| Copyright (c) 2010-2015 Institute for System Programming |
| of the Russian Academy of Sciences. |
| |
| This work is licensed under the terms of the GNU GPL, version 2 or later. |
| See the COPYING file in the top-level directory. |
| |
| Record/replay |
| ------------- |
| |
| Record/replay functions are used for the deterministic replay of qemu execution. |
| Execution recording writes a non-deterministic events log, which can be later |
| used for replaying the execution anywhere and for unlimited number of times. |
| It also supports checkpointing for faster rewind to the specific replay moment. |
| Execution replaying reads the log and replays all non-deterministic events |
| including external input, hardware clocks, and interrupts. |
| |
| Deterministic replay has the following features: |
| * Deterministically replays whole system execution and all contents of |
| the memory, state of the hardware devices, clocks, and screen of the VM. |
| * Writes execution log into the file for later replaying for multiple times |
| on different machines. |
| * Supports i386, x86_64, and Arm hardware platforms. |
| * Performs deterministic replay of all operations with keyboard and mouse |
| input devices. |
| |
| Usage of the record/replay: |
| * First, record the execution with the following command line: |
| qemu-system-i386 \ |
| -icount shift=7,rr=record,rrfile=replay.bin \ |
| -drive file=disk.qcow2,if=none,snapshot,id=img-direct \ |
| -drive driver=blkreplay,if=none,image=img-direct,id=img-blkreplay \ |
| -device ide-hd,drive=img-blkreplay \ |
| -netdev user,id=net1 -device rtl8139,netdev=net1 \ |
| -object filter-replay,id=replay,netdev=net1 |
| * After recording, you can replay it by using another command line: |
| qemu-system-i386 \ |
| -icount shift=7,rr=replay,rrfile=replay.bin \ |
| -drive file=disk.qcow2,if=none,snapshot,id=img-direct \ |
| -drive driver=blkreplay,if=none,image=img-direct,id=img-blkreplay \ |
| -device ide-hd,drive=img-blkreplay \ |
| -netdev user,id=net1 -device rtl8139,netdev=net1 \ |
| -object filter-replay,id=replay,netdev=net1 |
| The only difference with recording is changing the rr option |
| from record to replay. |
| * Block device images are not actually changed in the recording mode, |
| because all of the changes are written to the temporary overlay file. |
| This behavior is enabled by using blkreplay driver. It should be used |
| for every enabled block device, as described in 'Block devices' section. |
| * '-net none' option should be specified when network is not used, |
| because QEMU adds network card by default. When network is needed, |
| it should be configured explicitly with replay filter, as described |
| in 'Network devices' section. |
| * Interaction with audio devices and serial ports are recorded and replayed |
| automatically when such devices are enabled. |
| |
| Academic papers with description of deterministic replay implementation: |
| http://www.computer.org/csdl/proceedings/csmr/2012/4666/00/4666a553-abs.html |
| http://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=2786805.2803179 |
| |
| Modifications of qemu include: |
| * wrappers for clock and time functions to save their return values in the log |
| * saving different asynchronous events (e.g. system shutdown) into the log |
| * synchronization of the bottom halves execution |
| * synchronization of the threads from thread pool |
| * recording/replaying user input (mouse, keyboard, and microphone) |
| * adding internal checkpoints for cpu and io synchronization |
| * network filter for recording and replaying the packets |
| * block driver for making block layer deterministic |
| * serial port input record and replay |
| * recording of random numbers obtained from the external sources |
| |
| Locking and thread synchronisation |
| ---------------------------------- |
| |
| Previously the synchronisation of the main thread and the vCPU thread |
| was ensured by the holding of the BQL. However the trend has been to |
| reduce the time the BQL was held across the system including under TCG |
| system emulation. As it is important that batches of events are kept |
| in sequence (e.g. expiring timers and checkpoints in the main thread |
| while instruction checkpoints are written by the vCPU thread) we need |
| another lock to keep things in lock-step. This role is now handled by |
| the replay_mutex_lock. It used to be held only for each event being |
| written but now it is held for a whole execution period. This results |
| in a deterministic ping-pong between the two main threads. |
| |
| As the BQL is now a finer grained lock than the replay_lock it is almost |
| certainly a bug, and a source of deadlocks, to take the |
| replay_mutex_lock while the BQL is held. This is enforced by an assert. |
| While the unlocks are usually in the reverse order, this is not |
| necessary; you can drop the replay_lock while holding the BQL, without |
| doing a more complicated unlock_iothread/replay_unlock/lock_iothread |
| sequence. |
| |
| Non-deterministic events |
| ------------------------ |
| |
| Our record/replay system is based on saving and replaying non-deterministic |
| events (e.g. keyboard input) and simulating deterministic ones (e.g. reading |
| from HDD or memory of the VM). Saving only non-deterministic events makes |
