[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

Re: [Xen-users] Re: Users can provide their own kernels?



> This is very disconcerting to someone who was looking at renting out
> domU space on a Xen machine.
>
> Will there be options to prevent a domU that booted a dom0 kernel from
> accessing xend? I'd hate for an abusive user to balloon all the other
> domUs to 16MB RAM and balloon themselves to 1GB RAM, play with
> scheduling parameters, or randomly kill off other domUs.

In Xen, the guest kernel has no part in enforcing interdomain security - Xen 
does that.  Simply by running a kernel in a domU, it is unprivileged.  
Kernels running in a domU never have any special privileges unless you 
explicitly grant them from dom0.  This is unlike UML / vservers, where a 
compromise of the VM's kernel can allow a user to "escape".

The only reason we provide a separate xenU kernel is because it's a bit 
smaller than the xen0 kernel.  The guest bootloader takes advantage of this 
support to allow users to compile their own guest kernels and select them 
themselves.

So it's safe, don't worry ;-)

Cheers,
Mark

_______________________________________________
Xen-users mailing list
Xen-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
http://lists.xensource.com/xen-users


 


Rackspace

Lists.xenproject.org is hosted with RackSpace, monitoring our
servers 24x7x365 and backed by RackSpace's Fanatical Support®.