Using make tarball targets for tools locally, binaries may exist
for both debug and release builds. In this case, cryptic errors
are shown as we try to install multiple binaries.
This change require exactly one binary to be found and errors out
in other cases.
Signed-off-by: Manuel Huber <manuelh@nvidia.com>
When using the multiInstallSuffix we must be cautelous on using the shim
name, as qemu-nvidia-gpu* doesn't actually have a matching QEMU itself,
but should rather be mapped to:
qemu-nvidia-gpu -> qemu
qemu-nvidia-gpu-snp -> qemu-snp-experimental
qemu-nvidia-gpu-tdx -> qemu-tdx-experimental
Signed-off-by: Fabiano Fidêncio <ffidencio@nvidia.com>
In order to have a better way to set things up using a toml editor, we
should take the containerd approach and actually have everything
uncommnted. This will help us to unify how we deal with such values in
the future from the kata-deploy POV.
Signed-off-by: Fabiano Fidêncio <ffidencio@nvidia.com>
Allow users to build the Kata Agent using INIT_DATA=no to disable the
detect_initdata_device() code loop and associated debug log output.
Future additional improvements related to Init Data are tracked by #11532.
Signed-off-by: Dan Mihai <dmihai@microsoft.com>
On 69c4fc4e76, I've mistakenly changed the
nvidia-gpu podOverhead while I should only have changed the TEE
nvidia-gpu ones.
Let's move it back to its original value.
Reported-by: Joji Mekkattuparamban <jojim@nvidia.com>
Signed-off-by: Fabiano Fidêncio <ffidencio@nvidia.com>
We've added logic to properly do the book keeping of the TEE keys when
using NFD **AND** creating the runtime classes. However, we need to also
take into consideration the case where the runtimeclasses are being
created by the helm template, and in that case we just update what helm
has deployed.
Signed-off-by: Fabiano Fidêncio <ffidencio@nvidia.com>
Introduce a new devkit parameter which will produce a rootfs
without chisselling. This results in a larger rootfs with various
packages and binaries being included, for instance, enabling the
use of the debug console.
Signed-off-by: Manuel Huber <manuelh@nvidia.com>
Let's just move the podOverhead to a gigantic value, as we do need pod
snadboxes as big as that, and we've noticed QEMU being OOM killed with
smaller overheads.
Signed-off-by: Fabiano Fidêncio <ffidencio@nvidia.com>
This makes the user experience better, as the admin can deploy Kata
Containers without having to download / set up any additional file.
Of course, if the admin wants something more specific, examples are
provided.
Tests and documentation are updated to reflect this change.
Signed-off-by: Fabiano Fidêncio <ffidencio@nvidia.com>
Add three example values files to make it easier for users to try out
different Kata Containers configurations:
- try-kata.values.yaml: Enables all available shims
- try-kata-tee.values.yaml: Enables only TEE/confidential computing shims
- try-kata-nvidia-gpu.values.yaml: Enables only NVIDIA GPU shims
These files use the new structured configuration format and serve as
ready-to-use examples for common deployment scenarios.
Also update the README.md to document these example files and how to use them.
Signed-off-by: Fabiano Fidêncio <ffidencio@nvidia.com>
Add comprehensive documentation for the new structured configuration
format, including:
- Migration guide from legacy env.* format
- List of deprecated fields with removal timeline (2 releases)
- Examples of the new structured format
- Explanation of key benefits
- Backward compatibility notes
The documentation makes it clear that the legacy format is deprecated
but will continue to work during the transition period.
Signed-off-by: Fabiano Fidêncio <ffidencio@nvidia.com>
This commit adds backward compatibility support to ensure existing
configurations using the legacy env.* format continue to work.
The helper functions now check for legacy env.* values first, and
only fall back to the new structured format if legacy values are
not set. This allows for gradual migration without breaking
existing deployments.
