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Installation of iohyve on HardenedBSD

pr1ntf edited this page Nov 9, 2015 · 1 revision

Installing HardenedBSD

  • The actual installation is pretty simple. I just grabbed the latest ISO from the HardenedBSD website and popped it in. Because of the name bhyve, and my obession facination with Star Trek, I will be renaming this box to "borgcube."

  • I tend to grab not only the lib32 stuff, I also grab the src stuff because I compile my own kernel, but I won't be going into that today. I suggest you look into doing this if you don't: RTFHB.

  • Next you'll find the partitioning screen. Nothing fancy here either, except when I run production stuff, I usually choose to run a "root on zfs" setup, so I can do something like a software RAID, but instead using ZFS mirroring. Because the amount of disks I have at my ready are limited (I use just 4x 1.0TB HDDS), I just auto-partition the first disk with UFS and save the other three for the zpool later on. You can also manually partition and make your operating system partition smaller, and add the remaining free space to the zpool later on as well. Yes, ZFS is pretty awesome, I know. Just make sure you have enough RAM to make it happy. Since we are making virtualization system, I assume you have some RAM to spare.

  • The rest of the installation is pretty self-explanatory, setting a static IP, adding a user, etc... Because this server will never (theoretically) be exposed to the internet, I add the user to the wheel group so I can just switch to the root user after login to administer guest operating systems. (su -) Bhyve can only be used by root as it now stands, but the bhyve team is looking to change that in the future. After installation, I exit to a shell to install the tools I will need to begin post installation tasks. I do this via pkg install nano tmux git, although most of the actual programs used by iohyve are built into FreeBSD, or can easily be compiled from source via the ports. In my fresh install tool box I have:

    • nano I'm offically not leet enough for vi yet.
    • tmux I use a terminal multiplexer for two reasons, one is to feel like a hacker, the other is to manage multiple terminal sessions when dealing with multiple guest operating systems and their consoles. More on that later.
    • git Because iohyve is not in FreeBSD ports yet, you have to grab the latest version from github.

Post-installation zpool setup.

There are a few things I like to do before to fresh servers, and I'm sure you do that too. I like to change my motd and the sshd port. Some install sudo and edit the sudoers file. After you do what you need to do, get the zpool set up so iohyve has a place to store things. For me, I can find out what disks I have available to me by running ls /dev | grep ada but you may have different disk names if you have a different controller.

root@borgcube:~ # ls /dev | grep ada
ada0
ada0s1
ada0s1a
ada0s1b
ada1
ada2
ada3

From my output, I can tell that the operating system is installed on /dev/ada0 which leaves /dev/ada1, /dev/ada2, and /dev/ada3 to use for my zpool. For redundancy, I will be utilizing raidz which acts much like RAID-5.

root@borgcube:~ # zpool create borgpool raidz1 /dev/ada1 /dev/ada2 /dev/ada3

iohyve installation and prep.

Please note that the syntax for seting up iohyve has changed recently. Please refer to the man page for guidance on how to set up your kernel modules, network bridge, and zpool.

  • Before installing and setting up iohyve, we must prepare the host first. Begin by adding the following to your /boot/loader.conf file:
vmm_load="YES"
nmdm_load="YES"
  • Then add the following to your /etc/sysctl.conf file:
net.link.tap.up_on_open=1
  • Next we set up the networking in /etc/rc.conf. Be sure to find out the correct name for your primary ethernet adapter. I can tell mine is em0 because when I run ifconfig I can see it has a connection. While I am in /etc/rc.conf I will also make sure zfs_enable is set so iohyve will be able to use ZFS. My file looks something like this:
hostname="borgcube"
ifconfig_em0="inet XXX.XXX.XXX.XXX netmask XXX.XXX.XXX.0"
defaultrouter="XXX.XXX.XXX.XXX"

cloned_interfaces="bridge0 tap0"
ifconfig_bridge0="addm em0 addm tap0"

zfs_enable="YES"
sshd_enable="YES"

# Set dumpdev to "AUTO" to enable crash dumps, "NO" to disable
dumpdev="AUTO"
  • We can now begin to install iohyve and run make install to install the script into the /usr/local/sbin folder.
root@borgcube:~ # git clone https://github.com/pr1ntf/iohyve.git
Cloning into 'iohyve'...
remote: Counting objects: 383, done.
remote: Total 383 (delta 0), reused 0 (delta 0), pack-reused 383
Receiving objects: 100% (383/383), 109.21 KiB | 0 bytes/s, done.
Resolving deltas: 100% (165/165), done.
Checking connectivity... done.
root@borgcube:~ # cd iohyve/
root@borgcube:~/iohyve # make install
mkdir -p /usr/local/sbin
install -m 0555 iohyve /usr/local/sbin/
install rc.d/* /usr/local/etc/rc.d/
  • At this point, I would reboot the system before going any further and check to make sure everything worked.

  • Check to be sure the kernel modules were loaded:

root@borgcube:~ # kldstat | grep vmm && kldstat | grep nmdm
 2    1 0xffffffff81c96000 3634e0   vmm.ko
 3    1 0xffffffff81ffa000 50b0     nmdm.ko
  • Check the if the tap sysctl is set:
root@borgcube:~ # sysctl -a | grep net.link.tap.up_on_open
net.link.tap.up_on_open: 1
  • Check the networking for the tap and bridge interfaces:
root@borgcube:~ # ifconfig -a | grep bridge0 && ifconfig -a | grep tap0
bridge0: flags=8843<UP,BROADCAST,RUNNING,SIMPLEX,MULTICAST> metric 0 mtu 1500
tap0: flags=8902<BROADCAST,PROMISC,SIMPLEX,MULTICAST> metric 0 mtu 1500
  • If you would like to run guest operating systems other than FreeBSD, you will need grub2-bhyve. I install from ports after running portsnap fetch && portsnap extract:
root@borgcube:~ # find /usr/ports -name "grub2-bhyve"
/usr/ports/sysutils/grub2-bhyve
root@borgcube:~ # cd /usr/ports/sysutils/grub2-bhyve && make install clean

...
...
...

