Stefan Hajnoczi
2015-Mar-27 12:15 UTC
Re: [Libguestfs] Point-in-time snapshots (was: Re: Inspection of disk snapshots)
On Thu, Mar 26, 2015 at 12:02:27AM +0100, Kashyap Chamarthy wrote:> [Added Stefan Hajnoczi, who wrote the 'drive-backup' QMP command and > Eric Blake.] > > On Wed, Mar 25, 2015 at 07:41:23PM +0000, Richard W.M. Jones wrote: > > On Wed, Mar 25, 2015 at 07:38:03PM +0100, Kashyap Chamarthy wrote: > > > On Mon, Mar 23, 2015 at 10:43:30PM +0000, Richard W.M. Jones wrote: > > [. . .] > > > > > > If you want lightweight, consistent, point-in-time snapshots (which it > > > > > sounds like you do), qemu has recently been adding this capability. > > Yeah, I have the two-part incremental backup series from John Snow's > (who is the author of it) git repo. But, he said one more revision is > about to hit the list, so I held off my testing until I can cleanly test > that series on top of current QEMU git master. > > > > > > See the 'drive-backup' monitor command. I've not tried using that > > > > > > A small QMP test for 'drive-backup': > > > > > > https://kashyapc.fedorapeople.org/virt/test-qmp-drive-backup.txt > > > > That's interesting, but even more interesting would be to see > > drive-backup writing to NBD. > > > > From what I gather, drive-backup would take a nbd:... target, meaning > > that it is the *client* (not the server). > > You're right -- the original cover letter[*] of the 'drive-backup' QEMU > patch series that was merged says it: > > "The simplest use-case is to copy a point-in-time snapshot to a > local file. > > More advanced users may wish to make the target an NBD URL. The NBD > server listening on the other side can process the backup writes any > way it wishes." > > > What's interesting is what you're supposed to connect to the server. > > (Maybe I'm wrong about this however) > > Yeah, I too wonder what to connect on the server side when using NBD as > target with 'drive-backup' (taking the simple example test I pointed > above). > > So, something like? > > . . . > { 'execute': 'drive-backup', 'arguments': > { 'device': 'drive-virtio-disk1', 'sync': 'full', 'target': > 'nbd://localhost', 'mode': 'absolute-paths', 'format': 'qcow2' } > . . . > > Same question as yours, what is the NBD server going to run? > > > My only NBD testing so far has been with w/ NBD over Unix socket or > over TCP[**].For 'sync': 'full' mode qemu-nbd or nbd-server can be used as the server. You probably don't want 'format': 'qcow2', just raw data over NBD. That way the NBD server can implement whatever storage backend it likes (raw, qcow2, something else). For incremental backup the NBD server would either be a qemu-nbd instance with a qcow2 image and backing file: full-backup.img <- incremental-1.qcow2 <- incremental-2.qcow2 Or the NBD server would be a custom backup application that does something smart with the incoming NBD WRITE requests. Stefan> > > [*] http://lists.nongnu.org/archive/html/qemu-devel/2013-06/msg04229.html > > [**] NBD over TCP: > > (1) Run an NBD server locally: > > $ qemu-nbd -f qcow2 -p10809 \ > /var/lib/libvirt/images/cirros-0.3.3-x86_64-disk.img -t > > (2) Create an overlay using the NBD server as backing file: > > $ qemu-img create -f qcow2 -F raw \ > -o backing_file=nbd://localhost nbd-overlay1.qcow2 > > (3) Optionally, boot the overlay w/ a minimal CLI. > > $ qemu-system-x86_64 \ > -nographic \ > -nodefconfig \ > -nodefaults \ > -m 2048 \ > -device virtio-scsi-pci,id=scsi \ > -device virtio-serial-pci \ > -serial stdio \ > -drive file=./nbd-overlay1.qcow2,format=qcow2,if=virtio,cache=writeback > > > -- > /kashyap
Richard W.M. Jones
2015-Mar-27 12:31 UTC
Re: [Libguestfs] Point-in-time snapshots (was: Re: Inspection of disk snapshots)
On Fri, Mar 27, 2015 at 12:15:34PM +0000, Stefan Hajnoczi wrote:> On Thu, Mar 26, 2015 at 12:02:27AM +0100, Kashyap Chamarthy wrote: > > So, something like? > > > > . . . > > { 'execute': 'drive-backup', 'arguments': > > { 'device': 'drive-virtio-disk1', 'sync': 'full', 'target': > > 'nbd://localhost', 'mode': 'absolute-paths', 'format': 'qcow2' } > > . . . > > > > Same question as yours, what is the NBD server going to run? > > > > > > My only NBD testing so far has been with w/ NBD over Unix socket or > > over TCP[**]. > > For 'sync': 'full' mode qemu-nbd or nbd-server can be used as the > server. You probably don't want 'format': 'qcow2', just raw data over > NBD. That way the NBD server can implement whatever storage backend it > likes (raw, qcow2, something else). > > For incremental backup the NBD server would either be a qemu-nbd > instance with a qcow2 image and backing file: > > full-backup.img <- incremental-1.qcow2 <- incremental-2.qcow2 > > Or the NBD server would be a custom backup application that does > something smart with the incoming NBD WRITE requests.What I care about is connecting libguestfs to qemu and reading a snapshot at some point in time, even though the guest is still writing away to its disks. Is this possible with drive-backup (or otherwise)? Rich. -- Richard Jones, Virtualization Group, Red Hat http://people.redhat.com/~rjones Read my programming and virtualization blog: http://rwmj.wordpress.com virt-top is 'top' for virtual machines. Tiny program with many powerful monitoring features, net stats, disk stats, logging, etc. http://people.redhat.com/~rjones/virt-top
Stefan Hajnoczi
2015-Mar-27 15:21 UTC
Re: [Libguestfs] Point-in-time snapshots (was: Re: Inspection of disk snapshots)
On Fri, Mar 27, 2015 at 12:31:41PM +0000, Richard W.M. Jones wrote:> On Fri, Mar 27, 2015 at 12:15:34PM +0000, Stefan Hajnoczi wrote: > > On Thu, Mar 26, 2015 at 12:02:27AM +0100, Kashyap Chamarthy wrote: > > > So, something like? > > > > > > . . . > > > { 'execute': 'drive-backup', 'arguments': > > > { 'device': 'drive-virtio-disk1', 'sync': 'full', 'target': > > > 'nbd://localhost', 'mode': 'absolute-paths', 'format': 'qcow2' } > > > . . . > > > > > > Same question as yours, what is the NBD server going to run? > > > > > > > > > My only NBD testing so far has been with w/ NBD over Unix socket or > > > over TCP[**]. > > > > For 'sync': 'full' mode qemu-nbd or nbd-server can be used as the > > server. You probably don't want 'format': 'qcow2', just raw data over > > NBD. That way the NBD server can implement whatever storage backend it > > likes (raw, qcow2, something else). > > > > For incremental backup the NBD server would either be a qemu-nbd > > instance with a qcow2 image and backing file: > > > > full-backup.img <- incremental-1.qcow2 <- incremental-2.qcow2 > > > > Or the NBD server would be a custom backup application that does > > something smart with the incoming NBD WRITE requests. > > What I care about is connecting libguestfs to qemu and reading a > snapshot at some point in time, even though the guest is still writing > away to its disks. Is this possible with drive-backup (or otherwise)?Yes, that is what drive-backup does. New writes coming from the guest are held up until the old data has been written to the NBD target. That way you get a point-in-time snapshot while the guest continues running. Stefan
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