Based on discussion after commitf432114d9c
was pushed it was pointed out that the documentation still mentions the older version. Fix the documentation to state the new version and introduce ambiguity for future updates. Fixes:f432114d9c
Signed-off-by: Peter Krempa <pkrempa@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Martin Kletzander <mkletzan@redhat.com>
36 KiB
Storage pool and volume XML format
Storage pool XML
Although all storage pool backends share the same public APIs and XML format, they have varying levels of capabilities. Some may allow creation of volumes, others may only allow use of pre-existing volumes. Some may have constraints on volume size, or placement.
The top level tag for a storage pool document is 'pool'. It has a single attribute type
, which is one of dir
, fs
, netfs
, disk
, iscsi
, logical
, scsi
(all since 0.4.1 ), mpath
( since 0.7.1 ), rbd
( since 0.9.13 ), sheepdog
(since 0.10.0, removed in 8.8.0 ), gluster
( since 1.2.0 ), zfs
( since 1.2.8 ), vstorage
( since 3.1.0 ), or iscsi-direct
( since 4.7.0 ). This corresponds to the storage backend drivers listed further along in this document.
Storage pool general metadata
<pool type="iscsi">
<name>virtimages</name>
<uuid>3e3fce45-4f53-4fa7-bb32-11f34168b82b</uuid>
<allocation>10000000</allocation>
<capacity>50000000</capacity>
<available>40000000</available>
...
name
Providing a name for the pool which is unique to the host. This is mandatory when defining a pool. Since 0.4.1
uuid
Providing an identifier for the pool which is globally unique. This is optional when defining a pool, a UUID will be generated if omitted. Since 0.4.1
allocation
Providing the total storage allocation for the pool. This may be larger than the sum of the allocation of all volumes due to metadata overhead. This value is in bytes. This is not applicable when creating a pool. Since 0.4.1
capacity
Providing the total storage capacity for the pool. Due to underlying device constraints it may not be possible to use the full capacity for storage volumes. This value is in bytes. This is not applicable when creating a pool. Since 0.4.1
available
Providing the free space available for allocating new volumes in the pool. Due to underlying device constraints it may not be possible to allocate the entire free space to a single volume. This value is in bytes. This is not applicable when creating a pool. Since 0.4.1
Features
Some pools support optional features:
...
<features>
<cow state='no'>
</features>
...
Valid features are:
cow
Controls whether the filesystem performs copy-on-write (COW) for images in the pool. This may only be set for directory / filesystem pools on the
btrfs
filesystem. If not set then libvirt will attempt to disable COW on any btrfs filesystems. Since 6.6.0.
Source elements
A single source
element is contained within the top level pool
element. This tag is used to describe the source of the storage pool. The set of child elements that it will contain depend on the pool type, but come from the following child elements:
...
<source>
<host name="iscsi.example.com"/>
<device path="iqn.2013-06.com.example:iscsi-pool"/>
<auth type='chap' username='myname'>
<secret usage='mycluster_myname'/>
</auth>
<vendor name="Acme"/>
<product name="model"/>
</source>
...
...
<source>
<device path='/dev/mapper/mpatha' part_separator='no'/>
<format type='gpt'/>
</source>
...
...
<source>
<adapter type='scsi_host' name='scsi_host1'/>
</source>
...
...
<source>
<adapter type='scsi_host'>
<parentaddr unique_id='1'>
<address domain='0x0000' bus='0x00' slot='0x1f' addr='0x2'/>
</parentaddr>
</adapter>
</source>
...
...
<source>
<adapter type='fc_host' parent='scsi_host5' wwnn='20000000c9831b4b' wwpn='10000000c9831b4b'/>
</source>
...
...
