virtio-rng: add rate limiting support

This adds parameters to virtio-rng-pci to allow rate limiting the entropy a
guest receives.  An example command line:

$ qemu -device virtio-rng-pci,max-bytes=1024,period=1000

Would limit entropy collection to 1Kb/s.

Signed-off-by: Anthony Liguori <aliguori@us.ibm.com>
This commit is contained in:
Anthony Liguori 2012-10-30 17:45:05 -05:00
parent 16c915ba42
commit 904d6f5880
3 changed files with 64 additions and 8 deletions

View File

@ -1015,6 +1015,13 @@ static void virtio_rng_initfn(Object *obj)
static Property virtio_rng_properties[] = {
DEFINE_VIRTIO_COMMON_FEATURES(VirtIOPCIProxy, host_features),
/* Set a default rate limit of 2^47 bytes per minute or roughly 2TB/s. If
you have an entropy source capable of generating more entropy than this
and you can pass it through via virtio-rng, then hats off to you. Until
then, this is unlimited for all practical purposes.
*/
DEFINE_PROP_UINT64("max-bytes", VirtIOPCIProxy, rng.max_bytes, INT64_MAX),
DEFINE_PROP_UINT32("period", VirtIOPCIProxy, rng.period_ms, 1 << 16),
DEFINE_PROP_END_OF_LIST(),
};

View File

@ -31,6 +31,12 @@ typedef struct VirtIORNG {
bool popped;
RngBackend *rng;
/* We purposefully don't migrate this state. The quota will reset on the
* destination as a result. Rate limiting is host state, not guest state.
*/
QEMUTimer *rate_limit_timer;
int64_t quota_remaining;
} VirtIORNG;
static bool is_guest_ready(VirtIORNG *vrng)
@ -55,6 +61,8 @@ static size_t pop_an_elem(VirtIORNG *vrng)
return size;
}
static void virtio_rng_process(VirtIORNG *vrng);
/* Send data from a char device over to the guest */
static void chr_read(void *opaque, const void *buf, size_t size)
{
@ -66,6 +74,8 @@ static void chr_read(void *opaque, const void *buf, size_t size)
return;
}
vrng->quota_remaining -= size;
offset = 0;
while (offset < size) {
if (!pop_an_elem(vrng)) {
@ -85,21 +95,30 @@ static void chr_read(void *opaque, const void *buf, size_t size)
* didn't have enough data to fill them all, indicate we want more
* data.
*/
len = pop_an_elem(vrng);
if (len) {
virtio_rng_process(vrng);
}
static void virtio_rng_process(VirtIORNG *vrng)
{
ssize_t size;
if (!is_guest_ready(vrng)) {
return;
}
size = pop_an_elem(vrng);
size = MIN(vrng->quota_remaining, size);
if (size > 0) {
rng_backend_request_entropy(vrng->rng, size, chr_read, vrng);
}
}
static void handle_input(VirtIODevice *vdev, VirtQueue *vq)
{
VirtIORNG *vrng = DO_UPCAST(VirtIORNG, vdev, vdev);
size_t size;
size = pop_an_elem(vrng);
if (size) {
rng_backend_request_entropy(vrng->rng, size, chr_read, vrng);
}
virtio_rng_process(vrng);
}
static uint32_t get_features(VirtIODevice *vdev, uint32_t f)
@ -163,9 +182,27 @@ static int virtio_rng_load(QEMUFile *f, void *opaque, int version_id)
virtqueue_map_sg(vrng->elem.out_sg, vrng->elem.out_addr,
vrng->elem.out_num, 0);
}
/* We may have an element ready but couldn't process it due to a quota
limit. Make sure to try again after live migration when the quota may
have been reset.
*/
virtio_rng_process(vrng);
return 0;
}
static void check_rate_limit(void *opaque)
{
VirtIORNG *s = opaque;
s->quota_remaining = s->conf->max_bytes;
virtio_rng_process(s);
qemu_mod_timer(s->rate_limit_timer,
qemu_get_clock_ms(vm_clock) + s->conf->period_ms);
}
VirtIODevice *virtio_rng_init(DeviceState *dev, VirtIORNGConf *conf)
{
VirtIORNG *vrng;
@ -196,6 +233,16 @@ VirtIODevice *virtio_rng_init(DeviceState *dev, VirtIORNGConf *conf)
vrng->qdev = dev;
vrng->conf = conf;
vrng->popped = false;
vrng->quota_remaining = vrng->conf->max_bytes;
g_assert_cmpint(vrng->conf->max_bytes, <=, INT64_MAX);
vrng->rate_limit_timer = qemu_new_timer_ms(vm_clock,
check_rate_limit, vrng);
qemu_mod_timer(vrng->rate_limit_timer,
qemu_get_clock_ms(vm_clock) + vrng->conf->period_ms);
register_savevm(dev, "virtio-rng", -1, 1, virtio_rng_save,
virtio_rng_load, vrng);

View File

@ -19,6 +19,8 @@
struct VirtIORNGConf {
RngBackend *rng;
uint64_t max_bytes;
uint32_t period_ms;
};
#endif