Comment by StreamBright

6 years ago

What are the differences compare to Firecracker?

From the guest perspective, the differences are minimal. Even boot time of the guest (thinking about a custom-built minimalist Linux kernel here) is roughly the same.

On the host side, things are more interesting. Firecraker has a smaller TCB (Trusted Computing Base), is written in Rust, and is statically linked. On the other hand, QEMU provides more features (especially in the block layer, with more formats, network-based block devices, asynchronous I/O...), can be configured at build time to adapt it to a particular use case, and has a pretty good security record.

In the end, KVM userspace VMMs (Virtual Machine Monitors) are learning from each other, giving users more options to choose from. Everybody wins.

  • > In the end, KVM userspace VMMs (Virtual Machine Monitors) are learning from each other, giving users more options to choose from. Everybody wins.

    Indeed. Nice to see that the cross-pollination is happening.

    For folks interested in what can be accomplished with userspace VMMs, a very minimalist example is the Solo5 project (https://github.com/Solo5/solo5), specifically the 'hvt' tender.

  • > QEMU... has a pretty good security record

    That's an interesting and I would argue, contrarian take?

    https://www.theregister.co.uk/2017/01/30/google_cloud_kicked...

    "QEMU has a long track record of security bugs, such as VENOM, and it's unclear what vulnerabilities may still be lurking in the code."

    • I think the slide 14 from the talk "Reports of my Bloat Have Been Greatly Exaggerated" [1] presented by Paolo Bonzini at KVM Forum 2019 gives some good perspective about QEMU's security track:

      "Of the top 100 vulnerabilities reported for QEMU:

      - 65 were not guest exploitable

      - 3 were not in QEMU :)

      - 5 did not affect x86 KVM guests

      - 3 were not related to the C language

      - Only 6 affected devices normally used for IaaS

      The most recent of these 6 was reported in 2016"

      The rest of this talk was also very interesting. I encourage everyone with 10 minutes to spare and an interest in VMMs to take a look at the slides.

      [1] https://static.sched.com/hosted_files/kvmforum2019/c6/kvmfor...

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