Backward compatibility is maintained for:
- env.shims, env.shims_* (per architecture)
- env.defaultShim, env.defaultShim_* (per architecture)
- env.allowedHypervisorAnnotations
- env.snapshotterHandlerMapping_* (per architecture)
- env.pullTypeMapping_* (per architecture)
- env.agentHttpsProxy, env.agentNoProxy
- env._experimentalSetupSnapshotter
- env._experimentalForceGuestPull_* (per architecture)
- env.debug
Legacy env vars (SHIMS, DEFAULT_SHIM, etc.) are still set in the
DaemonSet when using the old format to maintain full compatibility.
Signed-off-by: Fabiano Fidêncio <ffidencio@nvidia.com>
This commit introduces a new structured configuration format for
configuring Kata Containers shims in the Helm chart. The new format
provides:
- Per-shim configuration with enabled/supportedArches
- Per-shim snapshotter, guest pull, and agent proxy settings
- Architecture-aware default shim configuration
- Root-level debug and snapshotter setup configuration
All shims are disabled by default and must be explicitly enabled.
This provides better type safety and clearer organization compared
to the legacy env.* string-based format.
The templates are updated to use the new structure exclusively.
Backward compatibility will be added in a follow-up commit.
Signed-off-by: Fabiano Fidêncio <ffidencio@nvidia.com>
As the some of the global vars can be empty, we should actually check
their _FOR_ARCH version instead.
Signed-off-by: Fabiano Fidêncio <ffidencio@nvidia.com>
As we're making the values.yaml more user friendly, we actually have to
handle the https_proxy and no_proxy entries per shim, instead of having
this globally available, as this will only affect images being pulled
inside the guest (as in, when using TEE variations of the shims).
Signed-off-by: Fabiano Fidêncio <ffidencio@nvidia.com>
Adds a practical set of kernel config used by docker-in-docker and kind
for network bridging and filtering. It also includes the matching IPv6
support to allow tools like kind that require IPv6 network policies to
work out of the box.
This support includes:
- nftables reject and filtering support for inet/ipv4/ipv6
- Bridge filtering for container-to-container traffic
- IPv6 NAT, filtering, and packet matching rules for network policies
- VXLAN and IPsec crypto support for network tunneling
- TMPFS POSIX ACL support for filesystem permissions
The configs are organized across fragment files:
- common/fs.conf: TMPFS ACL support
- common/crypto.conf: IPsec/VXLAN crypto algorithms
- common/network.conf: VXLAN, IPsec ESP, nftables bridge/ARP/netdev
- common/netfilter.conf: IPv6 netfilter stack and nftables advanced features
Fixes: #11886
Signed-off-by: Simon Kaegi <simon.kaegi@gmail.com>
Parallelize busybox builds to build a bit faster and create the
build directory prior to Docker execution, which on my
environment, helps with permission issues when building busybox
without the kata-containers/build directory existing beforehand.
Signed-off-by: Manuel Huber <manuelh@nvidia.com>
For the nvidia-gpu-snp and nvidia-gpu-tdx we must set containerd to
allow the CDI annotation to be passed to down.
This solution may become obsolete soon enough, but the cleanest way to
have it properly working is by adding it here (even if we remove it
before the next release).
Signed-off-by: Manuel Huber <manuelh@nvidia.com>
Signed-off-by: Fabiano Fidêncio <ffidencio@nvidia.com>
It's been noticed that as more RAM is needed to run the CC tests, we
also need to update the podOverhead of the NVIDIA CC runtime classes to
avoid getting OOM Killed.
Signed-off-by: Manuel Huber <manuelh@nvidia.com>
Signed-off-by: Fabiano Fidêncio <ffidencio@nvidia.com>
Let's now make sure that we don't add duplicated values to any of our
entries, making the script as sane as possible for sequential runs.
Vibed with Cursor's help!
Signed-off-by: Fabiano Fidêncio <ffidencio@nvidia.com>
Let's add some helper functions, not yet used, to avoid adding
duplicated items.
This idea is an expansion of Choi's idea to avoid setting duplicated
items, and it'll help on making the whole script idempotent on
sequential runs.
Vibed with Cursor's help!
Signed-off-by: Fabiano Fidêncio <ffidencio@nvidia.com>
I know, this is not simplifying much things for now, but it has a good
intent in the background and will serve as base for making the
kata-deploy helm chart more user friendly.