<source>
<host name='localhost'/>
<dir path='/var/lib/libvirt/images'/>
<format type='nfs'/>
<protocol ver='3'/>
</source>
...
device
Provides the source for pools backed by physical devices (pool types
fs
,logical
,disk
,iscsi
,iscsi-direct
,zfs
,vstorage
). May be repeated multiple times depending on backend driver. Contains a required attributepath
which is either the fully qualified path to the block device node or foriscsi
oriscsi-direct
the iSCSI Qualified Name (IQN). Since 0.4.1An optional attribute
part_separator
for eachpath
may be supplied. Valid values for the attribute may be either "yes" or "no". This attribute is to be used for adisk
pool type using apath
to a device mapper multipath device. Setting the attribute to "yes" causes libvirt to attempt to generate and find target volume path's using a "p" separator. The default algorithm used by device mapper is to add the "p" separator only when the source device path ends with a number; however, it's possible to configure the devmapper device to not use 'user_friendly_names' thus creating partitions with the "p" separator even when the device source path does not end with a number. Since 1.3.1dir
Provides the source for pools backed by directories (pool types
dir
,netfs
,gluster
), or optionally to select a subdirectory within a pool that resembles a filesystem (pool typegluster
). May only occur once. Contains a single attributepath
which is the fully qualified path to the backing directory or for anetfs
pool type usingformat
type "cifs", the path to the Samba share without the leading slash. Since 0.4.1adapter
Provides the source for pools backed by SCSI adapters (pool type
scsi
). May only occur once.name
The SCSI adapter name (e.g. "scsi_host1", although a name such as "host1" is still supported for backwards compatibility, it is not recommended). The scsi_host name to be used can be determined from the output of a
virsh nodedev-list scsi_host
command followed by a combination oflspci
andvirsh nodedev-dumpxml scsi_hostN
commands to find thescsi_hostN
to be used. Since 0.6.2It is further recommended to utilize the
parentaddr
element since it's possible to have the path to which the scsi_hostN uses change between system reboots. Since 1.2.7type
Specifies the adapter type. Valid values are "scsi_host" or "fc_host". If omitted and the
name
attribute is specified, then it defaults to "scsi_host". To keep backwards compatibility, this attribute is optional only for the "scsi_host" adapter, but is mandatory for the "fc_host" adapter. Since 1.0.5 A "fc_host" capable scsi_hostN can be determined by usingvirsh nodedev-list --cap fc_host
. Since 1.2.8Note: Regardless of whether a "scsi_host" adapter type is defined using a
name
or aparentaddr
, it should refer to a real scsi_host adapter as found through avirsh nodedev-list scsi_host
andvirsh nodedev-dumpxml scsi_hostN
on one of the scsi_host's displayed. It should not refer to a "fc_host" capable scsi_hostN nor should it refer to the vHBA created for some "fc_host" adapter. For a vHBA thenodedev-dumpxml
output parent setting will be the "fc_host" capable scsi_hostN value. Additionally, do not refer to an iSCSI scsi_hostN for the "scsi_host" source. An iSCSI scsi_hostN'snodedev-dumpxml
output parent field is generally "computer". This is a libvirt created parent value indicating no parent was defined for the node device.wwnn
andwwpn
The required "World Wide Node Name" (
wwnn
) and "World Wide Port Name" (wwpn
) are used by the "fc_host" adapter to uniquely identify the vHBA device in the Fibre Channel storage fabric. If the vHBA device already exists as a Node Device, then libvirt will use it; otherwise, the vHBA will be created using the provided values. It is considered a configuration error use the values from the HBA as those would be for a "scsi_host"type
pool instead. Thewwnn
andwwpn
have very specific format requirements based on the hypervisor being used, thus care should be taken if you decide to generate your own to follow the standards; otherwise, the pool will fail to start with an opaque error message indicating failure to write to the vport_create file during vport create/delete due to "No such file or directory". Since 1.0.4parent
