Some virtualisation environments, namely Linux KVM/Qemu and VirtualBox support high-performance paravirtualised devices that follow the "Virtio" specification. This is a driver for using the virtio ethernet device from OS X guests. In VirtualBox, this device is known as the "Paravirtualised Network (virtio-net)".
Download the latest virtio-net driver installer to your VirtualBox or Qemu virtual machine running OS X 10.7 or newer. Run the installer. If your VM has any virtio-net devices enabled, they should now spring into life!
22 December 2013: I have updated the driver to version 0.9.4 (Beta 3) with some bug fixes and stability
improvements. In particular, it is now possible to safely unload the driver at
runtime, using kextunload /System/Library/Extensions/virtio-net.kext
. This is
useful for upgrading to newer versions without rebooting.
Version 0.9.2 was released in 2011, and the updates since have been bug fixes rather than feature enhancements. However, as I am now also using KVM, I'm strongly considering implementing drivers for more devices in the Virtio family and beyond. Of particular interest are:
- Memory Balloon - For dynamically varying the amount of memory assigned to the virtual machine.
- Console - Of interest to kernel developers: I'm hoping to get
kprintf()
output working via the virsh console. - Disk Storage - Currently, you have to use an emulated AHCI device for OS X VM disks. The virtio storage device should reduce the overhead and potentially offer some advanced features such as Discard ("TRIM") which is useful for VM image files as well as SSDs. The virtio SCSI device even supports hotplugging.
- SPICE/qxl virtualised graphics adapter and desktop integration - Implementing a driver for this will offer better desktop integration (native mouse cursor and resizeable VM window) and eventually, it might offer better graphics performance, clipboard integration, etc. This isn't technically based on virtio, though.
- 9P - This is for sharing parts of the host's file system with the guest OS.
- Network - The virtio-net implementation in KVM is much higher performance and supports more features than VirtualBox's. This driver currently doesn't even
Some of this will eventually get done if I fund development myself. But if you have an interest in a particular feature, I'm available for funded development, and source code contributions are always welcome.
With that in mind, the next step is modularising the existing code by splitting the virtqueues and PCI device initialisation from the network-specific code so that the other drivers can be built upon the virtqueues.
The current release is version 0.9.4 (the third beta for the 1.0), which includes support for message signaled interrupts (they are not available on VirtualBox unfortunately), and offloaded checksumming and TCP segmentation for IPv4. Transmit speeds with TSO are now on par with receive speeds and easily outperform the emulated Intel gigabit adapter.
Binaries (and the installer) are in the bin/ directory.
Version 0.9.4 works with both the VirtualBox and Qemu/KVM implementations of the virtio network device, and is known to work with OS X 10.7 (Lion) through 10.9.x (Mavericks/Sea Lion), with both 32-bit and 64-bit kernels.
It might also run on 10.6 (it certainly will if you build it against the 10.6 SDK with no modification). I have had success reports with 10.5 with some modifications. I am planning to incorporate those changes once I have modularised the PCI code out from the network code.
Some virtualisation software (I know of VirtualBox and Linux KVM/Qemu) implements paravirtual hardware per the "virtio" specification. One type of virtio device is the "virtio-net" ethernet adapter. Linux and Windows guest drivers exist for it, but as far as I know, this is the only such driver for Mac OS X (10.6+).
Compared to the default emulated Intel gigabit device, the paravirtualised adapter in VirtualBox is approximately twice as fast at transmitting TCP data (with TSO), and about 4 times as fast at receiving.
Kernel debugging via gdb is now also supported by this driver. If the virtio-net device is the primary network adapter in the system (and the driver is the first network card driver to be loaded), you can attach gdb to an appropriately configured crashed kernel. Sending the ACPI Shutdown signal in VirtualBox is treated as a non-maskable interrupt (NMI) so if you specify that kernel debug flag as part of the boot args, you can attach the debugger that way.
