OSv is a new open-source operating system for virtual-machines. OSv was designed from the ground up to execute a single application on top of a hypervisor, resulting in superior performance and effortless management when compared to traditional operating systems which were designed for a vast range of physical machines.
OSv has new APIs for new applications, but also runs unmodified Linux applications (most of Linux's ABI is supported) and in particular can run an unmodified JVM, and applications built on top of one.
For more information about OSv, see http://osv.io/ and https://github.com/cloudius-systems/osv/wiki
OSv can only be built on a 64-bit x86 Linux distribution. Please note that this means the "x86_64" or "amd64" version, not the 32-bit "i386" version.
First, install prerequisite packages:
Fedora
yum install ant autoconf automake boost-static gcc-c++ genromfs libvirt libtool flex bison qemu-system-x86 qemu-img maven maven-shade-plugin python-dpkt tcpdump gdb
Debian Debian stable(wheezy) is not able to install gcc 4.8, Debian testing(jessie) or later is required.
apt-get install build-essential libboost-all-dev genromfs autoconf libtool openjdk-7-jdk ant qemu-utils maven libmaven-shade-plugin-java python-dpkt tcpdump gdb qemu-system-x86
Before start building OSv, you'll need to add your account to kvm group.
usermod -aG kvm <user name>
Ubuntu users: you may use Oracle JDK if you don't want to pull too many
dependencies for openjdk-7-jdk
To ensure functional C++11 support, Gcc 4.8 or above is required, as this was the first version to fully comply with the C++11 standard.
Make sure all git submodules are up-to-date:
git submodule update --init --recursive
Finally, build everything at once:
make
By default make creates image in qcow2 format. To change this pass format value via img_format variable, i.e.
make img_format=raw
./scripts/run.py
By default, this runs OSv under KVM, with 4 VCPUs and 2GB of memory, and runs the default management application (containing a shell, Web server, and SSH server).
If running under KVM you can terminate by hitting Ctrl+A X.
To start osv with external networking:
sudo ./scripts/run.py -n -v
The -v is for kvm's vhost that provides better performance and its setup requires a tap and thus we use sudo.
By default OSv spawns a dhcpd that auto config the virtual nics. Static config can be done within OSv, configure networking like so:
ifconfig virtio-net0 192.168.122.100 netmask 255.255.255.0 up
route add default gw 192.168.122.1
Test networking:
test invoke TCPExternalCommunication
# Building and running a simple java application example
$ make image=java-example
$ scripts/run.py -e "java.so -cp /java-example Hello"
# Running an ifconfig by explicit execution of ifconfig.so (compiled C++ code)
$ make
$ sudo scripts/run.py -nv -e "/tools/ifconfig.so"