Difference between revisions of "Sysadmin/Migrate virtual machine"
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# virsh vol-create-as boot new.img 1G --format raw | # virsh vol-create-as boot new.img 1G --format raw | ||
# virsh vol-upload --pool boot new.img existing.img | # virsh vol-upload --pool boot new.img existing.img | ||
+ | |||
+ | === Copying LVM volumes across machines === | ||
+ | |||
+ | Create the new volume, format and mount it: | ||
+ | |||
+ | # virsh vol-create-as nvme-pool new-root 20G | ||
+ | # mkfs.ext4 -L new-root -O mmp,flex_bg,extent,uninit_bg,sparse_super /dev/nvme-pool/new-root | ||
+ | # tune2fs -c -1 -i 0 /dev/nvme-pool/new-root | ||
+ | # mkdir /new-root | ||
+ | # mount /dev/nvme-pool/new-root /new-root | ||
+ | |||
+ | Copy the contents of the remote filesystem (this can be done while the VM is online, but you might want to shutdown any running database to get a consistent snapshot): | ||
+ | |||
+ | # rsync -PHAXphax lightwave:/ /new-root/ | ||
+ | |||
+ | Don't forget to unmount your new filesystem! | ||
+ | |||
+ | # umount /new-root | ||
+ | # rmdir /new-root | ||
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | === Importing a VM from existing disk files === | ||
+ | |||
+ | # virt-install -v --accelerate --nographics --vcpus 2 --ram 1024 --os-type linux --os-variant=ubuntu20.04 --network bridge:br0 --disk vol=boot/NEWVM-boot.img,bus=virtio --disk vol=nvme-pool/NEWVM-root,bus=virtio --name NEWVM --import | ||
+ | |||
+ | The new VM will boot and probably fail to mount the root because the UUID changed. | ||
+ | You can fix this by dropping into grub the usual way: | ||
+ | |||
+ | * virsh start --console NEWVM | ||
+ | * press ESC before the kernel starts | ||
+ | * press e to edit a menu entry | ||
+ | * modify the kernel command line (for example, root=/dev/vdb) | ||
+ | * hit ctrl-x to boot | ||
+ | |||
+ | After booting, remember to update your grub.cfg and test it: | ||
+ | |||
+ | # update-grub | ||
+ | # reboot | ||
=== How to migrate a file-based guest to LVM (online method) === | === How to migrate a file-based guest to LVM (online method) === |
Latest revision as of 18:21, 27 February 2022
Importing an existing disk image into libvirt
Let's assume you already have a disk file and you want to add it to a pool. There doesn't seem to be a direct way to do this with virsh, but you can create a blank disk and then copy your image into it:
# virsh vol-create-as boot new.img 1G --format raw # virsh vol-upload --pool boot new.img existing.img
Copying LVM volumes across machines
Create the new volume, format and mount it:
# virsh vol-create-as nvme-pool new-root 20G # mkfs.ext4 -L new-root -O mmp,flex_bg,extent,uninit_bg,sparse_super /dev/nvme-pool/new-root # tune2fs -c -1 -i 0 /dev/nvme-pool/new-root # mkdir /new-root # mount /dev/nvme-pool/new-root /new-root
Copy the contents of the remote filesystem (this can be done while the VM is online, but you might want to shutdown any running database to get a consistent snapshot):
# rsync -PHAXphax lightwave:/ /new-root/
Don't forget to unmount your new filesystem!