With that said, let's add ALLOWED_HYPERVISOR_ANNOTATIONS per arch, while
adding support to set something like "qemu:foo,bar clh:bar foobar
barfoo". Why? Because in the future we'll have a better way to set this
per shim (and the shim is per arch ...).
More details of what we'll do in the future are being discussed here:
https://github.com/kata-containers/kata-containers/issues/12024
Anyways, the variables are **DELIBERATELY** not exposed to the chart for
now, as those will be later on when addressing the issue mentioned
above.
Signed-off-by: Fabiano Fidêncio <ffidencio@nvidia.com>
When the runtimeClasses were added, as part of 7cfa826804, the
firecracker runtimeClass ended up missing from the dictionary.
Signed-off-by: Fabiano Fidêncio <ffidencio@nvidia.com>
This reverts commit be05e1370c, which is
not a problem as we never released such option.
Conflicts:
tools/packaging/kata-deploy/helm-chart/README.md
Signed-off-by: Fabiano Fidêncio <ffidencio@nvidia.com>
We had this logic inside the script when we didn't use the helm chart.
However, this only makes the shim script more convoluted for no reason.
Signed-off-by: Fabiano Fidêncio <ffidencio@nvidia.com>
Otherwise we'll face issues like:
```
Error: found in Chart.yaml, but missing in charts/ directory: node-feature-discovery
```
Signed-off-by: Fabiano Fidêncio <ffidencio@nvidia.com>
Let's ensure that we add NFD as a weak dependency of the kata-deploy
helm chart.
What we're doing for now is leaving it up to the user / admin to enable
it, and if enabled then we do a explicit check for virtualization
support (x86_64 only for now).
In case NFD is already deployed, we fail the installation (in case it's
enabled on the kata-deploy helm chart) with a clear error message to the
user.
While I know that kata-remote **DOES NOT** require virtualization, I've
left this out (with a comment for when we add a peer-pods dependency on
kata-deploy) in order to simplify things for now, as kata-remote is not
a deployed shim by default.
Signed-off-by: Fabiano Fidêncio <ffidencio@nvidia.com>
As Kata Containers can be consumed by other helm-charts, hard coding the
default runtime class name to `kata` is not optimal.
Signed-off-by: Fabiano Fidêncio <ffidencio@nvidia.com>
All the options that take a specific shim as an argument MUST have
specific per arch settings, as not all the shims are available for all
the arches, leading to issues when setting up multi-arch deployments.
Signed-off-by: Fabiano Fidêncio <ffidencio@nvidia.com>
When the NodeFeatureRule CRD is detected kata-deploy will:
* Create the specific NodeFeatureRules for the x86_64 TEEs
* Adapt the TEEs runtime classes to take into account the amount of keys
available in the system when spawning the podsandbox.
Note, we still do not have NFD as sub-dependency of the helm chart, and
I'm not even sure if we will have. However, it's important to integrate
better with the scenarios where the NFD is already present.
Signed-off-by: Fabiano Fidêncio <ffidencio@nvidia.com>
This allows us to do a full multi-arch deployment, as the user can
easily select which shim can be deployed per arch, as some of the VMMs
are not supported on all architectures, which would lead to a broken
installation.
Now, passing shims per arch we can easily have an heterogenous
deployment where, for instance, we can set qemu-se-runtime-rs for s390x,
qemu-cca for aarch64, and qemu-snp / qemu-tdx for x86_64 and call all of
those a default kata-confidential ... and have everything working with
the same deployment.
Signed-off-by: Fabiano Fidêncio <ffidencio@nvidia.com>
Build only from Ubuntu repositories do not mix with developer.nvidia.com
Signed-off-by: Zvonko Kaiser <zkaiser@nvidia.com>
Update tools/osbuilder/rootfs-builder/nvidia/nvidia_chroot.sh
Co-authored-by: Copilot <175728472+Copilot@users.noreply.github.com>
Aurélien has moved to a reliable mirror for our tests, but we missed
that our tools Dockerfiles could benefit from the same change, which is
added now.
Signed-off-by: Fabiano Fidêncio <ffidencio@nvidia.com>