| log file smaller and simulation faster. |
| |
| The following non-deterministic data from peripheral devices is saved into |
| the log: mouse and keyboard input, network packets, audio controller input, |
| serial port input, and hardware clocks (they are non-deterministic |
| too, because their values are taken from the host machine). Inputs from |
| simulated hardware, memory of VM, software interrupts, and execution of |
| instructions are not saved into the log, because they are deterministic and |
| can be replayed by simulating the behavior of virtual machine starting from |
| initial state. |
| |
| We had to solve three tasks to implement deterministic replay: recording |
| non-deterministic events, replaying non-deterministic events, and checking |
| that there is no divergence between record and replay modes. |
| |
| We changed several parts of QEMU to make event log recording and replaying. |
| Devices' models that have non-deterministic input from external devices were |
| changed to write every external event into the execution log immediately. |
| E.g. network packets are written into the log when they arrive into the virtual |
| network adapter. |
| |
| All non-deterministic events are coming from these devices. But to |
| replay them we need to know at which moments they occur. We specify |
| these moments by counting the number of instructions executed between |
| every pair of consecutive events. |
| |
| Instruction counting |
| -------------------- |
| |
| QEMU should work in icount mode to use record/replay feature. icount was |
| designed to allow deterministic execution in absence of external inputs |
| of the virtual machine. We also use icount to control the occurrence of the |
| non-deterministic events. The number of instructions elapsed from the last event |
| is written to the log while recording the execution. In replay mode we |
| can predict when to inject that event using the instruction counter. |
| |
| Timers |
| ------ |
| |
| Timers are used to execute callbacks from different subsystems of QEMU |
| at the specified moments of time. There are several kinds of timers: |
| * Real time clock. Based on host time and used only for callbacks that |
| do not change the virtual machine state. For this reason real time |
| clock and timers does not affect deterministic replay at all. |
| * Virtual clock. These timers run only during the emulation. In icount |
| mode virtual clock value is calculated using executed instructions counter. |
| That is why it is completely deterministic and does not have to be recorded. |
| * Host clock. This clock is used by device models that simulate real time |
| sources (e.g. real time clock chip). Host clock is the one of the sources |
| of non-determinism. Host clock read operations should be logged to |
| make the execution deterministic. |
| * Virtual real time clock. This clock is similar to real time clock but |
| it is used only for increasing virtual clock while virtual machine is |
| sleeping. Due to its nature it is also non-deterministic as the host clock |
| and has to be logged too. |
| |
| Checkpoints |
| ----------- |
| |
| Replaying of the execution of virtual machine is bound by sources of |
| non-determinism. These are inputs from clock and peripheral devices, |
| and QEMU thread scheduling. Thread scheduling affect on processing events |
| from timers, asynchronous input-output, and bottom halves. |
| |
| Invocations of timers are coupled with clock reads and changing the state |
| of the virtual machine. Reads produce non-deterministic data taken from |
| host clock. And VM state changes should preserve their order. Their relative |
| order in replay mode must replicate the order of callbacks in record mode. |
| To preserve this order we use checkpoints. When a specific clock is processed |
| in record mode we save to the log special "checkpoint" event. |
| Checkpoints here do not refer to virtual machine snapshots. They are just |
| record/replay events used for synchronization. |
| |
| QEMU in replay mode will try to invoke timers processing in random moment |
| of time. That's why we do not process a group of timers until the checkpoint |
| event will be read from the log. Such an event allows synchronizing CPU |
| execution and timer events. |
| |
| Two other checkpoints govern the "warping" of the virtual clock. |
| While the virtual machine is idle, the virtual clock increments at |
| 1 ns per *real time* nanosecond. This is done by setting up a timer |
| (called the warp timer) on the virtual real time clock, so that the |
| timer fires at the next deadline of the virtual clock; the virtual clock |
| is then incremented (which is called "warping" the virtual clock) as |
| soon as the timer fires or the CPUs need to go out of the idle state. |
| Two functions are used for this purpose; because these actions change |
| virtual machine state and must be deterministic, each of them creates a |
| checkpoint. icount_start_warp_timer checks if the CPUs are idle and if so |
| starts accounting real time to virtual clock. icount_account_warp_timer |
| is called when the CPUs get an interrupt or when the warp timer fires, |
| and it warps the virtual clock by the amount of real time that has passed |
