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xen-pv-channel(7)		      Xen		     xen-pv-channel(7)

NAME
       xen-pv-channel -	Xen PV Channels

DESCRIPTION
       A channel is a low-bandwidth private byte stream	similar	to a serial
       link. Typical uses of channels are

       1.  to provide initial configuration information	to a VM	on boot
	   (example use: CloudStack's cloud-early-config service)

       2.  to signal/query an in-guest agent (example use: oVirt's guest
	   agent)

       Channels	are similar to virtio-serial devices and emulated serial
       links.  Channels	are intended to	be used	in the implementation of
       libvirt s when running on Xen.

       Note: if	an application requires	a high-bandwidth link then it should
       use vchan instead.

   How to use channels:	an example
       Consider	a cloud	deployment where VMs are cloned	from pre-made
       templates, and customised on first boot by an in-guest agent which sets
       the IP address, hostname, ssh keys etc. To install the system the cloud
       administrator would first:

       1.  Install a guest as normal (no channel configuration necessary)

       2.  Install the in-guest	agent specific to the cloud software. This
	   will	prepare	the guest to communicate over the channel, and also
	   prepare the guest to	be cloned safely (sometimes known as
	   "sysprepping")

       3.  Shutdown the	guest

       4.  Register the	guest as a template with the cloud orchestration
	   software

       5.  Install the cloud orchestration agent in dom0

       At runtime, when	a cloud	tenant requests	that a VM is created from the
       template, the sequence of events	would be: (assuming a Linux domU)

       1.  A VM	is "cloned" from the template

       2.  A unique Unix domain	socket path in dom0 is allocated (e.g.
	   /my/cloud/software/talk/to/domain/)

       3.  Domain configuration	is created for the VM, listing the channel
	   name	expected by the	in-guest agent.	In xl syntax this would	be:

	   channel = [ "connection=socket,
	   name=org.my.cloud.software.agent.version1, path =
	   /my/cloud/software/talk/to/domain/" ]

       4.  The VM is started

       5.  In dom0 the cloud orchestration agent connects to the Unix domain
	   socket, writes a handshake message and waits	for a reply

       6.  Assuming the	guest kernel has CONFIG_HVC_XEN_FRONTEND set then the
	   console driver will generate	a hotplug event

       7.  A udev rule is activated by the hotplug event.

	   The udev rule would look something like:

	   SUBSYSTEM=="xen", DEVPATH=="/devices/console-[0-9]",
	   RUN+="xen-console-setup"

	   where the "xen-console-setup" script	would read the channel name
	   and make a symlink in
	   /dev/xen-channel/org.my.cloud.software.agent.version1 pointing to
	   /dev/hvcN. N	is the same number as the number in
	   "/devices/console-[0-9]".  In other words, "/devices/console-2"
	   maps	to /dev/hvc2.

       8.  The in-guest	agent uses inotify to see the creation of the
	   /dev/xen-channel symlink and	opens the device.

       9.  The in-guest	agent completes	the handshake with the dom0 agent

       10. The dom0 agent transmits the	unique VM configuration: hostname, IP
	   address, ssh	keys etc etc

       11. The in-guest	agent receives the configuration and applies it.

       Using channels avoids having to use a temporary disk device or network
       connection.

   Design recommendations and pitfalls
       It's necessary to install channel-specific software (an "agent")	into
       the guest before	you can	use a channel. By default a channel will
       appear as a device which	could be mistaken for a	serial port or regular
       console.	It is known that some software will proactively	seek out
       serial ports and	issue AT commands at them; make	sure such software is
       disabled!

       Since channels are identified by	names, application authors must	ensure
       their channel names are unique to avoid clashes.	We recommend that
       channel names include parts unique to the application such as a domain
       names. To assist	prevent	clashes	we recommend authors add their names
       to our global channel registry at the end of this document.

   Limitations
       Hotplug and unplug of channels is not currently implemented.

   Channel name	registry
       It is important that channel names are globally unique. To help ensure
       that no-one's name clashes with yours, please add yours to this list.

	   Key:
	   N: Name
	   C: Contact
	   D: Short description	of use,	possibly including a URL to your software or API

	   N: org.xenproject.guest.clipboard.0.1
	   C: David Scott <dave.scott@citrix.com>
	   D: Share clipboard data via an in-guest agent. See:
	      https://wiki.xenproject.org/wiki/Clipboard_sharing_protocol

4.19.2-pre			  2025-02-17		     xen-pv-channel(7)

Want to link to this manual page? Use this URL:
<https://man.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?query=xen-pv-channel&sektion=7&manpath=FreeBSD+Ports+15.0>

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