Bochs/sfsite/networking/bochs-network-planning.txt

71 lines
3.4 KiB
Plaintext
Raw Normal View History

2001-06-17 08:14:28 +04:00
While talking to Peter Grehan about network support for Bochs, we came up with
the following possible plans. All plans use the emulated NE2K in the guest OS
except for #6, which uses the serial port instead. Peter says that #6 is
close to working already, but that #1 is the most interesting. In the next
few days, he will describe #1 in more detail and mail it to bochs-developers
and plex86 lists.
Here the plans, in no particular order. Please correct mistakes, add pros and
cons, and if you must, add even more plans at the end. (Warning: We
may ask you to implement it...)
1. Emulated NE2K + virtual ethernet driver
Pros: you can talk to host
if you set up IP forwarding in the host, you can talk to the world
Cons: must have root access to load a kernel module,
must be written separately for each host OS,
not all OSes support IP forwarding
2. Emulated NE2K + packet filters (BPF, LSF)
Pros: infrastructure is already there in iodev/eth_*.cc
each packet mover can support several OSes if
they have the right library/kernel feature such as bpf.
user can run it, if packet filter permits
Cons: can't talk to host!
3. Emulated NE2K + emulate network protocols with portable code. Bochs
interprets ethernet frames from the NE2K and turns them into host OS
networking function calls. For outgoing TCP for example, bochs would open a
TCP port using BSD sockets and send and receive data on bochs' behalf. To get
data back into Bochs, we would build ethernet frames and place them in the
emulated NE2K RX queue to make the guest OS think that another host on the
ethernet had responded. For incoming TCP, user tells bochs to redirect host
port X to guest OS port Y, and bochs binds to host port X using socket code.
When connections and data arrive, it turns them into ethernet frames and puts
them into the emulated NE2K RX queue.
Pros: can be portable socket code!
can run as a normal user!
Cons: each protocol must be handled separately
hard to extract TCP information from ethernet frames (maybe
we can borrow linux or other networking code)
Peter Grehan, author of current NE2K code, says it's not practical!
4. Emulated NE2K + PPP on host. Bochs guest OS runs an NE2K, bochs emulator
translates ethernet-ppp and moves packets to/from PPPD running on the host.
This might be called EoPPP!
Pros: PPP already exists for many platforms
all IP protocols supported
if you set up IP forwarding in the host, you can talk to the world
Cons: requires root access on host to start PPP
may require virtual terminal (excludes win?)
have to emulate some ethernet functions
5. Emulated NE2K + Kernel module using bridging code (this is what vmware does)
Pros: bochs appears to be on the same LAN as the host, with different MAC
requires no extra config on the host or guest OS
Cons: Must have root access to load a kernel module,
must be written separately for each host OS,
bridging code not present in all kernels
6. PPP link using bochs serial code
Pros: use normal networking on guest and host
only minor coding required: we just need to make serial open
a TTY in the correct mode
works on any platform that has PPP
if you set up IP forwarding in the host, you can talk to the world
Cons: requires root access on host to start PPP
may require virtual terminal (excludes win?)
probably slower because of overhead of running PPP in emulation