| since icount_start_warp_timer. |
| |
| Bottom halves |
| ------------- |
| |
| Disk I/O events are completely deterministic in our model, because |
| in both record and replay modes we start virtual machine from the same |
| disk state. But callbacks that virtual disk controller uses for reading and |
| writing the disk may occur at different moments of time in record and replay |
| modes. |
| |
| Reading and writing requests are created by CPU thread of QEMU. Later these |
| requests proceed to block layer which creates "bottom halves". Bottom |
| halves consist of callback and its parameters. They are processed when |
| main loop locks the global mutex. These locks are not synchronized with |
| replaying process because main loop also processes the events that do not |
| affect the virtual machine state (like user interaction with monitor). |
| |
| That is why we had to implement saving and replaying bottom halves callbacks |
| synchronously to the CPU execution. When the callback is about to execute |
| it is added to the queue in the replay module. This queue is written to the |
| log when its callbacks are executed. In replay mode callbacks are not processed |
| until the corresponding event is read from the events log file. |
| |
| Sometimes the block layer uses asynchronous callbacks for its internal purposes |
| (like reading or writing VM snapshots or disk image cluster tables). In this |
| case bottom halves are not marked as "replayable" and do not saved |
| into the log. |
| |
| Block devices |
| ------------- |
| |
| Block devices record/replay module intercepts calls of |
| bdrv coroutine functions at the top of block drivers stack. |
| To record and replay block operations the drive must be configured |
| as following: |
| -drive file=disk.qcow2,if=none,snapshot,id=img-direct |
| -drive driver=blkreplay,if=none,image=img-direct,id=img-blkreplay |
| -device ide-hd,drive=img-blkreplay |
| |
| blkreplay driver should be inserted between disk image and virtual driver |
| controller. Therefore all disk requests may be recorded and replayed. |
| |
| All block completion operations are added to the queue in the coroutines. |
| Queue is flushed at checkpoints and information about processed requests |
| is recorded to the log. In replay phase the queue is matched with |
| events read from the log. Therefore block devices requests are processed |
| deterministically. |
| |
| Snapshotting |
| ------------ |
| |
| New VM snapshots may be created in replay mode. They can be used later |
| to recover the desired VM state. All VM states created in replay mode |
| are associated with the moment of time in the replay scenario. |
| After recovering the VM state replay will start from that position. |
| |
| Default starting snapshot name may be specified with icount field |
| rrsnapshot as follows: |
| -icount shift=7,rr=record,rrfile=replay.bin,rrsnapshot=snapshot_name |
| |
| This snapshot is created at start of recording and restored at start |
| of replaying. It also can be loaded while replaying to roll back |
| the execution. |
| |
| 'snapshot' flag of the disk image must be removed to save the snapshots |
| in the overlay (or original image) instead of using the temporary overlay. |
| -drive file=disk.ovl,if=none,id=img-direct |
| -drive driver=blkreplay,if=none,image=img-direct,id=img-blkreplay |
| -device ide-hd,drive=img-blkreplay |
| |
| Use QEMU monitor to create additional snapshots. 'savevm <name>' command |
| created the snapshot and 'loadvm <name>' restores it. To prevent corruption |
| of the original disk image, use overlay files linked to the original images. |
| Therefore all new snapshots (including the starting one) will be saved in |
| overlays and the original image remains unchanged. |
| |
| When you need to use snapshots with diskless virtual machine, |
| it must be started with 'orphan' qcow2 image. This image will be used |
| for storing VM snapshots. Here is the example of the command line for this: |
| |
| qemu-system-i386 -icount shift=3,rr=replay,rrfile=record.bin,rrsnapshot=init \ |
| -net none -drive file=empty.qcow2,if=none,id=rr |
| |
| empty.qcow2 drive does not connected to any virtual block device and used |
| for VM snapshots only. |
| |
| Network devices |
| --------------- |
| |
| Record and replay for network interactions is performed with the network filter. |
| Each backend must have its own instance of the replay filter as follows: |
| -netdev user,id=net1 -device rtl8139,netdev=net1 |
| -object filter-replay,id=replay,netdev=net1 |
| |
| Replay network filter is used to record and replay network packets. While |
| recording the virtual machine this filter puts all packets coming from |
| the outer world into the log. In replay mode packets from the log are |
| injected into the network device. All interactions with network backend |
| in replay mode are disabled. |
| |
| Audio devices |
| ------------- |
| |
| Audio data is recorded and replay automatically. The command line for recording |
| and replaying must contain identical specifications of audio hardware, e.g.: |
| -soundhw ac97 |
| |
| Serial ports |
| ------------ |
| |
| Serial ports input is recorded and replay automatically. The command lines |
| for recording and replaying must contain identical number of ports in record |