Used by the "fc_host" adapter type to optionally specify the parent scsi_host device defined in the Node Device database as the NPIV virtual Host Bus Adapter (vHBA). The value provided must be a vport capable scsi_host. The value is not the scsi_host of the vHBA created by 'virsh nodedev-create', rather it is the parent of that vHBA. If the value is not provided, libvirt will determine the parent based either finding the wwnn,wwpn defined for an existing scsi_host or by creating a vHBA. Providing the parent attribute is also useful for the duplicate pool definition checks. This is more important in environments where both the "fc_host" and "scsi_host" source adapter pools are being used in order to ensure a new definition doesn't duplicate using the scsi_hostN of some existing storage pool. Since 1.0.4
parent_wwnn
andparent_wwpn
Instead of the
parent
to specify which scsi_host to use by name, it's possible to provide the wwnn and wwpn of the parent to be used for the vHBA in order to ensure that between reboots or after a hardware configuration change that the scsi_host parent name doesn't change. Both the parent_wwnn and parent_wwpn must be provided. Since 3.0.0parent_fabric_wwn
Instead of the
parent
to specify which scsi_host to use by name, it's possible to provide the fabric_wwn on which the scsi_host exists. This provides flexibility for choosing a scsi_host that may be available on the fabric rather than requiring a specific parent by wwnn or wwpn to be available. Since 3.0.0managed
An optional attribute to instruct the SCSI storage backend to manage destroying the vHBA when the pool is destroyed. For configurations that do not provide an already created vHBA from a 'virsh nodedev-create', libvirt will set this property to "yes". For configurations that have already created a vHBA via 'virsh nodedev-create' and are using the wwnn/wwpn from that vHBA and optionally the scsi_host parent, setting this attribute to "yes" will allow libvirt to destroy the node device when the pool is destroyed. If this attribute is set to "no" or not defined in the XML, then libvirt will not destroy the vHBA. Since 1.2.11
parentaddr
Used by the "scsi_host" adapter type instead of the
name
attribute to more uniquely identify the SCSI host. Using a combination of theunique_id
attribute and theaddress
element to formulate a PCI address, a search will be performed of the/sys/class/scsi_host/hostNN
links for a matching PCI address with a matchingunique_id
value in the/sys/class/scsi_host/hostNN/unique_id
file. The value in the "unique_id" file will be unique enough for the specific PCI address. ThehostNN
will be used by libvirt as the basis to define which SCSI host is to be used for the currently booted system. Since 1.2.7address
The PCI address of the scsi_host device to be used. Using a PCI address provides consistent naming across system reboots and kernel reloads. The address will have four attributes:
domain
(a 2-byte hex integer, not currently used by qemu),bus
(a hex value between 0 and 0xff, inclusive),slot
(a hex value between 0x0 and 0x1f, inclusive), andfunction
(a value between 0 and 7, inclusive). The PCI address can be determined by listing the/sys/bus/pci/devices
and the/sys/class/scsi_host
directories in order to find the expected scsi_host device. The address will be provided in a format such as "0000:00:1f:2" which can be used to generate the expected PCI address "domain='0x0000' bus='0x00' slot='0x1f' function='0x0'". Optionally, using the combination of the commands 'virsh nodedev-list scsi_host' and 'virsh nodedev-dumpxml' for a specific list entry and converting the resultingpath
element as the basis to formulate the correctly formatted PCI address.unique_id
Required
parentaddr
attribute used to determine which of the scsi_host adapters for the provided PCI address should be used. The value is determine by contents of theunique_id
file for the specific scsi_host adapter. For a PCI address of "0000:00:1f:2", the unique identifier files can be found using the commandfind -H /sys/class/scsi_host/host*/unique_id | xargs grep '[0-9]'
. Optionally, thevirsh nodedev-dumpxml scsi_hostN
' of a specific scsi_hostN list entry will list theunique_id
value.
