-x86_64-9pfs-interp.sh

The run script will start a Python3 console inside a Unikraft virtual machine. You can run Python commands at the prompt.

Close KraftKit-opened instances by running Ctrl+c. Then, check the open instances by using kraft ps or sudo kraft ps. Stop the instances by running kraft stop `.

Close the QEMU instance by using the Ctrl+a x keyboard combination. That is, press Ctrl and a simultaneously, then release and press x.

For Firecracker, you would have to kill the process by issuing a command. Simplest is to open up another console and run:

pkill -f firecracker

Detailed Steps

Configure

Configuring, building and running a Unikraft application depends on our choice of platform and architecture. Currently, supported platforms are QEMU (KVM), Xen and linuxu. QEMU (KVM) is known to be working, so we focus on that.

Supported architectures are x86_64 and AArch64.

Use the corresponding the configuration files in defconfigs/, according to your choice of platform and architecture.

QEMU x86_64

Use the defconfigs/qemu-x86_64-9pfs configuration file together with make defconfig to create the configuration file:

UK_DEFCONFIG=$(pwd)/defconfigs/qemu-x86_64-9pfs make defconfig

This results in the creation of the .config file:

ls .config
.config

The .config file will be used in the build step.

QEMU AArch64

Use the defconfigs/qemu-arm64-9pfs configuration file together with make defconfig to create the configuration file:

UK_DEFCONFIG=$(pwd)/defconfigs/qemu-arm64-9pfs make defconfig

Similar to the x86_64 configuration, this results in the creation of the .config file that will be used in the build step.

Build

Building uses as input the .config file from above, and results in a unikernel image as output. The unikernel output image, together with intermediary build files, are stored in the build/ directory.

Clean Up

Before starting a build on a different platform or architecture, you must clean up the build output. This may also be required in case of a new configuration.

Cleaning up is done with 3 possible commands:

  • make clean: cleans all actual build output files (binary files, including the unikernel image)
  • make properclean: removes the entire build/ directory
  • make distclean: removes the entire build/ directory and the .config file

Typically, you would use make properclean to remove all build artifacts, but keep the configuration file.

QEMU x86_64

Building for QEMU x86_64 assumes you did the QEMU x86_64 configuration step above. Build the Unikraft Python3 image for QEMU x86_64 by using the commands below:

make prepare
make -j $(nproc)

You can see a list of all the files processed by the build system:

[...]
  LD      python3_qemu-x86_64.dbg
  UKBI    python3_qemu-x86_64.dbg.bootinfo
  SCSTRIP python3_qemu-x86_64
  GZ      python3_qemu-x86_64.gz
make[1]: Leaving directory '/media/stefan/projects/unikraft/scripts/workdir/apps/app-python3/workdir/unikraft'

At the end of the build command, the python3_qemu-x86_64 unikernel image is generated. This image is to be used in the run step.

QEMU AArch64

If you had configured and build a unikernel image for another platform or architecture (such as x86_64) before, then:

  1. Do a cleanup step with make properclean.

  2. Configure for QEMU AAarch64, as shown above.

  3. Follow the instructions below to build for QEMU AArch64.

Building for QEMU AArch64 assumes you did the QEMU AArch64 configuration step above. Build the Unikraft Python3 image for QEMU AArch64 by using the same command as for x86_64:

make prepare
make -j $(nproc)

Same as when building for x86_64, you can see a list of all the files

[...]
  LD      python3_qemu-arm64.dbg
  UKBI    python3_qemu-arm64.dbg.bootinfo
  SCSTRIP python3_qemu-arm64
  GZ      python3_qemu-arm64.gz
make[1]: Leaving directory '/media/stefan/projects/unikraft/scripts/workdir/apps/app-python3/workdir/unikraft'

Similarly to x86_64, at the end of the build command, the python3_qemu-arm64 unikernel image is generated. This image is to be used in the run step.

Run

Run the resulting image using qemu-system.

Before that, unpack the root filesystem:

mkdir rootfs
tar xf rootfs.tar.gz -C rootfs

QEMU x86_64

To run the QEMU x86_64 build, use qemu-system-x86_64:

sudo qemu-system-x86_64 \
    -accel kvm \
    -fsdev local,id=myid,path="$(pwd)/rootfs",security_model=none \
    -device virtio-9p-pci,fsdev=myid,mount_tag=fs1,disable-modern=on,disable-legacy=off \
    -kernel build/python3_qemu-x86_64 -nographic

This will open up a Python3 console:

en1: Added
en1: Interface is up
Powered by
o.   .o       _ _               __ _
Oo   Oo  ___ (_) | __ __  __ _ ' _) :_
oO   oO ' _ `| | |/ /  _)' _` | |_|  _)
oOo oOO| | | | |   (| | | (_) |  _) :_
 OoOoO ._, ._:_:_,\_._,  .__,_:_, \___)
                  Atlas 0.13.1~5eb820bd
Python 3.7.4 (default, Jul  1 2023, 16:22:09) 
[GCC 9.4.0] on unknown
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
>>> print("Hello, World!")
Hello, World!
>>>

Close the QEMU instance by using the Ctrl+a x keyboard combination. That is, press Ctrl and a simultaneously, then release and press x.

QEMU AArch64

To run the AArch64 build, use qemu-system-aarch64:

sudo qemu-system-aarch64 \
    -fsdev local,id=myid,path="$(pwd)/rootfs",security_model=none \
    -device virtio-9p-pci,fsdev=myid,mount_tag=fs1,disable-modern=on,disable-legacy=off \
    -kernel build/python3_qemu-arm64 -nographic \
    -machine virt -cpu cortex-a57

Just like when running for x86_64, this will run the Python3 application:

en1: Added
en1: Interface is up
Powered by
o.   .o       _ _               __ _
Oo   Oo  ___ (_) | __ __  __ _ ' _) :_
oO   oO ' _ `| | |/ /  _)' _` | |_|  _)
oOo oOO| | | | |   (| | | (_) |  _) :_
 OoOoO ._, ._:_:_,\_._,  .__,_:_, \___)
                  Atlas 0.13.1~5eb820bd
Python 3.7.4 (default, Jul  1 2023, 16:22:09) 
[GCC 9.4.0] on unknown
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
>>> print("Hello, World!")
Hello, World!
>>>

Similarly, to close the QEMU Python3 server, use the Ctrl+a x keyboard shortcut.