  • Next finish setting up iohyve by telling it which zpool to use. If you want to list the zpools available, you can run zpool list.
root@borgcube:~ # zpool list
NAME       SIZE  ALLOC   FREE  EXPANDSZ   FRAG    CAP  DEDUP  HEALTH  
ALTROOT
borgpool  2.72T   138K  2.72T         -     0%     0%  1.00x  ONLINE  -
root@borgcube:~ # iohyve setup borgpool
Setting up iohyve...
  • You can see that it installed by running zfs list.
root@borgcube:~ # zfs list
NAME                  USED  AVAIL  REFER  MOUNTPOINT
borgpool              318K  1.75T  24.0K  /borgpool
borgpool/iohyve      48.0K  1.75T  24.0K  /iohyve
borgpool/iohyve/ISO  24.0K  1.75T  24.0K  /iohyve/ISO

Install a FreeBSD guest.

  • Fetch the installation media:
root@borgcube:~ # iohyve fetch 
ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/.../FreeBSD-10.2-RELEASE-amd64-bootonly.iso
Fetching 
ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/.../FreeBSD-10.2-RELEASE-amd64-bootonly.iso...
/iohyve/ISO/FreeBSD-10.2-RELEASE-amd64-bootonl100% of  230 MB 6883 kBps 
00m34s
root@borgcube:~ #
  • Now here is where tmux comes in. Because bhyve doesn't emulate video, the console output is connected via serial console, in the case with iohyve, it uses cu to set up nmdm consoles for each guest. There are other ways to set this up, like directing output directly to tmux panes or xterm itself. If you opted to install a GUI before all of this, such as i3 you don't even need a multiplexer like tmux, you can just open a new terminal window. You can theoretically install a guest via one SSH session as well, using <RETURN> ``. to stop the nmdm connection and bring you back to your SSH prompt. This can get tricky and cause headaches, though.

  • Create a guest named freebsdguest that has a disk size of 8 gigabytes, then run the installation:

root@borgcube:~ # iohyve create freebsdguest 8G
Creating freebsdguest...
root@borgcube:~ # iohyve isolist
Listing ISO's...
FreeBSD-10.2-RELEASE-amd64-bootonly.iso
root@borgcube:~ # iohyve install freebsdguest FreeBSD-10.2-RELEASE-amd64-bootonly.iso
Installing freebsdguest...
  • If you haven't already done so, open a new terminal (Ctrl+b + c on tmux) and run iohyve console freebsdguest. You may have to press enter once in the console.

  • As long as you choose to do a UFS install, you should be able to install just as usual. You can do a "root on zfs" install, but you have to up the amount of RAM the guest uses, as mentioned before, ZFS likes to nomnomnom on some RAM. The default amount of RAM iohyve set is 256M, but you can change that after guest creation, more on that later.

  • Once the installation is over, you can choose to "reboot" via the menu, but that actually won't reboot the guest, more on that another time. If you choose the "reboot" option on the menu, you must run iohyve destroy freebsdguest before going further. Otherwise, you can just go back to your orginal terminal and run 'iohyve stop freebsdguest' when it asks you to reboot and iohyve will gracefully stop the guest for clean startup on it's next start.

  • Now you can run iohyve start freebsdguest and switch back to the iohyve console freebsdguest terminal watch in glory as the guest operating system boots.

Other cool stuff you can do with iohyve

  • Check all of the properties for a given guest:
root@borgcube:~ # iohyve getall freebsdguest
Getting freebsdguest props...
ram     256M
cpu     1
size    8G
loader  bhyveload
install no
boot    0
tap     tap0
name    freebsdguest
con     nmdm0
persist 1
  • Increase RAM amount:
root@borgcube:~ # iohyve set freebsdguest ram=1024M
Setting freebsdguest prop ram=1024M...
root@borgcube:~ # iohyve get freebsdguest ram
Getting freebsdguest prop ram...
1024M
  • Delete a guest:
root@borgcube:~ # iohyve list
Listing guests...
freebsdguest
naughtyguest
root@borgcube:~ # iohyve delete naughtyguest
Are you sure you want to delete naughtyguest [Y/N]? y
  • List all running guests:
root@borgcube:~ # iohyve running
Listing running guests...
freebsdguest
  • Start a guest at host boot time. Make sure iohyve_enable="YES" is set in your /etc/rc.conf file.
root@borgcube:~ # iohyve set freebsdguest boot=1
Setting freebsdguest prop boot=1...

Run a Debian Linux guest.

  • After fetching the ISO, create the guest as usual. I also like to give the guest a bit more RAM, too.
root@borgcube:~ # iohyve create debianguest 8G
Creating debianguest...
root@borgcube:~ # iohyve set debianguest ram=512MB
Setting debianguest prop ram=512MB...
  • Change the guest's bootloader by setting it in iohyve. Make sure you have installed grub2-bhyve as mentioned above.
root@borgcube:~ # iohyve set debianguest loader=grub-bhyve
Setting debianguest prop loader=grub-bhyve...
  • Install the guest as usual:
root@borgcube:~ # iohyve install debianguest 
debian-8.2.0-amd64-i386-netinst.iso
Installing debianguest...