mirror of
https://github.com/projectacrn/acrn-hypervisor.git
synced 2026-06-06 17:21:22 +00:00
doc: Reorganize documentation site content
Take the existing ACRN technical documentation and reorganize its presentation to be persona and use-case based, in preparation for adding new scenario/use-case based architecture introduction and getting started documents. Introduce a more graphical home page and theme color tweaks. Signed-off-by: David B. Kinder <david.b.kinder@intel.com>
This commit is contained in:
committed by
David Kinder
parent
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commit
11d4f4159f
@@ -1,630 +0,0 @@
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.. _getting-started-apl-nuc:
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Getting started guide for Intel NUC
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###################################
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The Intel |reg| NUC is the primary tested platform for ACRN development,
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and its setup is described below.
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Hardware setup
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**************
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Intel Apollo Lake NUC (APL) and Intel Kaby Lake NUC (KBL),
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described in :ref:`hardware`, are currently supported for ACRN development:
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- We can enable the serial console on `KBL
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<https://www.amazon.com/Intel-Business-Mini-Technology-BLKNUC7i7DNH1E/dp/B07CCQ8V4R>`__
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(NUC7i7DN), but this is not supported on APL (NUC6CAYH).
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Connecting to the serial port
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=============================
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If you don't need a serial console you can ignore this section.
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Neither the APL or KBL NUCs present an external serial port interface.
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However, the KBL NUC does have a serial port header you can
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expose with a serial DB9 header cable. You can build this cable yourself,
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referring to the `KBL NUC product specification
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<https://www.intel.com/content/dam/support/us/en/documents/mini-pcs/nuc-kits/NUC7i7DN_TechProdSpec.pdf>`__
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as shown below:
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.. figure:: images/KBL-serial-port-header.png
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:align: center
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KBL serial port header details
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.. figure:: images/KBL-serial-port-header-to-RS232-cable.jpg
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:align: center
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KBL `serial port header to RS232 cable
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<https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07BV1W6N8/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_ep_dp_wYm0BbABD5AK6>`_
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Or you can `purchase
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<https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07BV1W6N8/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_ep_dp_wYm0BbABD5AK6>`_
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such a cable.
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You'll also need an `RS232 DB9 female to USB cable
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<https://www.amazon.com/Adapter-Chipset-CableCreation-Converter-Register/dp/B0769DVQM1>`__,
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or an `RS232 DB9 female/female (NULL modem) cross-over cable
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<https://www.amazon.com/SF-Cable-Null-Modem-RS232/dp/B006W0I3BA>`__
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to connect to your host system.
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.. note::
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If you want to use the RS232 DB9 female/female cable, please choose
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the ``cross-over`` type rather than ``straight-through`` type.
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Firmware update on the NUC
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==========================
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You may need to update to the latest UEFI firmware for the NUC hardware.
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Follow these `BIOS Update Instructions
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<https://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/support/articles/000005636.html>`__
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for downloading and flashing an updated BIOS for the NUC.
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Software setup
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**************
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.. _set-up-CL:
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Set up a Clear Linux Operating System
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=====================================
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We begin by installing Clear Linux* as the development OS on the NUC.
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The Clear Linux release includes an ``acrn.efi`` hypervisor application
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that will be added to the EFI partition (by the quick setup script or
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manually, as described below).
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.. note::
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Please refer to the ACRN :ref:`release_notes` for the Clear Linux OS
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version number tested with a specific ACRN release. Adjust the
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instruction below to reference the appropriate version number of Clear
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Linux OS (we use version 30210 as an example).
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#. Download the compressed Clear Linux OS installer image from
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https://download.clearlinux.org/releases/30210/clear/clear-30210-live-server.img.xz
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and follow the `Clear Linux OS installation guide
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<https://clearlinux.org/documentation/clear-linux/get-started/bare-metal-install-server>`_
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as a starting point for installing Clear Linux OS onto your platform. Follow the recommended
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options for choosing an **Advanced options** installation type, and using the platform's
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storage as the target device for installation (overwriting the
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existing data).
