Li Lei 030a088892 [Tools] Multiple bug fixes of Graphene Secure Container (GSC) tool 5 years ago
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README 536f6a1e90 [Docs] Update GSC readme 5 years ago
gen_manifest 030a088892 [Tools] Multiple bug fixes of Graphene Secure Container (GSC) tool 5 years ago
gsce 030a088892 [Tools] Multiple bug fixes of Graphene Secure Container (GSC) tool 5 years ago

README

Graphene-SGX Secure Container
--------------------------------
Graphene-SGX Secure Container (GSC) is a container system where the containerized application can be protected by Graphene-SGX while it is running in a container environment. The GSC system includes two parts: (1) a Docker container instance where the application is running inside Graphene-SGX and both of them are running inside the container instance; (2) a front-end named GSCE (GSC Engine) which takes a legacy Docker container image and automatically launches the contained application inside a GSC container instance.

Launching a GSC container instance includes following steps:

(1) Make sure there is a Docker container image of your application in the local or remote image repository.

(2) Download and Compile Graphene-SGX;

(2) Go to graphene/Tools

(3) Run a GSC container via the following command:

./gsce run [All the arguments used for launching a normal Docker container] [docker Image Name:Tag].

Let's take redis, a key-value, in-memory database as an example. Assume the user runs a normal redis from its docker image as follows.
```bash
docker run -i -t -p 6379:6379 redis:latest
```
To launch a GSC container running redis, simply change docker to "./gsce", i.e., the user runs the command as follows.
```bash
./gsce run -i -t -p 6379:6379 redis:latest
```
--------------------------------
Setting up the Dockerfile:

If running a C++ example your Dockerfile should have the following:
```docker
FROM gcc:9.1

# Ensure you add your path to the graphene folder
COPY . /home/username/graphene/LibOS/shim/test/apps/yourImageName

WORKDIR /home/username/graphene/LibOS/shim/test/apps/yourImageName

# You can use gcc or g++ and any flags you would like (std flag is for C++ 11 support)
RUN g++ -o app sourcefile.cpp -std=c++11

CMD ["./app"]
```
Note: If GSC has issues finding your program and it is added under the trusted files, it is possible that your path has a typo or is incorrect.
--------------------------------
Issues You May Encounter
1) Graphene is having trouble handling the symbolic links in graphene/Runtime
- For some reason Graphene doesn't read symbolic links in certain instances. You will need to replace all of the links with a copy of the actual files with the same name to the Runtime folder. Rather than doing this manually (more painful than you may think) use this trick:
- `shopt -s globstar` <-- enables globstar option
- `sed -i '' **/*` <-- replaces all of the links
2) Cannot find (generated_offsets)/(site).py
- Graphene for some reason can't access certain modules it needs to sign enclaves, so all you need to do is copy wherever the modules are located to the folder: `/home/username/graphene/Pal/src/host/Linux-SGX/signer`
3) "Cannot open device /dev/gsgx"
- cd into `graphene/Pal/src/host/Linux-SGX/sgx-driver/load.sh`
- run `./load.sh` to load the driver
4) Permission denied on mapping enclave
- run `sudo sysctl vm.mmap_min_addr=0`
5) If there is an issue when running bash.manifest.sgx
- edit the Entrypoint in relation to the executable in the Dockerfile
6) Issues with trusted files in GSC
- Edit the gen_manifest python script and add your trusted files inside of the df.write.
- The names for the sgx trusted files are arbitrary but need to be unique or overlap issues will occur when signing the enclaves
7) /lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2: version 'SHIM' not found (required by libc.so.6)
- Run `echo $LD_LIBRARY_PATH` and check for a trailing colon at the end of this path
8) "bad_alloc" or "st9_alloc"
- Your enclave size is too small (default is 256M). Try adding the line: `sgx.enclave_size = 1G` (Size must be a power of 2)
9) Cannot connect to AESMD service (socket cannot connect)
- Most likley your isgx.ko did not load properly when you ran load.sh. Run load.sh and handle any errors that may appear (most are documented above)
10) "Error while loading shared libraries: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory"
- Add the library to your graphene/Runtime directory. This is a temporary workaround.
11) "bash.manifest.sgx: file not found"
- Make sure that the location of the executable in your container is in your docker's PATH environment variable. If necessary, change the bin_name in gsce to the name of the binary manually.