On Mon, Nov 06, 2017 at 06:11:43PM +0100, Patrick Ohly wrote: > Hello! > > When Amarnath proposed the initial patch set for interacting with swtpm > without relying on CUSE, letting QEMU invoke swtpm was part of the > patch series. When using some virtual machine management framework like > virt-manager that might not be necessary. But our goal was to use > QEMU+swtpm to test TPM support in Yocto, and there QEMU is started by a > simple wrapper script where handling additional processes would be > awkward. > > To achieve that goal without having to make that script more complex, > I'd like to propose that with some minor (?) changes, a chardev could > also be configured to use an external command. As a proof of concept > I'm attaching a patch which modifies char-socket.c accordingly.
Personally I'm not a huge fan of adding more ways for QEMU to spawn external commands. QEMU is already a very large & complex beast which is hard to confine, and when QEMU spawns a command it is hard to lock it down to any useful extent without us adding alot of extra features to QEMU. Most stuff we've been doing in QEMU has tended to go in the opposite direction of facilitating integration with helpers spawned by a 3rd party, whether it be the mgmt app that launches QEMU or something else. cf vhost-user where we just expose a normal chardev unix socket and assume someone/thing else spawned the service on the other end, or the new approach to host FS passthrough where we expose vsock and run NFS server externally. I can see the argument about it making QEMU easier to use, and those who care about security aren't forced to use this new feature. It none the less has a cost on maintainers and existance of these features does reflect on QEMU's security reputation even if many don't use it. > +static void chardev_open_socket_cmd(Chardev *chr, > + const char *cmd, > + Error **errp) > +{ > + int fds[2] = { -1, -1 }; > + QIOChannelSocket *sioc = NULL; > + pid_t pid = -1; > + const char *argv[] = { "/bin/sh", "-c", cmd, NULL }; > + > + if (socketpair(AF_UNIX, SOCK_STREAM|SOCK_CLOEXEC, 0, fds)) { > + error_setg_errno(errp, errno, "Error creating socketpair(AF_UNIX, > SOCK_STREAM|SOCK_CLOEXEC)"); > + goto error; > + } > + > + pid = qemu_fork(errp); > + if (pid < 0) { > + goto error; > + } > + > + if (!pid) { > + /* child */ > + dup2(fds[1], STDIN_FILENO); > + execv(argv[0], (char * const *)argv); > + _exit(1); > + } > + > + /* > + * Hand over our end of the socket pair to the qio channel. > + * TODO: We don't reap the child at the moment. > + */ > + sioc = qio_channel_socket_new_fd(fds[0], errp); NB, you've mostly re-invented qio_channel_command_new_spawn() here, though you're using a socketpair instead of pipe, which has the slight benefit of meaning we can do FD passing across the external command. If the latter is why you chose socketpair, then it would be nice to improve QIOChannelCommand Regards, Daniel -- |: https://berrange.com -o- https://www.flickr.com/photos/dberrange :| |: https://libvirt.org -o- https://fstop138.berrange.com :| |: https://entangle-photo.org -o- https://www.instagram.com/dberrange :|