# umount /new-root # rmdir /new-root
Importing a VM from existing disk files
# virt-install -v --accelerate --nographics --vcpus 2 --ram 1024 --os-type linux --os-variant=ubuntu20.04 --network bridge:br0 --disk vol=boot/NEWVM-boot.img,bus=virtio --disk vol=nvme-pool/NEWVM-root,bus=virtio --name NEWVM --import
The new VM will boot and probably fail to mount the root because the UUID changed. You can fix this by dropping into grub the usual way:
- virsh start --console NEWVM
- press ESC before the kernel starts
- press e to edit a menu entry
- modify the kernel command line (for example, root=/dev/vdb)
- hit ctrl-x to boot
After booting, remember to update your grub.cfg and test it:
# update-grub # reboot
How to migrate a file-based guest to LVM (online method)
- First, take a copy of the kernel and initrd:
treehouse# scp VMNAME:/boot/{vmlinuz,initrd}-2.6.31-22-server /srv/vm/kernel/ubuntu/
- Then, create the logical volume and attach it to the running VM:
treehouse# virsh vol-create-as treehouse VMNAME-root 10G treehouse# virsh attach-disk VMNAME /dev/treehouse/VMNAME-root vdc treehouse# virsh console VMNAME
- From within the VM, format the new volume and move things over
VMNAME# mkfs.ext4 -L VMNAME-root -O flex_bg,extent,uninit_bg,sparse_super /dev/vdc VMNAME# tune2fs -c -1 -i 0 /dev/vdc VMNAME# mount /dev/vdc /mnt VMNAME# rsync -PHAXphax --numeric-ids --delete / /mnt/ VMNAME# vim /mnt/etc/fstab VMNAME# umount /mnt VMNAME# ^D
- Then edit the VM configuration to make it boot without GRUB, using externally provided kernel and initrd:
treehouse# virsh edit VMNAME
<os> <type arch='x86_64' machine='pc-0.11'>hvm</type> <kernel>/srv/vm/kernel/ubuntu/vmlinuz-2.6.31-22-server</kernel> <initrd>/srv/vm/kernel/ubuntu/initrd.img-2.6.31-22-server</initrd> <cmdline>console=tty0 console=ttyS0,115200n8 vga=normal root=LABEL=VMNAME-root ro</cmdline> <boot dev='hd'/> </os> ... <devices> ... <disk type='block' device='disk'> <source dev='/dev/treehouse/VMNAME-root'/> <target dev='vda' bus='virtio'/> </disk> ... </devices>
- Reboot
#treehouse virsh destroy VMNAME #treehouse virsh start VMNAME --console
How to migrate a file-based guest to LVM (offline method)
This method works by taking down the virtual machine during the migration and mounting the partition inside the hard drive image. Mounting qcow2 files require a fancier method.
- Determine the offset of the root partition within the raw disk image:
fdisk -l -u vm.img
- Convert the start offset to bytes:
mount -o loop,offset=$((63 * 512)) vm.img /mnt/
- Then, create an LV and copy over everything as in the online case
virsh vol-create-as treehouse VMNAME-root 10G virsh attach-disk rt /dev/treehouse/VMNAME-root vdc mkfs.ext4 -L rt-root -O flex_bg,extent,uninit_bg,sparse_super /dev/treehouse/VMNAME-root tune2fs -c -1 -i 0 /dev/treehouse/VMNAME-root mkdir /mnt2/VMNAME-root mount /dev/treehouse/VMNAME-root /mnt2/VMNAME-root/ rsync -HAXphax --numeric-ids --delete /mnt/VMNAME-root/ /mnt2/VMNAME-root/
How to migrate an LVM-based guest to another host
(untested procedure)
First, shutdown the VM, then do:
mount /dev/treehouse/beamrider-root /mnt ssh housetree mount /dev/housetree/beamrider-root /mnt rsync -PHAXphax --delete --numeric-ids /mnt/ housetree:/mnt/ rsync -a /etc/libvirt/qemu/beamrider.xml housetree:/etc/libvirt/qemu/ umount /mnt ssh housetree umount /mnt
Then log to $OTHERHOST and create the domain in virsh.
Downtime can be reduced to just a few minutes by doing a first rsync iteration from within the VM while it's still running.
Make sure you pass all the fancy switches to rsync or you'll loose information on the copy.
Alternative to convert file based VM to block based LVM
Stop the VM
sudo virsh stop name_of_vm
Convert the qcow2 file to a raw file
sudo qemu-img convert "name_of_vm".qcow2 -O raw "name_of_vm".raw
Create the LVM - Make sure the "size_of_vm" is equal or greater than the size of your raw image
sudo virsh vol-create-as treehouse "name_of_vm" "size_of_vm"
Copy the raw image to the LVM
sudo dd if="name_of_vm".raw of=/dev/treehouse/"name_of_vm" bs=1M
Edit the VM configuration
sudo virsh edit "name_of_vm"
<devices> ... <disk type='block' device='disk'> <----- change disk type to block <source dev='/dev/treehouse/"name_of_vm"'/> <------ note that the source is now dev= and not file= <target dev='vda' bus='virtio'/> </disk> ... </devices>
Now start your VM and your all set