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When setting up Clear Linux on your NUC:
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#. Launch the Clear Linux OS installer boot menu
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#. With Clear Linux OS highlighted, select Enter
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#. Login with your root account, and new password
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#. Run the installer using the command::
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$ clr-installer
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#. From the Main Menu, select "Configure Media" and set
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"Auto Partition" to your desired hard disk.
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#. Press :kbd:`A` to show the "Advanced options".
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#. Select "Additional Bundle Selection" to add bundles for
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"desktop-autostart", "editors", "network-basic", "user-basic"
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#. Select "User Manager" to add an administrative user "clear" and
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password.
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#. Select "Assign Hostname" to set the hostname as "clr-sos-guest"
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#. Select Confirm to start installation.
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#. After installation is complete, boot into Clear Linux OS, login as
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**clear** (using the password you set earlier).
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#. The instructions below provide details for setting
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up the ACRN Hypervisor, Service OS, and Guest OS. Along with the
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manual step details, We also provide an
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automated script that does all these steps for you, so you can skip these
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manual steps. See the `quick-setup-guide`_ section below to use the
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automated setup script.
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.. _quick-setup-guide:
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Use the script to set up ACRN automatically
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===========================================
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We provide an `acrn_quick_setup.sh script
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<https://raw.githubusercontent.com/projectacrn/acrn-hypervisor/master/doc/getting-started/acrn_quick_setup.sh>`__
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in the ACRN GitHub repo to quickly and automatically set up the SOS and UOS
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and generate a customized script for launching the UOS.
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This script requires the Clear Linux version number you'd like to set up
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for the ACRN SOS and UOS. The version specified must be greater than or
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equal to the Clear Linux version currently installed on the NUC. You
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can see your current Clear Linux version with the command::
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$ cat /etc/os-release
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.. note:: In the following steps, we're using Clear Linux version 30210. You should
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specify the Clear Linux version you want to use.
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Here are the steps to install Clear Linux on your NUC, set up the SOS
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and UOS using the ``acrn_quick_setup.sh`` script, and launch the UOS:
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#. Installing Clear Linux and login system
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#. Open a terminal
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#. Download ``acrn_quick_setup.sh`` script to set up the SOS. (If you don't need a proxy to
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get the script, you can just skip the ``export`` command.)
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.. code-block:: console
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$ export https_proxy=https://myproxy.mycompany.com:port
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$ cd ~
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$ wget https://raw.githubusercontent.com/projectacrn/acrn-hypervisor/master/doc/getting-started/acrn_quick_setup.sh
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$ sudo sh acrn_quick_setup.sh -s 30210
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Password:
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Upgrading SOS...
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Disable auto update...
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Clear Linux version 30210 is already installed. Continuing to setup SOS...
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Adding the service-os, kernel-iot-lts2018 and systemd-networkd-autostart bundles...
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...100%
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...100%
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...100%
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none
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Add /mnt/EFI/acrn folder
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Copy /usr/share/acrn/samples/nuc/acrn.conf /mnt/loader/entries/
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Copy /usr/lib/acrn/acrn.efi to /mnt/EFI/acrn
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Check ACRN efi boot event
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Clean all ACRN efi boot event
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Check linux bootloader event
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Clean all Linux bootloader event
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Add new ACRN efi boot event
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Create loader.conf
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Add default (5 seconds) boot wait time
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Add default boot to ACRN
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Getting latest Service OS kernel version: kernel-org.clearlinux.iot-lts2018-sos.4.19.34-45
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Getting current Service OS kernel version: kernel-org.clearlinux.iot-lts2018-sos.4.19.13-1901141830
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Replacing root partition uuid in acrn.conf
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Replace with new SOS kernel in acrn.conf
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Service OS setup done!
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Rebooting Service OS to take effects.
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Rebooting.
