From Fedora Project Wiki
(confirmed with maintainer, optional part not done for F19)
(→‎Documentation: RHEL Blog post on random numbers in guests)
 
(One intermediate revision by one other user not shown)
Line 32: Line 32:


== How To Test ==
== How To Test ==
TBD
* [[QA:Testcase_Virtualization_VirtioRNG| Virtio RNG (Random Number Generator)]]
 
XXX: Manual qemu bits at http://wiki.qemu.org/Features/VirtIORNG#Testing
 
XXX: Libvirt instructions based on posted patches


== User Experience ==
== User Experience ==
Line 55: Line 51:
* [http://log.amitshah.net/2013/01/about-random-numbers-and-virtual-machines/ Amit's post about virt and RNG]
* [http://log.amitshah.net/2013/01/about-random-numbers-and-virtual-machines/ Amit's post about virt and RNG]
* [https://lwn.net/Articles/525459/ LWN article about random numbers]
* [https://lwn.net/Articles/525459/ LWN article about random numbers]
* [http://rhelblog.redhat.com/2015/03/09/red-hat-enterprise-linux-virtual-machines-access-to-random-numbers-made-easy/ RHEL Blog post on easy access to random numbers in guests]


== Release Notes ==
== Release Notes ==

Latest revision as of 07:37, 15 March 2015

Virtio RNG

Summary

Provide a paravirtual random number generator to virtual machines, to prevent entropy starvation in guests.

Owner

Current status

  • Targeted release: Fedora 19
  • Last updated: 2013-05-22
  • Percentage of completion: 100% (confirmed with maintainer, optional part not done for F19)

Detailed Description

The linux kernel collects entropy from various non-deterministic hardware events, like mouse and keyboard input, and network traffic. This entropy is then exposed through /dev/random, commonly used by cryptographic applications that need true randomness to maintain security. However if more entropy is being consumed than is being produced, we have entropy starvation: reading from /dev/random will block, which can cause a denial of service. A common example here is use of /dev/random by SSL in various services.

VirtIO RNG (random number generator) is a paravirtualized device that is exposed as a hardware RNG device to the guest. Virtio RNG just appears as a regular hardware RNG to the guest, which the kernel reads from to fill its entropy pool. This effectively allows a host to inject entropy into a guest via several means: The default mode uses the host's /dev/random, but a physical HW RNG device or EGD (Entropy Gathering Daemon) source can also be used.

Benefit to Fedora

Makes Fedora a better platform for hosting server VMs.

Scope

  • Virtio RNG driver in kernel (DONE, since 2.6.26)
  • QEMU Device (DONE, since qemu 1.3)
  • Libvirt support (DONE, in 1.0.3)
  • Apps (all optional but would be nice if they are done)
    • virt-install (Not done)
    • virt-manager (Not done)

How To Test

User Experience

Server VMs will have more options for avoiding entropy starvation.

Dependencies

None.

Contingency Plan

Since this is brand new functionality, if it isn't ready in time, nothing has changed. We just drop this feature page.

Documentation

Release Notes

KVM and libvirt now support a paravirtual random number generator device. This can be used to prevent entropy starvation in virtual machines.

Comments and Discussion