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2f36b98a42
Signed-off-by: Peter Krempa <pkrempa@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Ján Tomko <jtomko@redhat.com>
194 lines
6.8 KiB
ReStructuredText
194 lines
6.8 KiB
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============================================
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Virtual machine lock manager, sanlock plugin
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============================================
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.. contents::
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This page describes use of the
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`sanlock <https://fedorahosted.org/sanlock/>`__ service as a `lock
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driver <locking.html>`__ plugin for virtual machine disk mutual
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exclusion.
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Sanlock daemon setup
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====================
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On many operating systems, the **sanlock** plugin is distributed in a
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sub-package which needs to be installed separately from the main libvirt
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RPM. On a Fedora/RHEL host this can be done with the ``yum`` command
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::
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$ su - root
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# yum install libvirt-lock-sanlock
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The next step is to start the sanlock daemon. For maximum safety sanlock
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prefers to have a connection to a watchdog daemon. This will cause the
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entire host to be rebooted in the event that sanlock crashes /
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terminates abnormally. To start the watchdog daemon on a Fedora/RHEL
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host the following commands can be run:
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::
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$ su - root
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# chkconfig wdmd on
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# service wdmd start
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Once the watchdog is running, sanlock can be started as follows
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::
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# chkconfig sanlock on
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# service sanlock start
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*Note:* if you wish to avoid the use of the watchdog, add the following
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line to ``/etc/sysconfig/sanlock`` before starting it
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::
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SANLOCKOPTS="-w 0"
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The sanlock daemon must be started on every single host that will be
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running virtual machines. So repeat these steps as necessary.
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libvirt sanlock plugin configuration
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====================================
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Once the sanlock daemon is running, the next step is to configure the
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libvirt sanlock plugin. There is a separate configuration file for each
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libvirt driver that is using sanlock. For QEMU, we will edit
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``/etc/libvirt/qemu-sanlock.conf`` There is one mandatory parameter that
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needs to be set, the ``host_id``. This is an integer between 1 and 2000,
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which must be set to a **unique** value on each host running virtual
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machines.
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::
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$ su - root
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# augtool -s set /files/etc/libvirt/qemu-sanlock.conf/host_id 1
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Repeat this on every host, changing **1** to a unique value for the
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host.
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libvirt sanlock storage configuration
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=====================================
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The sanlock plugin needs to create leases in a directory that is on a
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filesystem shared between all hosts running virtual machines. Obvious
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choices for this include NFS or GFS2. The libvirt sanlock plugin expects
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its lease directory be at ``/var/lib/libvirt/sanlock`` so update the
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host's ``/etc/fstab`` to mount a suitable shared/cluster filesystem at
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that location
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::
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$ su - root
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# echo "some.nfs.server:/export/sanlock /var/lib/libvirt/sanlock nfs hard,nointr 0 0" >> /etc/fstab
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# mount /var/lib/libvirt/sanlock
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If your sanlock daemon happen to run under non-root privileges, you need
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to tell this to libvirt so it chowns created files correctly. This can
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be done by setting ``user`` and/or ``group`` variables in the
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configuration file. Accepted values range is specified in description to
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the same variables in ``/etc/libvirt/qemu.conf``. For example:
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::
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augtool -s set /files/etc/libvirt/qemu-sanlock.conf/user sanlock
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augtool -s set /files/etc/libvirt/qemu-sanlock.conf/group sanlock
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But remember, that if this is NFS share, you need a no_root_squash-ed
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one for chown (and chmod possibly) to succeed.
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In terms of storage requirements, if the filesystem uses 512 byte
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sectors, you need to allow for ``1MB`` of storage for each guest disk.
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So if you have a network with 20 virtualization hosts, each running 50
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virtual machines and an average of 2 disks per guest, you will need
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``20*50*2 == 2000 MB`` of storage for sanlock.
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On one of the hosts on the network is it wise to setup a cron job which
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runs the ``virt-sanlock-cleanup`` script periodically. This scripts
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deletes any lease files which are not currently in use by running
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virtual machines, freeing up disk space on the shared filesystem. Unless
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VM disks are very frequently created + deleted it should be sufficient
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to run the cleanup once a week.
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QEMU/KVM driver configuration
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=============================
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The QEMU/KVM driver is fully integrated with the lock manager framework
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as of release 0.9.3. The out of the box configuration, however,
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currently uses the **nop** lock manager plugin. To get protection for
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disks, it is thus necessary to reconfigure QEMU to activate the
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**sanlock** driver. This is achieved by editing the QEMU driver
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configuration file (``/etc/libvirt/qemu.conf``) and changing the
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``lock_manager`` configuration tunable.
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::
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$ su - root
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# augtool -s set /files/etc/libvirt/qemu.conf/lock_manager sanlock
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# service libvirtd restart
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If all went well, libvirtd will have talked to sanlock and created the
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basic lockspace. This can be checked by looking for existence of the
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following file
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::
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# ls /var/lib/libvirt/sanlock/
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__LIBVIRT__DISKS__
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Every time you start a guest, additional lease files will appear in this
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directory, one for each virtual disk. The lease files are named based on
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the MD5 checksum of the fully qualified path of the virtual disk backing
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file. So if the guest is given a disk backed by
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``/var/lib/libvirt/images/demo.img`` expect to see a lease
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``/var/lib/libvirt/sanlock/bfa0240911bc17753e0b473688822159``
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It should be obvious that for locking to work correctly, every host
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running virtual machines should have storage configured in the same way.
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The easiest way to do this is to use the libvirt storage pool capability
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to configure any NFS volumes, iSCSI targets, or SCSI HBAs used for guest
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storage. Simply replicate the same storage pool XML across every host.
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It is important that any storage pools exposing block devices are
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configured to create volume paths under ``/dev/disks/by-path`` to ensure
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stable paths across hosts. An example iSCSI configuration which ensures
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this is:
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::
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<pool type='iscsi'>
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<name>myiscsipool</name>
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<source>
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<host name='192.168.254.8'/>
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<device path='your-iscsi-target-iqn'/>
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</source>
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<target>
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<path>/dev/disk/by-path</path>
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</target>
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</pool>
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Domain configuration
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====================
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In case sanlock loses access to disk locks for some reason, it will kill
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all domains that lost their locks. This default behavior may be changed
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using `on_lockfailure element <../formatdomain.html#events-configuration>`__ in
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domain XML. When this element is present, sanlock will call
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``sanlock_helper`` (provided by libvirt) with the specified action. This
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helper binary will connect to libvirtd and thus it may need to
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authenticate if libvirtd was configured to require that on the
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read-write UNIX socket. To provide the appropriate credentials to
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sanlock_helper, a `client authentication
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file <../auth.html#client-configuration>`__ needs to contain something like
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the following:
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::
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[auth-libvirt-localhost]
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credentials=sanlock
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[credentials-sanlock]
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authname=login
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password=password
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