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.. note::
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This script is using ``/dev/sda1`` as default EFI System Partition
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ESP). If the ESP is different based on your hardware, you can specify
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it using ``-e`` option. For example, to set up the SOS on an NVMe
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SSD, you could specify::
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sudo sh acrn_quick_setup.sh -s 30210 -e /dev/nvme0n1p1
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.. note::
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If you don't need to reboot automatically after setting up the SOS, you
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can specify the ``-d`` parameter (don't reboot)
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#. After the system reboots, login as the clear user. You can verify
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the SOS booted successfully by checking the ``dmesg`` log:
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.. code-block:: console
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$ dmesg | grep ACRN
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[ 0.000000] Hypervisor detected: ACRN
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[ 1.220887] ACRNTrace: Initialized acrn trace module with 4 cpu
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[ 1.224401] ACRN HVLog: Initialized hvlog module with 4 cpu
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#. Continue by setting up a Guest OS using the ``acrn_quick_setup.sh``
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script with the ``-u`` option (and the same Clear Linux version
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number):
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.. code-block:: console
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$ sudo sh acrn_quick_setup.sh -u 30210
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Password:
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Upgrading UOS...
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Downloading UOS image: https://download.clearlinux.org/releases/30210/clear/clear-30210-kvm.img.xz
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% Total % Received % Xferd Average Speed Time Time Time Current
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Dload Upload Total Spent Left Speed
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14 248M 14 35.4M 0 0 851k 0 0:04:57 0:00:42 0:04:15 293k
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After the download is completed, you'll get this output.
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.. code-block:: console
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Unxz UOS image: clear-30210-kvm.img.xz
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Get UOS image: clear-30210-kvm.img
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Upgrade UOS done...
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Now you can run this command to start UOS...
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$ sudo /root/launch_uos_30210.sh
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#. Now you can launch the UOS using the customized launch_uos script
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(with sudo):
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.. code-block:: console
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$ sudo /root/launch_uos_30210.sh
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Password:
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cpu1 online=0
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cpu2 online=0
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cpu3 online=0
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passed gvt-g optargs low_gm 64, high_gm 448, fence 8
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SW_LOAD: get kernel path /usr/lib/kernel/default-iot-lts2018
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SW_LOAD: get bootargs root=/dev/vda3 rw rootwait maxcpus=1 nohpet console=tty0 console=hvc0 console=ttyS0 no_timer_check ignore_loglevel log_buf_len=16M consoleblank=0 tsc=reliable i915.avail_planes_per_pipe=0x070F00 i915.enable_hangcheck=0 i915.nuclear_pageflip=1 i915.enable_guc_loading=0 i915.enable_guc_submission=0 i915.enable_guc=0
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VHM api version 1.0
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open hugetlbfs file /run/hugepage/acrn/huge_lv1/D279543825D611E8864ECB7A18B34643
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open hugetlbfs file /run/hugepage/acrn/huge_lv2/D279543825D611E8864ECB7A18B34643
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level 0 free/need pages:512/0 page size:0x200000
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level 1 free/need pages:1/2 page size:0x40000000
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to reserve more free pages:
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to reserve pages (+orig 1): echo 2 > /sys/kernel/mm/hugepages/hugepages-1048576kB/nr_hugepages
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now enough free pages are reserved!
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try to setup hugepage with:
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level 0 - lowmem 0x0, biosmem 0x0, highmem 0x0
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level 1 - lowmem 0x80000000, biosmem 0x0, highmem 0x0
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total_size 0x180000000
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mmap ptr 0x0x7efef33bb000 -> baseaddr 0x0x7eff00000000
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mmap 0x40000000@0x7eff00000000
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touch 1 pages with pagesz 0x40000000
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mmap 0x40000000@0x7eff40000000
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touch 512 pages with pagesz 0x200000
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...
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[ OK ] Started Login Service.
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[ OK ] Started Network Name Resolution.
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[ OK ] Reached target Network.
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Starting Permit User Sessions...
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[ OK ] Reached target Host and Network Name Lookups.
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[ OK ] Started Permit User Sessions.
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[ OK ] Started Serial Getty on ttyS0.
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[ OK ] Started Getty on tty1.
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[ OK ] Started Serial Getty on hvc0.
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[ OK ] Reached target Login Prompts.
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[ OK ] Reached target Multi-User System.
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[ OK ] Reached target Graphical Interface.
