The specifications below quantify Firecracker's promise to enable minimal-overhead execution of container and serverless workloads. These specifications are enforced by integration tests (that run for each PR and main branch merge).
On an M5D.metal instance (with hyperthreading disabled) and an M6G.metal instance and given host system resources are available (e.g., there are enough free CPU cycles, there is enough RAM, etc.), customers can rely on the following:
- Stability: The Firecracker virtual machine manager starts (up to API
socket availability) within
8 CPU ms
1 and never crashes/halts/terminates for internal reasons once started. Note: The wall-clock time has a large standard deviation, spanning6 ms to 60 ms
, with typical durations around12 ms
. - Failure Information: When failures occur due to external circumstances, they are logged2 by the Firecracker process.
- API Stability: The API socket is always available and the API conforms to the in-tree Open API specification. API failures are logged in the Firecracker log.
- Overhead: For a Firecracker virtual machine manager running a microVM
with
1 CPUs and 128 MiB of RAM
, and a guest OS with the Firecracker-tuned kernel:-
Firecracker's virtual machine manager threads have a memory overhead
<= 5 MiB
. The memory overhead is dependent on the workload (e.g. a workload with multiple vsock connections might generate a memory overhead > 5MiB) and on the VMM configuration (the overhead does not include the memory used by the MMDS data store.The overhead is tested as part of the Firecracker CI using a memory cop.
-
It takes
<= 125 ms
to go from receiving the Firecracker InstanceStart API call to the start of the Linux guest user-space/sbin/init
process. The boot time is measured using a VM with the serial console disabled and a minimal kernel and root file system. For more details check the boot time integration tests. -
The compute-only guest CPU performance is
> 95%
of the equivalent bare-metal performance.[integration test pending]
-
- IO Performance: With a host CPU core dedicated to the Firecracker device
emulation thread,
- the guest achieves up to
14.5 Gbps
network throughput by using<= 80%
of the host CPU core for emulation.[integration test pending]
- the guest achieves up to
25 Gbps
network throughput by using100%
of the host CPU core for emulation.[integration test pending]
- the virtualization layer adds on average
0.06ms
of latency.[integration test pending]
See further details on network performance - the guest achieves up to
1 GiB/s
storage throughput by using<= 70%
of the host CPU core for emulation.[integration test pending]
- the guest achieves up to
- Telemetry: Firecracker emits logs and metrics to the named pipes passed
to the logging API. Any logs and metrics emitted while their respective pipes
are full will be lost. Any such events will be signaled through the
lost-logs
andlost-metrics
counters.