rump_sp(7) - NetBSD Manual Pages

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RUMP_SP(7)          NetBSD Miscellaneous Information Manual         RUMP_SP(7)


NAME
rump_sp -- rump remote system call support
DESCRIPTION
The rump_sp facility allows clients to attach to a rump kernel server over a socket and perform system calls. While making a local rump system call is faster than calling the host kernel, a remote system call over a socket is slower. This facility is therefore meant mostly for operations which are not performance critical, such as configuration of a rump ker- nel server. Clients The NetBSD base system comes with multiple preinstalled clients which can be used to configure a rump kernel and request diagnostic information. These clients run as hybrids partially in the host system and partially against the rump kernel. For example, network-related clients will typi- cally avoid making any file system related system calls against the rump kernel, since it is not guaranteed that a rump network server has file system support. Another example is DNS: since a rump server very rarely has a DNS service configured, host networking is used to do DNS lookups. Some examples of clients include rump.ifconfig which configures inter- faces, rump.sysctl which is used to access the sysctl(7) namespace and rump.traceroute which is used to display a network trace starting from the rump kernel. Also, almost any unmodified dynamically linked application (for example telnet(1) or ls(1)) can be used as a rump kernel client with the help of system call hijacking. See rumphijack(3) for more information. Connecting to the server A remote rump server is specified using an URL. Currently two types of URLs are supported: TCP and local domain sockets. The TCP URL is of the format tcp://ip.address:port/ and the local domain URL is unix://path. The latter can accept relative or absolute paths. Note that absolute paths require three leading slashes. To preserve the standard usage of the rump clients' counterparts the environment variable RUMP_SERVER is used to specify the server URL. To keep track of which rump kernel the current shell is using, modifying the shell prompt is recommended -- this is analogous to the visual clue you have when you login from one machine to another. Client credentials and access control The current scheme gives all connecting clients root credentials. It is recommended to take precautions which prevent unauthorized access. For a unix domain socket it is enough to prevent access to the socket using file system permissions. For TCP/IP sockets the only available means is to prevent network access to the socket with the use of firewalls. More fine-grained access control based on cryptographic credentials may be implemented at a future date.
EXAMPLES
Get a list of file systems supported by a rump kernel server (in case that particular server does not support file systems, an error will be returned): $ env RUMP_SERVER=unix://sock rump.sysctl vfs.generic.fstypes
SEE ALSO
rump_server(1), rump(3), rumpclient(3), rumphijack(3)
HISTORY
rump_sp first appeared in NetBSD 6.0. NetBSD 10.99 February 7, 2011 NetBSD 10.99
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