+Inter-cluster instance moves
+----------------------------
+
+To move instances between clusters, different clusters must be able to
+communicate with each other over a secure channel. Up to and including
+Ganeti 2.1, clusters were self-contained entities and had no knowledge
+of other clusters. With Ganeti 2.2, clusters can exchange data if tokens
+(an encryption certificate) was exchanged by a trusted third party
+before.
+
+KVM Security
+------------
+
+When running KVM instances under Ganeti three security models ara
+available: "none", "user" and "pool".
+
+Under security model "none" instances run by default as root. This means
+that, if an instance gets jail broken, it will be able to own the host
+node, and thus the ganeti cluster. This is the default model, and the
+only one available before Ganeti 2.1.2.
+
+Under security model "user" an instance is run as the user specified by
+the hypervisor parameter "security_domain". This makes it easy to run
+all instances as non privileged users, and allows one to manually
+allocate specific users to specific instances or sets of instances. If
+the specified user doesn't have permissions a jail broken instance will
+need some local privilege escalation before being able to take over the
+node and the cluster. It's possible though for a jail broken instance to
+affect other ones running under the same user.
+
+Under security model "pool" a global cluster-level uid pool is used to
+start each instance on the same node under a different user. The uids in
+the cluster pool can be set with ``gnt-cluster init`` and ``gnt-cluster
+modify``, and must correspond to existing users on all nodes. Ganeti
+will then allocate one to each instance, as needed. This way a jail
+broken instance won't be able to affect any other. Since the users are
+handed out by ganeti in a per-node randomized way, in this mode there is
+no way to make sure a particular instance is always run as a certain
+user. Use mode "user" for that.
+
+In addition to these precautions, if you want to avoid instances sending
+traffic on your node network, you can use an iptables rule such as::
+
+ iptables -A OUTPUT -m owner --uid-owner <uid>[-<uid>] -j LOG \
+ --log-prefix "ganeti uid pool user network traffic"
+ iptables -A OUTPUT -m owner --uid-owner <uid>[-<uid>] -j DROP
+
+This won't affect regular instance traffic (that comes out of the tapX
+allocated to the instance, and can be filtered or subject to appropriate
+policy routes) but will stop any user generated traffic that might come
+from a jailbroken instance.
+