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clr-0d449d5327d64aee8a6b8a3484dcd880 login:
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#. Login as root (and specify the new password). You can verify you're
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running in the UOS by checking the kernel release version or seeing
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if acrn devices are visible:
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.. code-block:: console
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# uname -r
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4.19.34-45.iot-lts2018
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# ls /dev/acrn*
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ls: cannot access '/dev/acrn*': No such file or directory
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In the UOS there won't be any ``/dev/acrn*`` devices. If you're in the SOS,
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you'd see results such as these:
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.. code-block:: console
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# uname -r
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4.19.55-67.iot-lts2018-sos
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# ls /dev/acrn*
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/dev/acrn_hvlog_cur_0 /dev/acrn_hvlog_cur_2 /dev/acrn_trace_0 /dev/acrn_trace_2 /dev/acrn_vhm
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/dev/acrn_hvlog_cur_1 /dev/acrn_hvlog_cur_3 /dev/acrn_trace_1 /dev/acrn_trace_3
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With that you've successfully set up Clear Linux at the Service and User
|
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OS and started up a UOS VM.
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.. _manual-setup-guide:
|
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Manual setup ACRN guide
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=======================
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Instead of using the quick setup script, you can also set up ACRN, SOS,
|
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and UOS manually following these steps:
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#. After installing Clear Linux on the NUC, login as the **clear** user
|
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and open a terminal window.
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#. Clear Linux OS is set to automatically update itself. We recommend that you disable
|
||||
this feature to have more control over when updates happen. Use this command
|
||||
to disable the autoupdate feature:
|
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.. code-block:: none
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|
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$ sudo swupd autoupdate --disable
|
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|
||||
.. note::
|
||||
The Clear Linux OS installer will automatically check for updates and install the
|
||||
latest version available on your system. If you wish to use a specific version
|
||||
(such as 30210), you can achieve that after the installation has completed using
|
||||
``sudo swupd verify --fix --picky -m 30210``
|
||||
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#. If you have an older version of Clear Linux OS already installed
|
||||
on your hardware, use this command to upgrade Clear Linux OS
|
||||
to version 30210 (or newer):
|
||||
|
||||
.. code-block:: none
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||||
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$ sudo swupd update -m 30210 # or newer version
|
||||
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||||
#. Use the ``sudo swupd bundle-add`` command and add these Clear Linux OS bundles:
|
||||
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.. code-block:: none
|
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|
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$ sudo swupd bundle-add service-os kernel-iot-lts2018 systemd-networkd-autostart
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||||
.. table:: Clear Linux OS bundles
|
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:widths: auto
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:name: CL-bundles
|
||||
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+----------------------------+-------------------------------------------+
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| Bundle | Description |
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+============================+===========================================+
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| service-os | Add the acrn hypervisor, acrn |
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||||
| | devicemodel, and Service OS kernel |
|
||||
+----------------------------+-------------------------------------------+
|
||||
| kernel-iot-lts2018 | Run the Intel kernel "kernel-iot-lts2018" |
|
||||
| | which is enterprise-style kernel with |
|
||||
| | backports |
|
||||
+----------------------------+-------------------------------------------+
|
||||
| systemd-networkd-autostart | Enable systemd-networkd as the default |
|
||||
| | network manager |
|
||||
+----------------------------+-------------------------------------------+
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
.. _add-acrn-to-efi:
|
||||
|
||||
Add the ACRN hypervisor to the EFI Partition
|
||||
============================================
|
||||
|
||||
In order to boot the ACRN SOS on the platform, you'll need to add it to the EFI
|
||||
partition. Follow these steps:
|
||||
|
||||
#. Mount the EFI partition and verify you have the following files:
|
||||
|
||||
.. code-block:: none
|
||||
|
||||
$ sudo ls -1 /boot/EFI/org.clearlinux
|
||||
bootloaderx64.efi
|
||||
kernel-org.clearlinux.native.4.20.11-702
|
||||
kernel-org.clearlinux.iot-lts2018-sos.4.19.23-19
|
||||
kernel-org.clearlinux.iot-lts2018.4.19.23-19
|
||||
loaderx64.efi
|
||||
|
||||
.. note::
|
||||
On Clear Linux OS, the EFI System Partition (e.g.: ``/dev/sda1``)
|
||||
is mounted under ``/boot`` by default
|
||||
The Clear Linux project releases updates often, sometimes
|
||||
twice a day, so make note of the specific kernel versions
|
||||
(*iot-lts2018 and *iot-lts2018-sos*) listed on your system,
|
||||
as you will need them later.
