Google Summer of Code 2014

From QEMU
Revision as of 03:47, 8 February 2014 by Fam Zheng (talk | contribs)

Introduction

QEMU is applying as a mentoring organization for Google Summer of Code 2014. This page contains our ideas list and information for students and mentors.

Note to students: Google has not yet announced participating organizations for 2014. We do not know whether or not QEMU can participate this year, so use your time wisely and don't invest too much effort yet.

Find Us

Please contact the mentor for the project idea you are interested in. IRC is usually the quickest way to get an answer.

For general questions about QEMU in GSoC, please contact the following people:

Important links

Project Ideas

This is the listing of suggested project ideas. Students are free to suggest their own projects by emailing qemu-devel@nongnu.org and (optionally) CCing potential mentors.

QEMU projects

Device driver framework for low-level testing

Summary: Implement bus drivers and example device tests

Modern hardware requires elaborate setup before it can be accessed. So much low-level configuration is necessary before devices become available that we (mostly) don't bother to write test cases for emulated devices. This project is going to change that - let's make testing emulated devices easy!

QEMU's libqos library aims to provide a device driver framework for writing PCI, I2C, fw_cfg, and other device tests. libqos has several areas that need improvement before emulated device testing becomes generally useful:

  • Add support for virtio. This requires you to implement at least one of the virtio transports: virtio-pci, virtio-mmio, or virtio-ccw.
  • Add support for USB. This requires you to implement at least one USB Host Controller driver: xHCI, EHCI, UHCI, or OHCI.
  • Add I2C/SMBus controller drivers for pc (i440fx) and pc-q35 (ICH9) x86 machines.
  • Add PCI controller drivers for ppc machines.
  • Make device test cases work for multiple machine types. For example, a PCI network card test case should work on both x86 and ppc machines. This requires that you first implement more controller drivers (see above). Some busses, like PCI, can detect devices and therefore decide which device tests to execute for the emulated machine.

Pick one or more of these areas to work on.

This project will give you an opportunity to work on low-level device driver code, learn how modern hardware works, and familiarize yourself with device driver frameworks. The libqos approach is similar to kernel device driver frameworks that Linux, FreeBSD, Windows, or Darwin have. If you are not familiar with device drivers already, make sure to look at the free Linux Device Drivers book to get some background.

Links:

Details:

  • Skill level: intermediate to advanced
  • Language: C
  • Mentor: Stefan Hajnoczi <stefanha@redhat.com> (stefanha on IRC), Paolo Bonzini <pbonzini@redhat.com>

Disk image fuzz testing

Summary: Implement fuzz testing for image file formats to identify security vulnerabilities before the bad guys do

QEMU supports a range of image file formats including qcow2, VMDK, and VHDX. Image files are often uploaded by untrusted users to cloud providers or shared online as untrusted "demo appliances". Any bug in QEMU that can be triggered by a malicious image file could be used to compromise the host opening the image file.

Fuzz testing is an automated random testing technique that explores a program's code paths by trying random inputs. When the program under test crashes, a bug has been found. These techniques have been used successfully in other areas such as testing the Linux system call interface.

Your task is to implement fuzz tests for qcow2, VMDK, and VHDX. These tests will be merged into qemu.git and part of the test suite. You can either fix bugs found by your tests yourself, or work with the community to report them and provide fixes.

You should consider different approaches to fuzzing that interest you (e.g. combining with code coverage metrics). Using an existing fuzzing framework may be a good idea too.

Links:

Details:

  • Skill level: intermediate
  • Language: Python and/or shell
  • Mentor: Stefan Hajnoczi <stefanha@redhat.com> (stefanha on IRC)

Libvirt projects

Introducing job control to the storage driver

Currently, libvirt support job cancellation and progress reporting on domains. That is, if there's a long running job on a domain, e.g. migration, libvirt reports how much data has already been transferred to the destination and how much still needs to be transferred. However, libvirt lacks such information reporting in storage area, to which libvirt developers refer to as the storage driver. The aim is to report progress on several storage tasks, like volume wiping, file allocation an others.

  • Skill level: intermediate

Rewriting VirtualBox driver

If you have ever looked into our VirtualBox driver, you still may experience ocassional hedaches. I still do. The code is horribly structured so we would be more than happy to have somebody to rewrite the code and bring cleanliness that we strive to keep in the rest of the code.

  • Skill level: beginner

Your own idea

Just catch me (Michal Privoznik) on IRC and we can discuss what interests you.

Links:

Details:

  • Component: libvirt
  • Skill level: (see description to each item)
  • Language: C
  • Mentor: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>, mprivozn on IRC (#virt OFTC)
  • Suggested by: Michal Privoznik <mprivozn@redhat.com>

Project idea template

=== TITLE ===
 
 '''Summary:''' Short description of the project
 
 Detailed description of the project.
 
 '''Links:'''
 * Wiki links to relevant material
 * External links to mailing lists or web sites
 
 '''Details:'''
 * Skill level: beginner or intermediate or advanced
 * Language: C
 * Mentor: Email address and IRC nick
 * Suggested by: Person who suggested the idea

Information for mentors

Mentors are responsible for keeping in touch with their student and assessing the student's progress. GSoC has a mid-term evaluation and a final evaluation where both the mentor and student assess each other.

The mentor typically gives advice, reviews the student's code, and has regular communication with the student to ensure progress is being made.

Being a mentor is a significant time commitment, plan for 5 hours per week. Make sure you can make this commitment because backing out during the summer will affect the student's experience.

The mentor chooses their student by reviewing student application forms and conducting IRC interviews with candidates. Depending on the number of candidates, this can be time-consuming in itself. Choosing the right student is critical so that both the mentor and the student can have a successful experience.