host
Provides the source for pools backed by storage from a remote server (pool types
netfs
,iscsi
,iscsi-direct
,rbd
,sheepdog
,gluster
). Will be used in combination with adirectory
ordevice
element. Contains an attributename
which is the hostname or IP address of the server. May optionally contain aport
attribute for the protocol specific port number. Duplicate storage pool definition checks may perform a cursory check that the same host name by string comparison in the new pool does not match an existing pool's source host name when combined with thedirectory
ordevice
element. Name resolution of the provided hostname or IP address is left to the storage driver backend interactions with the remote server. See the storage driver page for any restrictions for specific storage backends. Since 0.4.1initiator
Required by the
iscsi-direct
pool in order to provide the iSCSI Qualified Name (IQN) to communicate with the pool'sdevice
target IQN. There is one sub-elementiqn
with thename
attribute to describe the IQN for the initiator. Since 4.7.0auth
If present, the
auth
element provides the authentication credentials needed to access the source by the setting of thetype
attribute (pool typesiscsi
,iscsi-direct
,rbd
). Thetype
must be either "chap" or "ceph". Use "ceph" for Ceph RBD (Rados Block Device) network sources and use "iscsi" for CHAP (Challenge-Handshake Authentication Protocol) iSCSI targets. Additionally a mandatory attributeusername
identifies the username to use during authentication as well as a sub-elementsecret
with a mandatory attributetype
, to tie back to a libvirt secret object that holds the actual password or other credentials. The domain XML intentionally does not expose the password, only the reference to the object that manages the password. Thesecret
element requires either auuid
attribute with the UUID of the secret object or ausage
attribute matching the key that was specified in the secret object. Since 0.9.7 for "ceph" and 1.1.1 for "chap"name
Provides the source for pools backed by storage from a named element (pool types
logical
,rbd
,sheepdog
,gluster
). Contains a string identifier. Since 0.4.5format
Provides information about the format of the pool (pool types
fs
,netfs
,disk
,logical
). This contains a single attributetype
whose value is backend specific. This is typically used to indicate filesystem type, or network filesystem type, or partition table type, or LVM metadata type. All drivers are required to have a default value for this, so it is optional. Since 0.4.1protocol
For a
netfs
Storage Pool provide a mechanism to define which NFS protocol version number will be used to contact the server's NFS service. The attributever
accepts the version number to use. Since 5.1.0vendor
Provides optional information about the vendor of the storage device. This contains a single attribute
name
whose value is backend specific. Since 0.8.4product
Provides an optional product name of the storage device. This contains a single attribute
name
whose value is backend specific. Since 0.8.4
Storage pool target elements
A single target
element is contained within the top level pool
element for some types of pools (pool types dir
, fs
, netfs
, logical
, disk
, iscsi
, scsi
, mpath
, zfs
). This tag is used to describe the mapping of the storage pool into the host filesystem. It can contain the following child elements:
...
<target>
<path>/dev/disk/by-path</path>
<permissions>
<owner>107</owner>
<group>107</group>
<mode>0744</mode>
<label>virt_image_t</label>
</permissions>
</target>
</pool>
path
Provides the location at which the pool will be mapped into the local filesystem namespace, as an absolute path. For a filesystem/directory based pool it will be a fully qualified name of the directory in which volumes will be created. For device based pools it will be a fully qualified name of the directory in which devices nodes exist. For the latter
/dev/
may seem like the logical choice, however, devices nodes there are not guaranteed stable across reboots, since they are allocated on demand. It is preferable to use a stable location such as one of the/dev/disk/by-{path|id|uuid|label}
locations. Forlogical
andzfs
pool types, a provided value is ignored and a default path generated. For a Multipath pool (typempath
), the provided value is ignored and the default value of "/dev/mapper" is used. Since 0.4.1permissions
This is currently only useful for directory or filesystem based pools, which are mapped as a directory into the local filesystem namespace. It provides information about the permissions to use for the final directory when the pool is built. There are 4 child elements. The
mode
element contains the octal permission set. Themode
defaults to 0711 when not provided. Theowner
element contains the numeric user ID. Thegroup
element contains the numeric group ID. Ifowner
orgroup
aren't specified when creating a directory, the UID and GID of the libvirtd process are used. Thelabel
element contains the MAC (eg SELinux) label string. Since 0.4.1 For running directory or filesystem based pools, these fields will be filled with the values used by the existing directory. Since 1.2.16
Device extents
If a storage pool exposes information about its underlying placement / allocation scheme, the device
element within the source
element may contain information about its available extents. Some pools have a constraint that a volume must be allocated entirely within a single constraint (eg disk partition pools). Thus the extent information allows an application to determine the maximum possible size for a new volume
For storage pools supporting extent information, within each device
element there will be zero or more freeExtent
elements. Each of these elements contains two attributes, start
and end
which provide the boundaries of the extent on the device, measured in bytes. Since 0.4.1
Refresh overrides
The optional refresh
element can control how the pool and associated volumes are refreshed (pool type rbd
). The allocation
attribute of the volume
child element controls the method used for computing the allocation of a volume. The valid attribute values are default
to compute the actual usage or capacity
to use the logical capacity for cases where computing the allocation is too expensive. The following XML snippet shows the syntax:
<pool type="rbd">
<name>myrbdpool</name>
...
