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162 lines
6.2 KiB
Markdown
162 lines
6.2 KiB
Markdown
2 months ago
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# Lightweight macOS VM's for tstest and natlab
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This utility is designed to provide custom virtual machine tooling support for macOS. The intent
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is to quickly create and spin up small, preconfigured virtual machines, for executing integration
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and unit tests.
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The primary driver is to provide support for VZVirtioNetworkDeviceConfiguration which is not
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supported by other popular macOS VM hosts. This also gives us the freedom to fully customize and script
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all virtual machine setup and interaction. VZVirtioNetworkDeviceConfiguration lets us
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directly inject and sink network traffic for simulating various network conditions,
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protocols, and topologies and ensure that the TailScale clients handle all of these situations correctly.
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This may also be used as a drop-in replacement for UTM or Tart on ARM Macs for quickly spinning up
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test VMs. It has the added benefit that, unlike UTM which uses AppleScript, it can be run
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via SSH.
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This uses Virtualization.framework which only supports arm64. The binaries only build for arm64.
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## Components
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The application is built in two components:
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The tailmac command line utility is used to set up and configure VM instances. The Host.app does the heavy lifting.
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You will typically initiate all interactions via the tailmac command-line util.
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For a full list of options:
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```
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tailmac -h
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```
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## Building
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```
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% make all
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```
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Will build both the tailmac command line util and Host.app. You will need a developer account. The default bundle identifiers
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default to TailScale owned ids, so if you don't have (or aren't using) a TailScale dev account, you will need to change this.
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This should build automatically as long as you have a valid developer cert. Signing is automatic. The binaries both
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require the virtualization entitlement, so they do need to be signed.
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There are separate recipes in the makefile to rebuild the individual components if needed.
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All binaries are copied to the bin directory.
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## Locations
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All vm images, restore images, block device files, save states, and other supporting files are persisted at ~/VM.bundle
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Each vm gets its own directory. These can be archived for posterity to preserve a particular image and/or state.
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The mere existence of a directory containing all of the required files in ~/VM.bundle is sufficient for tailmac to
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be able to see and run it. ~/VM.bundle and it's contents *is* tailmac's state. No other state is maintained elsewhere.
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Each vm has its own custom configuration which can be modified while the vm is idle. It's simple JSON - you may
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modify this directly, or using 'tailmac configure'.
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## Installing
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### Default a parameters
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* The default virtio socket device port is 51009
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* The default server socket for the virtual network device is /tmp/qemu-dgram.sock
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* The default memory size is 4Gb
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* The default mac address for the socket based networking is 52:cc:cc:cc:cc:01
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* The default mac address for the standard ethernet interface is 52:cc:cc:cc:ce:01
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### Creating and managing VMs
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You generally perform all interactions via the tailmac command line util. A NAT ethernet device is provided so
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you can ssh into your instance. The ethernet IP will be dhcp assigned by the host and can be determined by parsing
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the contents of /var/db/dhcpd_leases
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#### Creation
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To create a new VM (this will grab a restore image for what apples deems a 'latest; if needed). Restore images are large
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(on the order of 10 Gb) and installation after downloading takes a few minutes. If you wish to use a custom restore image,
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specify it with the --image option. If RestoreImage.ipsw exists in ~/VM.bundle, it will be used. macOS versions from
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12 to 15 have been tested and appear to work correctly.
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```
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tailmac create --id my_vm_id
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```
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With a custom restore image and parameters:
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```
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tailmac create --id my_custom_vm_id --image "/images/macos_ventura.ipsw" --mac 52:cc:cc:cc:cc:07 --mem 8000000000 --sock "/temp/custom.sock" --port 52345
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```
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A typical workflow would be to create single VM, manually set it up the way you wish including the installation of any required client side software
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(tailscaled or the client-side test harness for example) then clone that images as required and back up your
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images for future use.
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Fetching and persisting pre-configured images is left as an exercise for the reader (for now). A previously used image can simply be copied to the
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~/VM.bundle directory under a unique path and tailmac will automatically pick it up. No versioning is supported so old images may stop working in
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the future.
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To delete a VM image, you may simply remove it's directory under ~/VM.bundle or
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```
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tailmac delete --id my_stale_vm
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```
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Note that the disk size is fixed, but should be sufficient (perhaps even excessive) for most lightweight workflows.
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#### Restore Images
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To refresh an existing restore image:
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```
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tailmac refresh
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```
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Restore images can also be obtained directly from Apple for all macOS releases. Note Apple restore images are raw installs, and the OS will require
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configuration, user setup, etc before being useful. Cloning a vm after clicking through the setup, creating a user and disabling things like the
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lock screen and enabling auto-login will save you time in the future.
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#### Cloning
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To clone an existing vm (this will clone the mac and port as well)
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```
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tailmac clone --id old_vm_id --target-id new_vm_id
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```
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#### Configuration
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To reconfigure a existing vm:
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```
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tailmac configure --id vm_id --mac 11:22:33:44:55:66 --port 12345 --ethermac 22:33:44:55:66:77 -sock "/tmp/my.sock"
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```
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## Running a VM
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To list the available VM images
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```
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tailmac ls
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```
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To launch an VM
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```
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tailmac run --id machine_1
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```
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You may invoke multiple vms, but the limit on the number of concurrent instances is on the order of 2. Use the --tail option to watch the stdout of the
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Host.app process. There is currently no way to list the running VM instances, but invoking stop or halt for a vm instance
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that is not running is perfectly safe.
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To gracefully stop a running VM and save its state (this is a fire and forget thing):
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```
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tailmac stop --id machine_1
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```
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Manually closing a VM's window will save the VM's state (if possible) and is the equivalent of running 'tailmac stop --id vm_id'
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To halt a running vm without saving its state:
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```
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tailmac halt --id machine_1
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```
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