Skip to content

mirage/mirage-skeleton

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

ae2c934 · Mar 4, 2025
Mar 4, 2025
Mar 4, 2025
Mar 4, 2025
Jan 7, 2020
May 10, 2024
Sep 3, 2024
Jan 26, 2022
Oct 14, 2024
Jul 23, 2014
Mar 27, 2022
Mar 4, 2025

Repository files navigation

mirage-skeleton

This repository is a collection of tutorial code referred to from the Mirage website, example code for using specific devices like filesystems and networks, and higher-level applications like DHCP, DNS, and Web servers.

  • tutorial/ contains the tutorial content.
  • device-usage/ contains examples showing specific devices.
  • applications/ contains the higher-level examples, which may use several different devices.

Prerequisites

  • Install latest OPAM (at least 2.1.0), following instructions at https://opam.ocaml.org/

  • Install the mirage package with OPAM, updating your package first if necessary:

    $ opam update -u
    $ opam install mirage
    $ eval `opam config env`
  • Please ensure that your Mirage command-line version is at least 4.8.0 before proceeding:
    $ mirage --version
    4.8.0

Trivial example

You can check that your build environment is working and get a feel for the normal workflow by trying to compile the noop application.

    $ cd tutorials/noop
    $ mirage configure -t unix # initial setup for UNIX backend
    $ make depend # install dependencies
    $ make # build the program
    $ ./noop # run the program

Note that in the general case, you may need to specify more options at the mirage configure stage. You can find out about them with mirage configure --help. For example, you may need to specify what networking method should be used, with, e.g., --net socket or --net direct at the mirage configure stage.

Configure, Build, Run

Each unikernel lives in its own directory, and can be configured, built, and run from that location. For example:

    $ cd applications/static_website_tls
    $ mirage configure -t unix # initial setup for UNIX backend
    $ make depend # install dependencies
    $ make # build the program
    $ ./https # run the program

If you want to clean up mirage's artifacts after building, mirage clean will do the trick:

    $ cd applications/static_website_tls
    $ mirage clean

There is also a top-level Makefile at the root of this repository with convenience functions for configuring, building, and running all of the examples in one step.

    $ make all                   ## equivalent to ...
    $ make configure build
    $ make clean

Details

The Makefile simply invokes sample-specific sample/Makefile. Each of those invokes the mirage command-line tool to configure, build and run the sample, passing flags and environment as directed. The mirage command-line tool assumes that the OPAM package manager is present and is used to manage installation of an OCaml dependencies.

The mirage command-line tool supports four commands, each of which either uses config.ml in the current directory or supports passing a config.ml directly.

To configure a unikernel before building:

    $ mirage configure -t [hvt|virtio|qubes|macosx|unix|xen|genode|muen|spt]

The boot target is selected via the -t flag. The default target is unix. Depending on what devices are present in config.ml, there may be additional configuration options for the unikernel. To list the options,

    $ mirage help configure

and see the section labeled UNIKERNEL PARAMETERS.

To install dependencies

After running mirage configure:

    $ make depend

to install the list of dependencies discovered in the mirage configure phase.

To build a unikernel:

    $ make

The output will be created next to the config.ml file used.

To run a unikernel:

The mechanics of running the generated artifact will be dependent on the backend used. For details, see solo5's readme for hvt, virtio, etc., the qubes-test-mirage repository's readme for Qubes, or the MirageOS website instructions on booting Xen unikernels.

For the Macosx and Unix backends, running as a normal process should suffice.

For summaries by backend that assume the hello example, see below:

Unix:

    $ cd hello
    $ mirage configure -t unix
    $ make depend
    $ make
    $ ./hello

Xen:

    $ cd hello
    $ mirage configure -t xen
    $ make depend
    $ make
    $ sudo xl create xen.xl -c

Hvt:

    $ cd hello
    $ mirage configure -t hvt
    $ make depend
    $ make
    $ solo5-hvt hello.hvt

Virtio:

    $ cd hello
    $ mirage configure -t virtio
    $ make depend
    $ make
    $ solo5-virtio-run ./https.virtio

Macosx:

    $ cd hello
    $ mirage configure -t macosx
    $ make depend
    $ make
    $ ./hello

Qubes:

Some specific setup in the QubesOS manager is necessary to be able to easily run MirageOS unikernels -- please see the qubes-test-mirage readme for details.

    $ cd hello
    $ mirage configure -t qubes
    $ make depend
    $ make
    $ ~/test-unikernel hello.xen unikernel-test-vm

To clean up after building a unikernel:

    $ make clean