|
||||
|
||||
.. note::
|
||||
The EFI System Partition (ESP) may be different based on your hardware.
|
||||
It will typically be something like ``/dev/mmcblk0p1`` on platforms
|
||||
that have an on-board eMMC or ``/dev/nvme0n1p1`` if your system has
|
||||
a non-volatile storage media attached via a PCI Express (PCIe) bus
|
||||
(NVMe).
|
||||
|
||||
#. Put the ``acrn.efi`` hypervisor application (included in the Clear
|
||||
Linux OS release) on the EFI partition with:
|
||||
|
||||
.. code-block:: none
|
||||
|
||||
$ sudo mkdir /boot/EFI/acrn
|
||||
$ sudo cp /usr/lib/acrn/acrn.efi /boot/EFI/acrn/
|
||||
|
||||
#. Configure the EFI firmware to boot the ACRN hypervisor by default
|
||||
|
||||
The ACRN hypervisor (``acrn.efi``) is an EFI executable
|
||||
loaded directly by the platform EFI firmware. It then in turns loads the
|
||||
Service OS bootloader. Use the ``efibootmgr`` utility to configure the EFI
|
||||
firmware and add a new entry that loads the ACRN hypervisor.
|
||||
|
||||
.. code-block:: none
|
||||
|
||||
$ sudo efibootmgr -c -l "\EFI\acrn\acrn.efi" -d /dev/sda -p 1 -L "ACRN"
|
||||
|
||||
.. note::
|
||||
|
||||
Be aware that a Clear Linux OS update that includes a kernel upgrade will
|
||||
reset the boot option changes you just made. A Clear Linux OS update could
|
||||
happen automatically (if you have not disabled it as described above),
|
||||
if you later install a new bundle to your system, or simply if you
|
||||
decide to trigger an update manually. Whenever that happens,
|
||||
double-check the platform boot order using ``efibootmgr -v`` and
|
||||
modify it if needed.
|
||||
|
||||
The ACRN hypervisor (``acrn.efi``) accepts two command-line parameters that
|
||||
tweak its behavior:
|
||||
|
||||
1. ``bootloader=``: this sets the EFI executable to be loaded once the hypervisor
|
||||
is up and running. This is typically the bootloader of the Service OS and the
|
||||
default value is to use the Clear Linux OS bootloader, i.e.:
|
||||
``\EFI\org.clearlinux\bootloaderx64.efi``.
|
||||
#. ``uart=``: this tells the hypervisor where the serial port (UART) is found or
|
||||
whether it should be disabled. There are three forms for this parameter:
|
||||
|
||||
#. ``uart=disabled``: this disables the serial port completely
|
||||
#. ``uart=bdf@<BDF value>``: this sets the PCI serial port based on its BDF.
|
||||
For example, use ``bdf@0:18.1`` for a BDF of 0:18.1 ttyS1.
|
||||
#. ``uart=port@<port address>``: this sets the serial port address
|
||||
|
||||
.. note::
|
||||
|
||||
``uart=port@<port address>`` is required if you want to enable the serial console.
|
||||
You should run ``dmesg |grep ttyS0`` to get port address from the output, and then
|
||||
add the ``uart`` parameter into the ``efibootmgr`` command.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
Here is a more complete example of how to configure the EFI firmware to load the ACRN
|
||||
hypervisor and set these parameters.
|
||||
|
||||
.. code-block:: none
|
||||
|
||||
$ sudo efibootmgr -c -l "\EFI\acrn\acrn.efi" -d /dev/sda -p 1 -L "ACRN NUC Hypervisor" \
|
||||
-u "bootloader=\EFI\org.clearlinux\bootloaderx64.efi uart=disabled"
|
||||
|
||||
And also here is the example of how to enable a serial console for KBL NUC.
