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Published byCornelius Benson Modified over 9 years ago
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Improving the Reliability of Commodity Operating Systems
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Introduction Nooks Allows existing OS extensions to execute safely in commodity kernels Use lightweight kernel protection domains Restricted write access to kernel memory Track and validate all modifications to kernel data structures
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Motivation Computer reliability a unsolved problem Cost of failures continues to rise OS extensions have become prevalent 70% of Linux kernel code 35,000 drivers on Windows XP Written by people who are less experienced in kernel organization
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Motivation Extensions are leading cost of failures In Windows XP, drivers cause 85% of failures In Linux, device drivers introduce 7x errors than the rest of the kernel Extended OS cannot be tested completely
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Nooks Approach Target existing extension architecture Use conventional C instead of type-safe languages Aim to reduce the number of crashes due to drivers and extensions Prototype implemented in Linux Showed graceful recovery for 99% of fault injections
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Related Work Hardware approaches Capability-based architectures Recovery difficult for shared resources Segment architectures Difficult to program New OS structures Microkernels Good fault isolation Rebooting required to restart services
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Related Work Transaction-based systems Works well for file systems Language-based approaches Limited applicability
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Architecture Core principles Design for fault resistance, not fault tolerance Prevent and recover from most, not all Design for mistakes, not abuse Extensions are generally well-behaved (not malicious) Can explore the design space between unproctected and safe
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Architecture Implications + Can define an architecture that supports existing drivers with moderate performance costs - Malicious code can bypass these mechanisms
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Goals Isolation of kernel from extension failures Need to detect failures before they spread Automatic recovery from failures Backward compatibility
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Functions Reliability layer inserted between the extensions and the OS kernel Intercepts all interactions between the extensions and the OS kernel Major functions Isolation Interposition Object tracking Recovery
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Isolation Lightweight kernel protection domain Write access to a limited portion of the kernel’s address space Major tasks Creation, manipulation, and maintenance of lightweight kernel protection domains Inter-domain control transfer
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Isolation Extension procedure call (XPC) Similar to lightweight RPC Assume trusted interactions Asymmetric relationship Kernel has more privileges
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Interposition The Nooks interposition mechanisms Make sure that All control flows between the kernel and extensions are through the XPC mechanism All data flows between the kernel and extensions are managed by Nooks’ object-tracking code Extensions and the kernel communicate through wrapper stubs
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Object Tracking Maintains a list of kernel data structures that are manipulated by an extension Controls all modifications to those structures Provides object info for cleanup when an extension fails
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Object Tracking An object must be copied into an extension before it is modified Object tracking code verifies the type and accessibility of each parameter being passed
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Recovery Nooks detects software faults When kernel services are invoked incorrectly When an extension consumes too many resources Actions Return to the extension Generate an error code
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Recovery Nooks detects hardware faults Processor raises an exception during extension execution Attempts to read unmapped memory Write memory outside of its protection domain A user or a program trigger Nooks recovery explicitly
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Recovery Since extensions are decoupled from kernel, Nooks can freely release extension-held kernel structures, such as objects or locks, during the recovery process
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Architecture
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Implementation Linux 2.4.18 Worst-case target 18 months of development 22,000 lines of Nooks code (vs. 2.4 million lines of Linux code and 50 million lines of Windows 2003 code)
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Isolation Two parts Memory management Extension procedure call
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Memory Management Kernel has read-write access to the entire address space Each extension is restricted to read-only kernel access and read-write access to its local domain Nooks maintains a copy of the kernel page table for each domain
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Memory Management Changing protection domains is not as costly as changing processes Protection domains share kernel address space
