Instructions for setting up Vagrant xv6 environmentXv6 is a real operating system kernel, and hence, it needs real hardware to boot. Fortunatelly, today we can emulate hardware in software. Programs like QEMU can emulate functionality of the real physical CPU in software. I.e., QEMU implements the normal CPU loop similar to the one we discussed in class: fetches an instruction pointed by the instruction pointer register (EIP), decodes it, performs all permission and condition checks, computes the outcome, increments EIP and continues to the next instruction. Like a real PC platform, QEMU emulates hardware boot protocol. QEMU starts by loading the disk sector number 0 into the memory location 0x7c00 and jumping to it. Xv6 takes it from there. At a high level, for xv6 it does not matter if it runs on the real hardware or under QEMU. Of course, emulation is slower than real hardware, but besides that as long as QEMU implements the logic of the CPU correctly we do not see any deviations from a real baremetal execution. Surprisingly, QEMU is reasonably fast, so you as a human barely notice the difference. To run xv6 we need to compile and install a version of the QEMU emulator. Due to some compatibility issues it is impossible to compile QEMU directly on the Openlab (andromeda-XX) machines. Instead, we will run yet another virtual machine called Vagrant on the Openlab servers. Vagrant is a user-friendly interface to the VirtualBox virtual machine monitor. You will be able to start Vagrant on any of the andromeda machines. Vagrant will boot into a version of the Ubuntu Linux system. Currently vagrant is installed on Andromeda machines 1 through 75: andromeda-1.ics.uci.edu to andromeda-75.ics.uci.edu. Before you begin, you need to select an andromeda server for yourself. We are following the following method to select a server :
To configure your xv6 environment, login to your server $ ssh UCInetID@andromeda-XX.ics.uci.eduI suggest you create a new folder for your cs238p homeworks, like: UCInetID@andromeda-XX$mkdir cs238pChange into that directory: UCInetID@andromeda-XX$cd cs238pFetch a version of the vagrant environment that explains to vagrant what kind of virtual machine you're planning to run: UCInetID@andromeda-XX$ wget http://www.ics.uci.edu/~aburtsev/238P/hw/xv6-vagrant-master.tgz UCInetID@andromeda-XX$ tar -xzvf xv6-vagrant-master.tgzChange into the new folder UCInetID@andromeda-XX$ cd xv6-vagrant-masterChange the name of the vagrant VM to something unique (otherwise we all end up with the same VM and vagrant is confused). In the Vagrantfile file change the following line vb.name = "xv6_box_anton_cs238p" # <--- You should change this to make VM names uniqueStart vagrant VM (this will take several minutes as it is building QEMU inside (for me it takes around 10 minutes)) UCInetID@andromeda-XX$ vagrant upIf vagrant fails with the following message: ==> default: Clearing any previously set forwarded ports... Vagrant cannot forward the specified ports on this VM, since they would collide with some other application that is already listening on these ports. The forwarded port to 20000 is already in use on the host machine. To fix this, modify your current project's Vagrantfile to use another port. Example, where '1234' would be replaced by a unique host port: config.vm.network :forwarded_port, guest: 26001, host: 1234Go ahead with the suggested fix. Change the following line in the Vagrantfile setting the host port to something random below 64000: config.vm.network "forwarded_port", guest: 26001, host: 30000If vagrant VM is up, you're ready to log in inside and start working on your xv6 Linux environment. Log in inside the vagrant VM. From the same folder where Vagrantfile is (i.e., from cs238p/xv6-vagrant-master) type UCInetID@andromeda-XX$ vagrant sshNow you're inside the Linux Ubuntu 12.04.5 LTS. Your new vagrant machine should have everything you need to compile and run your xv6 code. Vagrant automatically shares the directory of your host machine where you put the `Vagrantfile` file (i.e., the `cs238P/xv6-vagrant-master` folder) as the `/vagrant` directory of the vagrant VM. You're now ready to start working on the homework (go back to the howework page). NoteWhile we provide instructions for how to use Andromeda machines, you are more than welcome to configure and run xv6 on your own laptop, desktop, or VM. If you decide to use your own environment, see the instructions on the xv6 tools page for how to set up xv6. I've successfully built xv6 on my Ubuntu 14.04 LTS. I had to install the following packages in order to build QEMU: libz-dev, libtool-bin, libtool, libglib2.0-dev, libpixman-1-dev, libfdt-dev.Finally, there are additional instructions for a yet another alternative setup inside of a Docker container at the bottom of this page. XV6 in DockerIn case you want to use run xv6 on your own machine using docker containers, you can try it out as well. I have successfully built XV6 using the grantbot/xv6 image hosted in the docker hub
In my localmachine, I downloaded the XV6 source code as follows : localhost$ mkdir XV6_Dev localhost$ cd XV6_Dev localhost$ git clone git://github.com/mit-pdos/xv6-public.git Cloning into xv6... ... Next, you will need to setup Docker, if you don't have it already on your machine. I followed the instructions from here. You will find similar instructions for other OS as well in the docker website. Once you have the setup ready, download the grantbot/xv6 image using docker pull grantbot/xv6 Then you can start the container using docker run -v '/{Path to local XV6 folder}/XV6_Dev':/home/a/XV6_Dev/ -i -t grantbot/xv6Once you have the bash prompt you can type the following to start XV6, cd ~/XV6_Dev/ make qemu-nox |
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Updated: February, 2018
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