Dom0

From Xen
Revision as of 04:41, 12 December 2011 by GarveyPatrickD (talk | contribs) (Some other ways to say the same thing.)

Dom0, or domain zero to expand the abbreviation, is the base domain started by the Xen hypervisor on boot. The Xen hypervisor is not usable without Domain-0 ("dom0").

The dom0 is essentially the "host" operating system (or a "service console", if you prefer). As a result, it runs the Xen management toolstack, and has special privileges, like being able to access the hardware directly.

It also has drivers for hardware, and it provides Xen virtual disks and network access for guests each referred to as a domU (unprivileged domains). For hardware that is made available to other domains, like network interfaces and disks, it will run the BackendDriver, which multiplexes and forwards to the hardware requests from the FrontendDriver in each DomU.

Unless DriverDomain's are being used or the hardware is passed through to the domU, the dom0 is responsible for running all of the device drivers for the hardware.

Also See

Most commonly dom0 runs some variant of Linux, but Xen dom0 implementations also exist for OpenSolaris and NetBSD. Modified versions of Linux, NetBSD and Solaris can be used as the dom0. See OS vendor documentation for specific steps. Current official documentation may be found at the following sites: