Binyu Zang

2papers

2 Papers

OSJan 24, 2022Code
DuVisor: a User-level Hypervisor Through Delegated Virtualization

Jiahao Chen, Dingji Li, Zeyu Mi et al.

Today's mainstream virtualization systems comprise of two cooperative components: a kernel-resident driver that accesses virtualization hardware and a user-level helper process that provides VM management and I/O virtualization. However, this virtualization architecture has intrinsic issues in both security (a large attack surface) and performance. While there is a long thread of work trying to minimize the kernel-resident driver by offloading functions to user mode, they face a fundamental tradeoff between security and performance: more offloading may reduce the kernel attack surface, yet increase the runtime ring crossings between the helper process and the driver, and thus more performance cost. This paper explores a new design called delegated virtualization, which completely separates the control plane (the kernel driver) from the data plane (the helper process) and thus eliminates the kernel driver from runtime intervention. The resulting user-level hypervisor, called DuVisor, can handle all VM operations without trapping into the kernel once the kernel driver has done the initialization. DuVisor retrofits existing hardware virtualization support with a new delegated virtualization extension to directly handle VM exits, configure virtualization registers, manage the stage-2 page table and virtual devices in user mode. We have implemented the hardware extension on an open-source RISC-V CPU and built a Rust-based hypervisor atop the hardware. Evaluation on FireSim shows that DuVisor outperforms KVM by up to 47.96\% in a variety of real-world applications and significantly reduces the attack surface.

CRJan 18, 2019
Taming Distrust in the Decentralized Internet with PIXIU

Yubin Xia, Qingyuan Liu, Cheng Tan et al.

Decentralized Internet is booming. People are fascinated by its promise that users can truly own their data. However, in a decentralized Internet, completing a task usually involves multiple nodes with mutual distrust. Such distrust might eventually become a major obstacle for the growth of the decentralized Internet. In this paper, we analyze the distrust using a simple model and highlight the properties required to faithfully accomplish one task in a decentralized Internet. We also introduce our draft solution -- PIXIU, a framework to mitigate the distrust among different nodes. In PIXIU, we design and utilize trust-λ and decentralized executor to achieve the above-needed properties.