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About

This shows how to create a small Linux VM with a Zig program running as init. I'm using it to test the kernel.

Presently the init performs a switch_root onto a tmpfs root and mounts /proc and /sys. Then it hands off to Busybox to run some more setup and start a shell.

Below is what the output looks like with -Doptimize=ReleaseSafe.

...
[    0.361427] Run /init as init process
info: Zig is running as init!
info: uname: Linux localhost 6.1.42 #5 SMP PREEMPT_DYNAMIC Thu Aug  3 11:36:24 BST 2023 x86_64 (none)
info: Switching root away from rootfs because of pivot_root
info: Temporarily mounted new root at /newroot
info: Moved root contents to /newroot
info: Moved /newroot to /
info: chrooted into new /
info: Mounting /proc and /sys, we'll get proper error traces now
/bin/sh: can't access tty; job control turned off
~ #

The kernel creates an initial file system called rootfs and populates it with the contents of the initrd image. This is basically a tmpfs file system and would be fine for testing except that it does not support pivot_root. So we make a new root fs.

Related article: Minimal Linux VM cross compiled with Clang and Zig

Build

This covers building a complete Linux VM with our Zig userland. We build two images, a kernel and initrd, which can be "direct booted" by QEMU.

For now it doesn't cover building Busybox. I haven't figured out how to do that with Zig yet.

Nix note

If you are using Nix and have flakes enabled then you can do:

$ nix develop

This will provide an unstable Zig (with ZLS), Busybox and bunch of stuff for kernel development. However note that Nix's lld.ld wrapper script has an issue with kernel compilation. There is a workaround listed below.

Init

Run zig build or zig build -Dtarget=aarch64-linux-none to cross compile.

Kernel

The Linux kernel can be cross compiled with LLVM in the following way.

$ cd $linux_git_checkout
$ make LLVM=1 ARCH=arm64 defconfig
$ make LLVM=1 ARCH=arm64 menuconfig # Optional
$ make LLVM=1 ARCH=arm64 -j$(nproc)

Or just remove ARCH if you are not cross compiling. In that case you can also drop LLVM and use the GNU toolchain. If you are using Nix then you have to specify gcc as the host compiler to avoid linker errors.

$ make HOSTCC=gcc CC=clang LLVM=1 ...

We need the Image.gz file on ARM64, other architectures use different names. For example on x86 it is bzImage.

$ mkdir -p $m_git_checkout/kernels/arm64
$ cp arch/arm64/boot/Image.gz $m_git_checkout/kernels/arm64/Image.gz

Initrd

Create the directory tree and copy in our init, for example:

$ mkdir -p initrds/x86_64/bin
$ cp zig-out/bin/m initrds/x86_64/init

If you have Busybox on your host system then you can copy it in with the following:

$ cp -r templates/busybox initrds/x86_64
$ script/add-dyn-exe.sh initrds/x86_64 busybox
$ script/link-busybox.sh initrds/x86_64 busybox

You may need to include kernel modules in your initrd:

$ cd $linux_git_checout
$ INSTALL_MOD_PATH=$m_git_checkout/initrds/x86_64 make modules_install

Create the cpio archive

$ cd $m_git_checkout
$ scripts/mk-initrd.sh

Run

If you built a x86_64 kernel on x86_64 then do

$ script/run-qemu.sh kvm initrds/x86_64.cpio.gz kernels/x86_64/bzImage

If you cross compiled arm64 then its

$ script/run-qemu.sh arm64 initrds/arm64.cpio.gz kernels/arm64/Image.gz

Debug

Kernel

If your kernel has debug symbols then you can connect with gdb to QEMU. First start QEMU with -s and, if you have KASLR enabled, get the kernel base address.

$ script/run-qemu.sh kvm initrds/x86_64.cpio.gz kernels/x86_64/bzImage -s
# head -n 3 /proc/kallsyms
ffffffffb0000000 T startup_64
ffffffffb0000000 T _stext
ffffffffb0000000 T _text

So $text_address=0xffffffffb0000000, then start gdb.

$ gdb
gdb> add-symbol-file $linux_git_checkout/vmlinux $text_address
gdb> target remote localhost:1234

To debug kernel boot add -S to the run-qemu.sh script and disable KASLR.

TODO

A big motivator for doing this is to leverage Zig's cross compilation abilities and build system. So obviously I want Zig to compile Busybox and whatever else.

I also want to reduce the amount of shell script to minimum. zig build <subcmd> should replace the scripts on the host and init will replace /etc/init.d/rcS.

Acknowledgments

  • Thanks jacobly helping me with why debug symbols were missing.

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