<source/>
...
<refresh>
<volume allocation='capacity'/>
</refresh>
...
</pool>
Since 5.2.0
Storage Pool Namespaces
Usage of Storage Pool Namespaces provides a mechanism to provide pool type specific data in a free form or arbitrary manner via XML syntax targeted solely for the needs of the specific pool type which is not otherwise supported in standard XML. For the "fs" and "netfs" pool types this provides a mechanism to provide additional mount options on the command line. For the "rbd" pool this provides a mechanism to override default settings for RBD configuration options.
Usage of namespaces comes with no support guarantees. It is intended for developers testing out a concept prior to requesting an explicitly supported XML option in libvirt, and thus should never be used in production.
fs:mount_opts
Provides an XML namespace mechanism to optionally utilize specifically named options for the mount command via the "-o" option for the
fs
ornetfs
type storage pools. In order to designate that the Storage Pool will be using the mechanism, thepool
element must be modified to provide the XML namespace attribute syntax as follows:xmlns:fs='http://libvirt.org/schemas/storagepool/fs/1.0'
The
fs:mount_opts
defines the mount options by specifying multiplefs:option
subelements with the attributename
specifying the mount option to be added. The value of the named option is not checked since it's possible options don't exist on all distributions. It is expected that proper and valid options will be supplied for the target host.The following XML snippet shows the syntax required in order to utilize for a netfs pool:
<pool type="netfs" xmlns:fs='http://libvirt.org/schemas/storagepool/fs/1.0'> <name>nfsimages</name> ... <source> ... </source> ... <target> ... </target> <fs:mount_opts> <fs:option name='sync'/> <fs:option name='lazytime'/> </fs:mount_opts> </pool> ...
Since 5.1.0.
rbd:config_opts
Provides an XML namespace mechanism to optionally utilize specifically named options for the RBD configuration options via the rados_conf_set API for the
rbd
type storage pools. In order to designate that the Storage Pool will be using the mechanism, thepool
element must be modified to provide the XML namespace attribute syntax as follows:xmlns:rbd='http://libvirt.org/schemas/storagepool/rbd/1.0'
The
rbd:config_opts
defines the configuration options by specifying multiplerbd:option
subelements with the attributename
specifying the configuration option to be added andvalue
specifying the configuration option value. The name and value for each option is only checked to be not empty. The name and value provided are not checked since it's possible options don't exist on all distributions. It is expected that proper and valid options will be supplied for the target host.The following XML snippet shows the syntax required in order to utilize
<pool type="rbd" xmlns:rbd='http://libvirt.org/schemas/storagepool/rbd/1.0'> <name>myrbdpool</name> ... <source> ... </source> ... <target> ... </target> ... <rbd:config_opts> <rbd:option name='client_mount_timeout' value='45'/> <rbd:option name='rados_mon_op_timeout' value='20'/> <rbd:option name='rados_osd_op_timeout' value='10'/> </rbd:config_opts> </pool>
Since 5.1.0.
Storage volume XML
A storage volume will generally be either a file or a device node; since 1.2.0, an optional output-only attribute type
lists the actual type (file, block, dir, network, netdir or ploop), which is also available from virStorageVolGetInfo()
. The storage volume XML format is available since 0.4.1
Storage volume general metadata
<volume type='file'>
<name>sparse.img</name>
<key>/var/lib/xen/images/sparse.img</key>
<allocation>0</allocation>
<capacity unit="T">1</capacity>
...