|
||||
|
||||
.. code-block:: none
|
||||
|
||||
$ sudo efibootmgr -c -l "\EFI\acrn\acrn.efi" -d /dev/sda -p 1 -L "ACRN NUC Hypervisor" \
|
||||
-u "bootloader=\EFI\org.clearlinux\bootloaderx64.efi uart=port@0x3f8"
|
||||
|
||||
#. Create a boot entry for the ACRN Service OS by copying a provided ``acrn.conf``
|
||||
and editing it to account for the kernel versions noted in a previous step.
|
||||
|
||||
It must contain these settings:
|
||||
|
||||
+-----------+----------------------------------------------------------------+
|
||||
| Setting | Description |
|
||||
+===========+================================================================+
|
||||
| title | Text to show in the boot menu |
|
||||
+-----------+----------------------------------------------------------------+
|
||||
| linux | Linux kernel for the Service OS (\*-sos) |
|
||||
+-----------+----------------------------------------------------------------+
|
||||
| options | Options to pass to the Service OS kernel (kernel parameters) |
|
||||
+-----------+----------------------------------------------------------------+
|
||||
|
||||
A starter acrn.conf configuration file is included in the Clear Linux
|
||||
OS release and is
|
||||
also available in the acrn-hypervisor/hypervisor GitHub repo as `acrn.conf
|
||||
<https://github.com/projectacrn/acrn-hypervisor/blob/master/efi-stub/clearlinux/acrn.conf>`__
|
||||
as shown here:
|
||||
|
||||
.. literalinclude:: ../../misc/efi-stub/clearlinux/acrn.conf
|
||||
:caption: efi-stub/clearlinux/acrn.conf
|
||||
|
||||
On the platform, copy the ``acrn.conf`` file to the EFI partition we mounted earlier:
|
||||
|
||||
.. code-block:: none
|
||||
|
||||
$ sudo cp /usr/share/acrn/samples/nuc/acrn.conf /boot/loader/entries/
|
||||
|
||||
You will need to edit this file to adjust the kernel version (``linux`` section),
|
||||
insert the ``PARTUUID`` of your ``/dev/sda3`` partition
|
||||
(``root=PARTUUID=<UUID of rootfs partition>``) in the ``options`` section, and
|
||||
add the ``hugepagesz=1G hugepages=2`` at end of the ``options`` section.
|
||||
|
||||
Use ``blkid`` to find out what your ``/dev/sda3`` ``PARTUUID`` value is. Here
|
||||
is a handy one-line command to do that:
|
||||
|
||||
.. code-block:: none
|
||||
|
||||
# sed -i "s/<UUID of rootfs partition>/`blkid -s PARTUUID -o value \
|
||||
/dev/sda3`/g" /boot/loader/entries/acrn.conf
|
||||
|
||||
.. note::
|
||||
It is also possible to use the device name directly, e.g. ``root=/dev/sda3``
|
||||
|
||||
#. Add a timeout period for Systemd-Boot to wait, otherwise it will not
|
||||
present the boot menu and will always boot the base Clear Linux OS
|
||||
|
||||
.. code-block:: none
|
||||
|
||||
$ sudo clr-boot-manager set-timeout 20
|
||||
$ sudo clr-boot-manager update
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
#. Reboot and select "The ACRN Service OS" to boot, as shown below:
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
.. code-block:: console
|
||||
:emphasize-lines: 1
|
||||
:caption: ACRN Service OS Boot Menu
|
||||
|
||||
=> The ACRN Service OS
|
||||
Clear Linux OS for Intel Architecture (Clear-linux-iot-lts2018-4.19.23-19)
|
||||
Clear Linux OS for Intel Architecture (Clear-linux-iot-lts2018-sos-4.19.23-19)
|
||||
Clear Linux OS for Intel Architecture (Clear-linux-native.4.20.11-702)
|
||||
EFI Default Loader
|
||||
Reboot Into Firmware Interface
|
||||
|
||||
#. After booting up the ACRN hypervisor, the Service OS will be launched
|
||||
automatically by default, and the Clear Linux OS desktop will be showing with user "clear",
|
||||
(or you can login remotely with an "ssh" client).
|
||||
If there is any issue which makes the GNOME desktop doesn't show successfully, then the system will go to
|
||||
shell console.
|
||||
|
||||
#. From ssh client, login as user "clear" using the password you set previously when
|
||||
you installed Clear Linux OS.