| and replay modes, but their backends may differ. |
| E.g., '-serial stdio' in record mode, and '-serial null' in replay mode. |
| |
| Reverse debugging |
| ----------------- |
| |
| Reverse debugging allows "executing" the program in reverse direction. |
| GDB remote protocol supports "reverse step" and "reverse continue" |
| commands. The first one steps single instruction backwards in time, |
| and the second one finds the last breakpoint in the past. |
| |
| Recorded executions may be used to enable reverse debugging. QEMU can't |
| execute the code in backwards direction, but can load a snapshot and |
| replay forward to find the desired position or breakpoint. |
| |
| The following GDB commands are supported: |
| - reverse-stepi (or rsi) - step one instruction backwards |
| - reverse-continue (or rc) - find last breakpoint in the past |
| |
| Reverse step loads the nearest snapshot and replays the execution until |
| the required instruction is met. |
| |
| Reverse continue may include several passes of examining the execution |
| between the snapshots. Each of the passes include the following steps: |
| 1. loading the snapshot |
| 2. replaying to examine the breakpoints |
| 3. if breakpoint or watchpoint was met |
| - loading the snapshot again |
| - replaying to the required breakpoint |
| 4. else |
| - proceeding to the p.1 with the earlier snapshot |
| |
| Therefore usage of the reverse debugging requires at least one snapshot |
| created in advance. This can be done by omitting 'snapshot' option |
| for the block drives and adding 'rrsnapshot' for both record and replay |
| command lines. |
| See the "Snapshotting" section to learn more about running record/replay |
| and creating the snapshot in these modes. |
| |
| Replay log format |
| ----------------- |
| |
| Record/replay log consists of the header and the sequence of execution |
| events. The header includes 4-byte replay version id and 8-byte reserved |
| field. Version is updated every time replay log format changes to prevent |
| using replay log created by another build of qemu. |
| |
| The sequence of the events describes virtual machine state changes. |
| It includes all non-deterministic inputs of VM, synchronization marks and |
| instruction counts used to correctly inject inputs at replay. |
| |
| Synchronization marks (checkpoints) are used for synchronizing qemu threads |
| that perform operations with virtual hardware. These operations may change |
| system's state (e.g., change some register or generate interrupt) and |
| therefore should execute synchronously with CPU thread. |
| |
| Every event in the log includes 1-byte event id and optional arguments. |
| When argument is an array, it is stored as 4-byte array length |
| and corresponding number of bytes with data. |
| Here is the list of events that are written into the log: |
| |
| - EVENT_INSTRUCTION. Instructions executed since last event. |
| Argument: 4-byte number of executed instructions. |
| - EVENT_INTERRUPT. Used to synchronize interrupt processing. |
| - EVENT_EXCEPTION. Used to synchronize exception handling. |
| - EVENT_ASYNC. This is a group of events. They are always processed |
| together with checkpoints. When such an event is generated, it is |
| stored in the queue and processed only when checkpoint occurs. |
| Every such event is followed by 1-byte checkpoint id and 1-byte |
| async event id from the following list: |
| - REPLAY_ASYNC_EVENT_BH. Bottom-half callback. This event synchronizes |
| callbacks that affect virtual machine state, but normally called |
| asynchronously. |
| Argument: 8-byte operation id. |
| - REPLAY_ASYNC_EVENT_INPUT. Input device event. Contains |
| parameters of keyboard and mouse input operations |
| (key press/release, mouse pointer movement). |
| Arguments: 9-16 bytes depending of input event. |
| - REPLAY_ASYNC_EVENT_INPUT_SYNC. Internal input synchronization event. |
| - REPLAY_ASYNC_EVENT_CHAR_READ. Character (e.g., serial port) device input |
| initiated by the sender. |
| Arguments: 1-byte character device id. |
| Array with bytes were read. |
| - REPLAY_ASYNC_EVENT_BLOCK. Block device operation. Used to synchronize |
| operations with disk and flash drives with CPU. |
| Argument: 8-byte operation id. |
| - REPLAY_ASYNC_EVENT_NET. Incoming network packet. |
| Arguments: 1-byte network adapter id. |
| 4-byte packet flags. |
| Array with packet bytes. |
| - EVENT_SHUTDOWN. Occurs when user sends shutdown event to qemu, |
| e.g., by closing the window. |
| - EVENT_CHAR_WRITE. Used to synchronize character output operations. |
| Arguments: 4-byte output function return value. |
| 4-byte offset in the output array. |
| - EVENT_CHAR_READ_ALL. Used to synchronize character input operations, |
| initiated by qemu. |
| Argument: Array with bytes that were read. |
| - EVENT_CHAR_READ_ALL_ERROR. Unsuccessful character input operation, |
| initiated by qemu. |
| Argument: 4-byte error code. |
| - EVENT_CLOCK + clock_id. Group of events for host clock read operations. |
| Argument: 8-byte clock value. |
| - EVENT_CHECKPOINT + checkpoint_id. Checkpoint for synchronization of |
| CPU, internal threads, and asynchronous input events. May be followed |
| by one or more EVENT_ASYNC events. |
| - EVENT_END. Last event in the log. |