name
Providing a name for the volume which is unique to the pool. This is mandatory when defining a volume. For a disk pool, the name must be combination of the
source
device path device and next partition number to be created. For example, if thesource
device path is /dev/sdb and there are no partitions on the disk, then the name must be sdb1 with the next name being sdb2 and so on. Since 0.4.1key
Providing an identifier for the volume which identifies a single volume. In some cases it's possible to have two distinct keys identifying a single volume. This field cannot be set when creating a volume: it is always generated. Since 0.4.1
allocation
Providing the total storage allocation for the volume. This may be smaller than the logical capacity if the volume is sparsely allocated. It may also be larger than the logical capacity if the volume has substantial metadata overhead. This value is in bytes. If omitted when creating a volume, the volume will be fully allocated at time of creation. If set to a value smaller than the capacity, the pool has the option of deciding to sparsely allocate a volume. It does not have to honour requests for sparse allocation though. Different types of pools may treat sparse volumes differently. For example, the
logical
pool will not automatically expand volume's allocation when it gets full; the user is responsible for doing that or configuring dmeventd to do so automatically. By default this is specified in bytes, but an optional attributeunit
can be specified to adjust the passed value. Values can be: 'B' or 'bytes' for bytes, 'KB' (kilobytes, 103 or 1000 bytes), 'K' or 'KiB' (kibibytes, 210 or 1024 bytes), 'MB' (megabytes, 106 or 1,000,000 bytes), 'M' or 'MiB' (mebibytes, 220 or 1,048,576 bytes), 'GB' (gigabytes, 109 or 1,000,000,000 bytes), 'G' or 'GiB' (gibibytes, 230 or 1,073,741,824 bytes), 'TB' (terabytes, 1012 or 1,000,000,000,000 bytes), 'T' or 'TiB' (tebibytes, 240 or 1,099,511,627,776 bytes), 'PB' (petabytes, 1015 or 1,000,000,000,000,000 bytes), 'P' or 'PiB' (pebibytes, 250 or 1,125,899,906,842,624 bytes), 'EB' (exabytes, 1018 or 1,000,000,000,000,000,000 bytes), or 'E' or 'EiB' (exbibytes, 260 or 1,152,921,504,606,846,976 bytes). Since 0.4.1, multi-characterunit
since 0.9.11.capacity
Providing the logical capacity for the volume. This value is in bytes by default, but a
unit
attribute can be specified with the same semantics as forallocation
This is compulsory when creating a volume. Since 0.4.1physical
This output only element provides the host physical size of the target storage volume. The default output
unit
will be in bytes. Since 3.0.0source
Provides information about the underlying storage allocation of the volume. This may not be available for some pool types. Since 0.4.1
target
Provides information about the representation of the volume on the local host. Since 0.4.1
Storage volume target elements
A single target
element is contained within the top level volume
element. This tag is used to describe the mapping of the storage volume into the host filesystem. It can contain the following child elements:
...
<target>
<path>/var/lib/virt/images/sparse.img</path>
<format type='qcow2'/>
<permissions>
<owner>107</owner>
<group>107</group>
<mode>0744</mode>
<label>virt_image_t</label>
</permissions>
<timestamps>
<atime>1341933637.273190990</atime>
<mtime>1341930622.047245868</mtime>
<ctime>1341930622.047245868</ctime>
</timestamps>
<encryption type='...'>
...
</encryption>
<compat>1.1</compat>
<nocow/>
<clusterSize unit='KiB'>64</clusterSize>
<features>
<lazy_refcounts/>
<extended_l2/>
</features>
</target>
path
Provides the location at which the volume can be accessed on the local filesystem, as an absolute path. This is a readonly attribute, so shouldn't be specified when creating a volume. Since 0.4.1
format
Provides information about the pool specific volume format. For disk pools it will provide the partition table format type, but is not preserved after a pool refresh or libvirtd restart. Use extended in order to create an extended disk extent partition. For filesystem or directory pools it will provide the file format type, eg cow, qcow, vmdk, raw. If omitted when creating a volume, the pool's default format will be used. The actual format is specified via the
type
attribute. Consult the storage driver page for the list of valid volume format type values for each specific pool. Theformat
will be ignored on input for pools without a volume format type value and the default pool format will be used. Since 0.4.1permissions
Provides information about the permissions to use when creating volumes. This is currently only useful for directory or filesystem based pools, where the volumes allocated are simple files. For pools where the volumes are device nodes, the hotplug scripts determine permissions. There are 4 child elements. The
mode
element contains the octal permission set. Themode
defaults to 0600 when not provided. Theowner
element contains the numeric user ID. Thegroup
element contains the numeric group ID. Ifowner
orgroup
aren't specified when creating a supported volume, the UID and GID of the libvirtd process are used. Thelabel
element contains the MAC (eg SELinux) label string. For existing directory or filesystem based volumes, these fields will be filled with the values used by the existing file. Since 0.4.1timestamps
Provides timing information about the volume. Up to four sub-elements are present, where
atime
,btime
,ctime
andmtime
hold the access, birth, change and modification time of the volume, where known. The used time format is <seconds>.<nanoseconds> since the beginning of the epoch (1 Jan 1970). If nanosecond resolution is 0 or otherwise unsupported by the host OS or filesystem, then the nanoseconds part is omitted. This is a readonly attribute and is ignored when creating a volume. Since 0.10.0encryption
If present, specifies how the volume is encrypted. See the Storage Encryption page for more information.