[virtio][virtio] is an open specification for virtualised "hardware" in virtual machines. Historically, virtual machine developers have either emulated popular real hardware devices in order to utilise existing drivers in operating systems, or implemented their own virtualised devices with drivers for each supported guest operating system. Neither approach is ideal. Emulating real hardware in software is often unnecessarily inefficient: some of the constraints of real hardware don't apply to virtualised hardware. VM-specific virtualised devices can be fast, but require specific driver for each supported guest operating system. Moreover, the VM developer usually maintains the drivers, and the specs are often not published. This prevents development of drivers for less popular guest operating systems.
An open specification presents an opportunity for separating the responsibilities for implementing the virtual hardware and the drivers, and also potentially allows for greater guest portability across different virtualisation solution.
The virtio spec (Version 0.9.5 as of this writing) includes a specification for a virtualised PCI ethernet network card. Implementations for such virtual hardware are present in Linux' KVM virtualisation solution and also in newer versions of VirtualBox. Drivers for guests exist for Linux (in the main tree) and for Windows.
VirtualBox supports virtual machines running Mac OS X (when running on Apple hardware), but so far I have not found any virtio drivers. Virtual machines are great for testing and debugging kernel extensions; I have so far however been unable to connect gdb to a Mac OS X kernel running inside a VirtualBox VM with emulated "real" ethernet cards. This is an attempt to create a driver which supports kernel debugging for the virtio network interface, in addition to being a good choice for general VM networking. Performance has not been a priority but seems to be pretty good so far nevertheless.
Receiving and transmitting packets works, the adapter is able to negotiate DHCP, send and receive pings, handle TCP connections, etc. The driver appears to be stable even when saturating the virtual network's bandwidth. Some benchmarks are in the docs/ directory, although these predate TSO support, which has almost doubled transmit speed in VirtualBox on my Core2Duo MacBook Air.
Startup and shutdown appear to work fine, as do disabling and re-enabling the device in Network Preferences and changing the adapter's configuration on the host side.
The driver detects link status changes and correctly communicates it to the operating system. This means that if you untick "cable connected" in the VirtualBox GUI for the network device, the adapter's dot in the guest's Network Preferences turns red, and back to green/yellow when you tick it. If you change the adapter's "wiring" (bridging, NAT, host-only, etc.) this is communicated as a brief status change which triggers a DHCP renew, as you'd want.
The "hardware" offers various advanced features, depending on implementation. Of those, this driver supports checksum offloading and automatic segmentation (TSO) for TCP on IPv4.
Reassembly of large packets, MAC address filtering/promiscuous mode, VLAN filtering, etc. are not implemented. Support may be added at a later date (patches welcome!).
Longer term, if we wish to support other virtio devices, the PCI device handling should be separated out into a distinct class from the ethernet controller. This could then take care of general feature negotiation, memory mapping, virtqueue handling, etc. To illustrate, the I/O registry hierarchy currently implemented by this driver is:
IOPCIDevice -> eu_philjordan_virtio_net[IOEthernetController] -> IOEthernetInterface
Where the object on the left side of the arrow is the provider of the one on the right. Under the proposed scheme, it would look something like this:
IOPCIDevice -> VirtioPCIDriver -> VirtioNetController[IOEthernetController] -> IOEthernetInterface
Other types of virtio devices would likewise attach to the VirtioPCIDriver
.
If you simply want to use the driver, just use the installer. For compiling it yourself, this repository contains an Xcode 4 project with which the KEXT can be built in a single step. The KEXT should work on versions 10.5 (Leopard) through 10.8 (Mountain Lion), but so far has only been tested on Snow Leopard and Mountain Lion. Since XCode 4 only runs on Snow Leopard and up, you'll need to create your own XCode 3 project if you want to compile it on Leopard.
I'm making the source code for this driver available under the [LGPL Version 3][lgpl].
The virtio_ring.h
file is adapted from the virtio spec and 3-clause BSD licensed.