The use-case for block migration in Libvirt/QEMU is to allow migration between two different back-ends. This is basically a host based volume migration, ESXi has a similar functionality (storage vMotion), but probably not enabled with OpenStack. Btw, if the Cinder volume driver can migrate the volume by itself, the Libvirt/QEMU is not called upon, but if it can't (different vendor boxes don't talk to each other), then Cinder asks Nova to help move the data...
If you are missing this host based process you are basically have a "data lock-in" on a specific back-end - the use case could be storage evacuation, or just moving the data to a different box. Ronen, From: "Daniel P. Berrange" <berra...@redhat.com> To: "OpenStack Development Mailing List (not for usage questions)" <openstack-dev@lists.openstack.org>, Date: 19/06/2014 11:42 AM Subject: Re: [openstack-dev] [nova][libvirt] Block migrations and Cinder volumes On Wed, Jun 18, 2014 at 11:09:33PM -0700, Rafi Khardalian wrote: > I am concerned about how block migration functions when Cinder volumes are > attached to an instance being migrated. We noticed some unexpected > behavior recently, whereby attached generic NFS-based volumes would become > entirely unsparse over the course of a migration. After spending some time > reviewing the code paths in Nova, I'm more concerned that this was actually > a minor symptom of a much more significant issue. > > For those unfamiliar, NFS-based volumes are simply RAW files residing on an > NFS mount. From Libvirt's perspective, these volumes look no different > than root or ephemeral disks. We are currently not filtering out volumes > whatsoever when making the request into Libvirt to perform the migration. > Libvirt simply receives an additional flag (VIR_MIGRATE_NON_SHARED_INC) > when a block migration is requested, which applied to the entire migration > process, not differentiated on a per-disk basis. Numerous guards within > Nova to prevent a block based migration from being allowed if the instance > disks exist on the destination; yet volumes remain attached and within the > defined XML during a block migration. > > Unless Libvirt has a lot more logic around this than I am lead to believe, > this seems like a recipe for corruption. It seems as though this would > also impact any type of volume attached to an instance (iSCSI, RBD, etc.), > NFS just happens to be what we were testing. If I am wrong and someone can > correct my understanding, I would really appreciate it. Otherwise, I'm > surprised we haven't had more reports of issues when block migrations are > used in conjunction with any attached volumes. Libvirt/QEMU has no special logic. When told to block-migrate, it will do so for *all* disks attached to the VM in read-write-exclusive mode. It will only skip those marked read-only or read-write-shared mode. Even that distinction is somewhat dubious and so not reliably what you would want. It seems like we should just disallow block migrate when any cinder volumes are attached to the VM, since there is never any valid use case for doing block migrate from a cinder volume to itself. Regards, Daniel -- |: http://berrange.com -o- http://www.flickr.com/photos/dberrange/ :| |: http://libvirt.org -o- http://virt-manager.org :| |: http://autobuild.org -o- http://search.cpan.org/~danberr/ :| |: http://entangle-photo.org -o- http://live.gnome.org/gtk-vnc :| _______________________________________________ OpenStack-dev mailing list OpenStack-dev@lists.openstack.org http://lists.openstack.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/openstack-dev
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