|
||||
|
||||
#. After rebooting the system, check that the ACRN hypervisor is running properly with:
|
||||
|
||||
.. code-block:: none
|
||||
|
||||
$ dmesg | grep ACRN
|
||||
[ 0.000000] Hypervisor detected: ACRN
|
||||
[ 1.687128] ACRNTrace: acrn_trace_init, cpu_num 4
|
||||
[ 1.693129] ACRN HVLog: acrn_hvlog_init
|
||||
|
||||
If you see log information similar to this, the ACRN hypervisor is running properly
|
||||
and you can start deploying a User OS. If not, verify the EFI boot options, SOS
|
||||
kernel, and ``acrn.conf`` settings are correct (as described above).
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
ACRN Network Bridge
|
||||
===================
|
||||
|
||||
ACRN bridge has been setup as a part of systemd services for device communication. The default
|
||||
bridge creates ``acrn_br0`` which is the bridge and ``tap0`` as an initial setup. The files can be
|
||||
found in ``/usr/lib/systemd/network``. No additional setup is needed since systemd-networkd is
|
||||
automatically enabled after a system restart.
|
||||
|
||||
Set up Reference UOS
|
||||
====================
|
||||
|
||||
#. On your platform, download the pre-built reference Clear Linux OS UOS
|
||||
image version 30210 (or newer) into your (root) home directory:
|
||||
|
||||
.. code-block:: none
|
||||
|
||||
$ cd ~
|
||||
$ mkdir uos
|
||||
$ cd uos
|
||||
$ curl https://download.clearlinux.org/releases/30210/clear/clear-30210-kvm.img.xz -o uos.img.xz
|
||||
|
||||
.. note::
|
||||
In case you want to use or try out a newer version of Clear Linux OS as the UOS, you can
|
||||
download the latest from http://download.clearlinux.org/image. Make sure to adjust the steps
|
||||
described below accordingly (image file name and kernel modules version).
|
||||
|
||||
#. Uncompress it:
|
||||
|
||||
.. code-block:: none
|
||||
|
||||
$ unxz uos.img.xz
|
||||
|
||||
#. Deploy the UOS kernel modules to UOS virtual disk image (note: you'll need to use
|
||||
the same **iot-lts2018** image version number noted in step 1 above):
|
||||
|
||||
.. code-block:: none
|
||||
|
||||
$ sudo losetup -f -P --show uos.img
|
||||
$ sudo mount /dev/loop0p3 /mnt
|
||||
$ sudo cp -r /usr/lib/modules/"`readlink /usr/lib/kernel/default-iot-lts2018 | awk -F '2018.' '{print $2}'`.iot-lts2018" /mnt/lib/modules
|
||||
$ sudo umount /mnt
|
||||
$ sync
|
||||
|
||||
#. Edit and Run the ``launch_uos.sh`` script to launch the UOS.
|
||||
|
||||
A sample `launch_uos.sh
|
||||
<https://raw.githubusercontent.com/projectacrn/acrn-hypervisor/master/devicemodel/samples/nuc/launch_uos.sh>`__
|
||||
is included in the Clear Linux OS release, and
|
||||
is also available in the acrn-hypervisor/devicemodel GitHub repo (in the samples
|
||||
folder) as shown here:
|
||||
|
||||
.. literalinclude:: ../../devicemodel/samples/nuc/launch_uos.sh
|
||||
:caption: devicemodel/samples/nuc/launch_uos.sh
|
||||
:language: bash
|
||||
|
||||
By default, the script is located in the ``/usr/share/acrn/samples/nuc/``
|
||||
directory. You can run it to launch the User OS:
|
||||
|
||||
.. code-block:: none
|
||||
|
||||
$ cd /usr/share/acrn/samples/nuc/
|
||||
$ sudo ./launch_uos.sh
|
||||
|
||||
#. At this point, you've successfully booted the ACRN hypervisor,
|
||||
SOS, and UOS:
|
||||
|
||||
.. figure:: images/gsg-successful-boot.png
|
||||
:align: center
|
||||
|
||||
Successful boot
|
||||
Reference in New Issue
Block a user