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Extension Procedure Call Transparent to both the kernel and its extensions Managed by two functions nooks_driver_call(func_ptr, arg_list, domain) nooks_kernel_call(func_ptr, arg_list, domain) Deferred call mechanisms available Useful for network drivers to queue up packets and perform bulk transfers
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Changes to Linux Kernel Maintain coherency between the kernel and extension page tables Detect exceptions that occurs within Nooks’ protection domains Locate tasks that are no longer collocated on the kernel stack due to isolation
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Interposition Provides wrapper stubs between extensions and the kernel Transparent to the kernel and drivers Kernel modifications Make standard module load to bind extensions to wrappers instead of kernel functions The kernel is initialized to interpose on the Nooks’ call into extensions
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Interposition Some data references are interposed Certain objects are linked directly into the extension for reading Kernel modification calls are wrapped Performance critical data structure Shadow object in extension that are synchronized before and after XPCs Otherwise, just XPCs
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Wrappers Within the kernel’s protection domain Three basic tasks Check parameters for validity Create a copy of kernel objects in the extension’s protection domain No serialization/deserialization necessary Synchronization code placed in wrappers Perform an XPC into the kernel or extension Automatically generated
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Wrapper Code Sharing 50% of Nooks code base Shared among multiple drivers
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Object Tracking Supports 43 kernel object types Records the addresses of all objects in use by an extension Records the association between the kernel and the extension versions of writable objects Performs garbage collection Determines whether to copy an object
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Recovery Recovery manager releases resources Unloading the extension Releasing its kernel and physical resources Reloading and restarting the extension User-mode agent coordinates recovery Each object is associated with a recovery function
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Implementation Limitations Nooks does not handle all possible errors Deliberate corruptions of system states Infinite loops However, a moderate reduction of system crashes is a significant contribution
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Achieving Transparency Wrapper stubs for every call in the extension-kernel interface Object-tracking code for every object type that is passed between the extension and the kernel Nooks transparent to both the extension and the kernel
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Reliability Nooks can detect and recover 99% of extension faults
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Test Methodology Synthetic fault injection Automatically changes single instructions in the extension code to emulate common errors Uninitialized variables Bad parameters
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Types of Extensions Isolated Device drivers (network, sound cards) Optional kernel subsystems (VFAT) Application-specific kernel extension (kHTTPd)
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Test Environment VMware Allows automation of crash testing without reboots 5 extensions 400 tests each
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Test Results Not all faulty-injection trials cause faulty behavior
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System Crashes A system crash is easiest to detect OS panics Hangs Reboots Linux experienced 317 crashes Nooks eliminated 313 crashes, or 99% 4 deadlocks
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System Crashes Sound blaster and VFAT extensions are process-oriented Fewer crashes kHTTPd, pcnet32, e1000 are interrupted- based More crashes
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Non-Fatal Extension Failures Nooks cannot detect erroneous extension behaviors Network could disappear Mounted file system hangs
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Recovery Errors A faulting extension is unloaded, reloaded, and restarted Works well with kHTTPp Not as well with VFAT Corruptions can propagate to disk if not detected in time
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Summary of Reliability Experiments Nooks eliminated 99% of the system crashes in extensions Nooks eliminated nearly 60% of non-fatal extension failures
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Performance Dell 1.7 GHz Pentium 4 890 MB of RAM SoundBlaster 16 Intel Pro/1000 Gb Ethernet Adapter 7200 RPM, 41 GB IDE HD Linux 2.4.18
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Sound Benchmark Plays an MP3 file at 128 Kb/sec 150 XPCs/sec Nooks imposes little overhead
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Network Benchmark netperf performance tool A node sends/receives a stream of 32 KB TCP messages via a 256KB buffer 10% overhead
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Compile Benchmark Linux kernel compilation on VFAT 25% slowdown
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Web Server Benchmarks httperf Repeatedly request a 1-KB file and measure the maximum request rate 60% slowdown CPU bound SPECweb99 3% slowdown
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Summary If the computation is not CPU bound, the penalty may not be important
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Conclusions Nooks is achievable with modest engineering effort Extensions such as device drivers can be isolated without changes to extension code Isolation and recovery can dramatically improve the system’s ability to survive extension faults
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