compat
Specify compatibility level. So far, this is only used for
type='qcow2'
volumes. Valid values are0.10
(QCOW2 v2) and1.1
(QCOW2 v3) so far. The values were meant to specify QEMU version the images should be compatible with.The default, if the
feature
element is present is1.1
. Since 1.1.0 Iffeature
is not present,0.10
was used Since 1.1.2 and Since 10.2.01.1
is used as it's the default ofqemu-img
.Any tool depending on a specific version should specify this field explicitly.
nocow
Turn off COW of the newly created volume. So far, this is only valid for a file image in btrfs file system. It will improve performance when the file image is used in VM. To create non-raw file images, it requires QEMU version since 2.1. Since 1.2.7
clusterSize
Changes the qcow2 cluster size which can affect image file size and performance. Since 7.4.0
features
Format-specific features. Only used for
qcow2
now. Valid sub-elements are:<lazy_refcounts/>
- allow delayed reference counter updates. Since 1.1.0<extended_l2/>
- enables subcluster allocation for qcow2 images. QCOW2 clusters are split into 32 subclusters decreasing the size of L2 cache needed. It's recommended to increaseclusterSize
.
Backing store elements
A single backingStore
element is contained within the top level volume
element. This tag is used to describe the optional copy on write, backing store for the storage volume. It can contain the following child elements:
...
<backingStore>
<path>/var/lib/virt/images/master.img</path>
<format type='raw'/>
<permissions>
<owner>107</owner>
<group>107</group>
<mode>0744</mode>
<label>virt_image_t</label>
</permissions>
</backingStore>
</volume>
path
Provides the location at which the backing store can be accessed on the local filesystem, as an absolute path. If omitted, there is no backing store for this volume. Since 0.6.0
format
Provides information about the pool specific backing store format. For disk pools it will provide the partition type. For filesystem or directory pools it will provide the file format type, eg cow, qcow, vmdk, raw. The actual format is specified via the type attribute. Consult the pool-specific docs for the list of valid values. Most file formats require a backing store of the same format, however, the qcow2 format allows a different backing store format. Since 0.6.0
permissions
Provides information about the permissions of the backing file. See volume
permissions
documentation for explanation of individual fields. Since 0.6.0
Example configuration
Here are a couple of examples, for a more complete set demonstrating every type of storage pool, consult the storage driver page
File based storage pool
<pool type="dir">
<name>virtimages</name>
<target>
<path>/var/lib/virt/images</path>
</target>
</pool>
iSCSI based storage pool
<pool type="iscsi">
<name>virtimages</name>
<source>
<host name="iscsi.example.com"/>
<device path="iqn.2013-06.com.example:iscsi-pool"/>
<auth type='chap' username='myuser'>
<secret usage='libvirtiscsi'/>
</auth>
</source>
<target>
<path>/dev/disk/by-path</path>
</target>
</pool>
Storage volume
<volume>
<name>sparse.img</name>
<allocation>0</allocation>
<capacity unit="T">1</capacity>
<target>
<path>/var/lib/virt/images/sparse.img</path>
<permissions>
<owner>107</owner>
<group>107</group>
<mode>0744</mode>
<label>virt_image_t</label>
</permissions>
</target>
</volume>
Storage volume using LUKS
<volume>
<name>MyLuks.img</name>
<capacity unit="G">5</capacity>
<target>
<path>/var/lib/virt/images/MyLuks.img</path>
<format type='raw'/>
<encryption format='luks'>
<secret type='passphrase' uuid='f52a81b2-424e-490c-823d-6bd4235bc572'/>
</encryption>
</target>
</volume>