Jan Schulze wrote:
> Ross S. W. Walker wrote:
> > Jan Schulze wrote:
> >> Hi all,
> >>
> >> I am wondering, whether it's possible to migrate a DomU from one XEN Host
> >> to
> >> another *without* using shared storage. All HowTos that I found so far, are
> >> using some kind of shared filesystem or block device.
> >
> > Shared storage is mandatory, but it doesn't have to be traditional
> > multi-host
> > scsi or fiber channel, with technology like iscsi and software like drbd
> > shared storage can be done on the cheap.
> >
> >> The DomU in question is using a physical device (partition /dev/sda1) that
> >> is
> >> exported as VBD from Dom0. If migration is possible with that setup, where
> >> will
> >> the DomU end up on the target system?
> >
> > It needs to be accessible there too at the same time, thus why shared
> > storage
> > is mandatory. Check out drbd, the latest version does primary-primary which
> > is what you need for live migrations.
>
> DRBD seems really interesting. However, when using primary-primary, I
> would also need a cluster file system. As my existing DomU uses ext3, I
> won't be able to use DRBD in a primary-primary setup, right?
No not in this case because the domUs file systems don't come into play
here. The Xen servers will have access to the domUs disks at the same
time, but they will not write at the same time. Only 1 xen host has
write access and during live migration they coordinate the hand-off
of this access along with the network and running memory.
Question is whether the drbd can work quick enough in this fashion
to have the disks in sync by the time the hand-over is complete. You
may need to up the pause state from say 50ms to 100ms just to give
drbd enough time to complete the replication.
> >> In case, migrating this DomU won't work, I would have to copy the VM
> >> manually.
> >> Is it possible to access the contents of /dev/sda1 from Dom0? Simply
> >> shutting
> >> down the DomU and mounting /dev/sda1 in Dom0 does not work.
> >
> > There will be a partition table within that partition, so you can run
> > kpartx -a /dev/sda1, and access the first partition via /dev/mapper/sda11,
> > or mount it via a loopback mount to the offset of that partition.
> >
> > # mount -t <fstype> -oloop,offset=<part offset> /dev/sda1 /mnt
>
> Thanks, did not know that. Very useful.
Always happy to pass the knowledge along as it was passed to me.
-Ross
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