Hi
I
have setup xen3.0.2.on two nodes,
I
try to migrate a vm from one to the other ,
I have modified
xend-config.sxp ,by uncommenting (xend-relocation-server
yes) and (xend-relocation-port 8002)
I
put the vm conf file and img file in a nfs node which the two xen node
can get access to
but
it does not work with the error as follows
Error: (104, 'Connection reset
by peer')
Xend.log in the sender node :
[2006-09-13 09:17:43 xend] ERROR (xmlrpclib2:124)
(104, 'Connection reset by peer')
Traceback (most recent call last):
File
"/usr/lib/python/xen/util/xmlrpclib2.py", line 103, in
_marshaled_dispatch
response = self._dispatch(method,
params)
File
"/usr/lib/python2.3/SimpleXMLRPCServer.py", line 407, in _dispatch
return func(*params)
File
"/usr/lib/python/xen/xend/XendDomain.py", line 417, in domain_migrate
sock.recv(80)
error: (104, 'Connection reset by peer')
xend.log in the receiver node:
[2006-09-13 09:19:58 xend] WARNING (tcp:73)
Rejected connection from 10.10.107.1:57983 (10.10.107.1) for port 8002.
Could anyone help me ?
Thanks in advance
/etc/xen/xend-config.sxp
#
-*- sh -*-
#
#
Xend configuration file.
#
#
This example configuration is appropriate for an installation that
#
utilizes a bridged network configuration. Access to xend via http
#
is disabled.
#
Commented out entries show the default for that entry, unless otherwise
#
specified.
#(logfile
/var/log/xend.log)
#(loglevel
DEBUG)
#(xend-http-server
no)
#(xend-unix-server
no)
#(xend-tcp-xmlrpc-server
no)
#(xend-unix-xmlrpc-server
yes)
#(xend-relocation-server
no)
(xend-relocation-server
yes)
#(xend-unix-path
/var/lib/xend/xend-socket)
#
Port xend should use for the HTTP interface, if xend-http-server is set.
#(xend-port
8000)
#
Port xend should use for the relocation interface, if xend-relocation-server
#
is set.
(xend-relocation-port
8002)
#
Address xend should listen on for HTTP connections, if xend-http-server is
#
set.
#
Specifying 'localhost' prevents remote connections.
#
Specifying the empty string '' (the default) allows all connections.
#(xend-address
'')
#(xend-address
localhost)
#
Address xend should listen on for relocation-socket connections, if
#
xend-relocation-server is set.
#
Meaning and default as for xend-address above.
(xend-relocation-address
'')
#
The hosts allowed to talk to the relocation port. If this is empty (the
#
default), then all connections are allowed (assuming that the connection
#
arrives on a port and interface on which we are listening; see
#
xend-relocation-port and xend-relocation-address above). Otherwise, this
#
should be a space-separated sequence of regular expressions. Any host
with
#
a fully-qualified domain name or an IP address that matches one of these
#
regular expressions will be accepted.
#
#
For example:
#
(xend-relocation-hosts-allow '^localhost$ ^.*\.example\.org$')
#
#(xend-relocation-hosts-allow
'')
(xend-relocation-hosts-allow
'^localhost$')
#
The limit (in kilobytes) on the size of the console buffer
#(console-limit
1024)
##
#
To bridge network traffic, like this:
#
#
dom0: fake eth0 -> vif0.0 -+
#
|
#
bridge -> real eth0 -> the network
#
|
#
domU: fake eth0 -> vifN.0 -+
#
#
use
#
#
(network-script network-bridge)
#
#
Your default ethernet device is used as the outgoing interface, by default.
#
To use a different one (e.g. eth1) use
#
#
(network-script 'network-bridge netdev=eth1')
#
#
The bridge is named xenbr0, by default. To rename the bridge, use
#
#
(network-script 'network-bridge bridge=<name>')
#
#
It is possible to use the network-bridge script in more complicated
#
scenarios, such as having two outgoing interfaces, with two bridges, and
#
two fake interfaces per guest domain. To do things like this, write
#
yourself a wrapper script, and call network-bridge from it, as appropriate.
#
(network-script
network-bridge)
#
The script used to control virtual interfaces. This can be overridden on
a
#
per-vif basis when creating a domain or a configuring a new vif. The
#
vif-bridge script is designed for use with the network-bridge script, or
#
similar configurations.
#
#
If you have overridden the bridge name using
#
(network-script 'network-bridge bridge=<name>') then you may wish to do
the
#
same here. The bridge name can also be set when creating a domain or
#
configuring a new vif, but a value specified here would act as a default.
#
#
If you are using only one bridge, the vif-bridge script will discover that,
#
so there is no need to specify it explicitly.
#
(vif-script
vif-bridge)
##
Use the following if network traffic is routed, as an alternative to the
#
settings for bridged networking given above.
#(network-script
network-route)
#(vif-script
vif-route)
##
Use the following if network traffic is routed with NAT, as an alternative
#
to the settings for bridged networking given above.
#(network-script
network-nat)
#(vif-script
vif-nat)
#
Dom0 will balloon out when needed to free memory for domU.
#
dom0-min-mem is the lowest memory level (in MB) dom0 will get down to.
#
If dom0-min-mem=0, dom0 will never balloon out.
(dom0-min-mem
196)
#
In SMP system, dom0 will use dom0-cpus # of CPUS
#
If dom0-cpus = 0, dom0 will take all cpus available
(dom0-cpus
0)
#
Whether to enable core-dumps when domains crash.
#(enable-dump
no)