Sorry for the delay, I've been really busy this past week. On Sun, Jan 22, 2023 at 10:26 PM David Gibson <david(a)gibson.dropbear.id.au> wrote:On Sat, Jan 21, 2023 at 10:47:03AM +0100, Stefano Brivio wrote:For libslirp we have the guest on a private subnet, so pulling addresses from that pool is pretty easy. For passt is the issue that there is no address range, or that the infrastructure to allocate from the range just doesn't exist yet? When you say "we use the host's gateway address", what is it used for exactly? (I didn't follow the loopback example below.)Hi Noah, Sorry for the delay, I didn't check pending mailing list posts for a couple of days. Comments below: On Tue, 17 Jan 2023 11:50:50 -0800 Noah Gold <nkgold(a)google.com> wrote: > Hi folks, > > libslirp and Passt have different approaches to sharing DNS resolvers with > the guest system, each with their own benefits & drawbacks. On the libslirp > project, we're discussing [1] how to support DNS failover. Passt already has > support for this, but there is a drawback to its solution which prevents us > from taking a similar approach: the resolvers are read exactly once, so if the > host changes networks at runtime, the guest will not receive the updated > resolvers and thus its connectivity will break.So, passt/pasta kinda-sorta binds itself to a particular host interface, so DNS won't be the only issue if the host changes network. For one thing, at least by default the guest gets the same IP as the host, so if the host IP changes the guest will get out of sync. We'll mostly cope with that ok, but there will be some edge cases which will break (most obviously if after the network change the guest wants to talk to something at the host's old address / its current address).Right -- the main motivation behind this (other than simplicity) is that we can close /etc/resolv.conf before sandboxing. However, we could keep a handle on it, just like we do for PID and pcap files, while still unmounting the filesystem. And we could also use inotify to detect changes I guess -- we do the same to monitor namespaces in pasta mode (see pasta_netns_quit_init()).All true, but I'm not sure those are actually the most pressing issues we'll face with a host network change.Hm, that's doesn't fit that easily into the passt model. For the most part we don't NAT at all, we only have a couple of special cases where we do. Because of that the problem with adding any extra NAT case is address allocation. Currently we use the host's gateway address, which mostly works but is a bit troublesome. I have some ideas I think will work better, but those don't necessarily get us more available addresses.libslirp's current approach is to DNAT a single address exposed to the guest to one of the resolvers configured on the host. The problem here is that if that one resolver goes down, the guest can't resolve DNS names. We're considering changing so that instead of a single address, we expose a set of MAXNS addresses, and DNAT those 1:1 to the DNS resolvers registered with the host. Because the DNAT table lives on the host side, we can refresh the guest's resolvers whenever the host's resolvers change, but without the need to expire a DHCP lease (even with short leases, the guest will still lose connectivity for a time). Does this sound like an approach Passt would be open to adopting as well?Yes, definitely, patches would be very welcome.It sounds like there might be a path to using NAT, but it's not something that would be ready soon. Given that, would there be long term concerns with using NAT for DNS in the way proposed here? I understand we can't implement it now, but I'd like to understand if it's an approach we would still rather avoid, even long term.Note that David (Cc'ed) is currently working on a generalised/flexible address mapping mechanism, some kind of (simple) NAT table as far as I understood it.That's a bit overstating it. I'm making our current single NAT case (translating host side loopback to gateway address on the guest) more configurable. I have plans (or at least ideas) for a more generalized NAT mechanism, but I'm really not implementing that yet. What I'm doing now is kind of a soft prerequisite for that rework though (as well as useful in its own right).This might even address your DNS idea already, I'm not sure, I'd wait for him to comment.Hadn't considered specifically that model, but it's a reasonbly natural extension of it (address allocation is still a complication). I'll certainly consider this case when I do more on this.-- David Gibson | I'll have my music baroque, and my code david AT gibson.dropbear.id.au | minimalist, thank you. NOT _the_ _other_ | _way_ _around_! http://www.ozlabs.org/~dgibsonOn Wed, Jan 25, 2023 at 9:55 AM Stefano Brivio <sbrivio(a)redhat.com> wrote:On Mon, 23 Jan 2023 17:20:13 +1100 David Gibson <david(a)gibson.dropbear.id.au> wrote:It's not related to machine migration, though that's another interesting case with similar constraints. The use case I'm thinking about is for a mobile device that may experience network changes as part of its normal operation (e.g. changing wifi networks).On Sat, Jan 21, 2023 at 10:47:03AM +0100, Stefano Brivio wrote:Noah, by the way, if your usage for DNS failover is related to a virtual machine being migrated to another host with different addressing, mind that you could simply tell qemu to connect to a new instance of passt. That's something you can't do with libslirp.Hi Noah, Sorry for the delay, I didn't check pending mailing list posts for a couple of days. Comments below: On Tue, 17 Jan 2023 11:50:50 -0800 Noah Gold <nkgold(a)google.com> wrote: > Hi folks, > > libslirp and Passt have different approaches to sharing DNS resolvers with > the guest system, each with their own benefits & drawbacks. On the libslirp > project, we're discussing [1] how to support DNS failover. Passt already has > support for this, but there is a drawback to its solution which prevents us > from taking a similar approach: the resolvers are read exactly once, so if the > host changes networks at runtime, the guest will not receive the updated > resolvers and thus its connectivity will break.So, passt/pasta kinda-sorta binds itself to a particular host interface, so DNS won't be the only issue if the host changes network. For one thing, at least by default the guest gets the same IP as the host, so if the host IP changes the guest will get out of sync. We'll mostly cope with that ok, but there will be some edge cases which will break (most obviously if after the network change the guest wants to talk to something at the host's old address / its current address).Would that solve your problem, or your issue is specifically related to DNS failover without any VM migration playing a role?It's not related to migration, but I wonder whether there's an idea there which could be used. The approach I was taking was to make the network component resilient to network changes. But another option is to detect network changes and restart the network component. libslirp still needs a way to support exposing multiple servers though, and I wonder whether we would want to require library consumers to write network awareness into their applications as opposed to solving it for them.-- Stefano