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==============================================
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Virtual machine lock manager, virtlockd plugin
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==============================================
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.. contents::
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This page describes use of the ``virtlockd`` 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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virtlockd background
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====================
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The virtlockd daemon is a single purpose binary which focuses
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exclusively on the task of acquiring and holding locks on behalf of
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running virtual machines. It is designed to offer a low overhead,
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portable locking scheme can be used out of the box on virtualization
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hosts with minimal configuration overheads. It makes use of the POSIX
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fcntl advisory locking capability to hold locks, which is supported by
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the majority of commonly used filesystems.
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virtlockd daemon setup
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======================
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In most OS, the virtlockd daemon itself will not require any upfront
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configuration work. It is installed by default when libvirtd is present,
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and a systemd socket unit is registered such that the daemon will be
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automatically started when first required. With OS that predate systemd
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though, it will be necessary to start it at boot time, prior to libvirtd
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being started. On RHEL/Fedora distros, this can be achieved as follows
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::
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# chkconfig virtlockd on
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# service virtlockd start
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The above instructions apply to the instance of virtlockd that runs
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privileged, and is used by the libvirtd daemon that runs privileged. If
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running libvirtd as an unprivileged user, it will always automatically
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spawn an instance of the virtlockd daemon unprivileged too. This
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requires no setup at all.
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libvirt lockd plugin configuration
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==================================
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Once the virtlockd daemon is running, or setup to autostart, the next
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step is to configure the libvirt lockd plugin. There is a separate
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configuration file for each libvirt driver that is using virtlockd. For
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QEMU, we will edit ``/etc/libvirt/qemu-lockd.conf``
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The default behaviour of the lockd plugin is to acquire locks directly
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on the virtual disk images associated with the guest <disk> elements.
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This ensures it can run out of the box with no configuration, providing
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locking for disk images on shared filesystems such as NFS. It does not
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provide any cross host protection for storage that is backed by block
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devices, since locks acquired on device nodes in /dev only apply within
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the host. It may also be the case that the filesystem holding the disk
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images is not capable of supporting fcntl locks.
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To address these problems it is possible to tell lockd to acquire locks
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on an indirect file. Essentially lockd will calculate the SHA256
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checksum of the fully qualified path, and create a zero length file in a
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given directory whose filename is the checksum. It will then acquire a
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lock on that file. Assuming the block devices assigned to the guest are
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using stable paths (eg /dev/disk/by-path/XXXXXXX) then this will allow
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for locks to apply across hosts. This feature can be enabled by setting
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a configuration setting that specifies the directory in which to create
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the lock files. The directory referred to should of course be placed on
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a shared filesystem (eg NFS) that is accessible to all hosts which can
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see the shared block devices.
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::
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$ su - root
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# augtool -s set \
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/files/etc/libvirt/qemu-lockd.conf/file_lockspace_dir \
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"/var/lib/libvirt/lockd/files"
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If the guests are using either LVM and SCSI block devices for their
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virtual disks, there is a unique identifier associated with each device.
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It is possible to tell lockd to use this UUID as the basis for acquiring
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locks, rather than the SHA256 sum of the filename. The benefit of this
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is that the locking protection will work even if the file paths to the
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given block device are different on each host.
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::
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$ su - root
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# augtool -s set \
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/files/etc/libvirt/qemu-lockd.conf/scsi_lockspace_dir \
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"/var/lib/libvirt/lockd/scsi"
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# augtool -s set \
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/files/etc/libvirt/qemu-lockd.conf/lvm_lockspace_dir \
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"/var/lib/libvirt/lockd/lvm"
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It is important to remember that the changes made to the
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``/etc/libvirt/qemu-lockd.conf`` file must be propagated to all hosts
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before any virtual machines are launched on them. This ensures that all
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hosts are using the same locking mechanism
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QEMU/KVM driver configuration
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=============================
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The QEMU driver is capable of using the virtlockd plugin since the
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release 1.0.2. The out of the box configuration, however, currently uses
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the **nop** lock manager plugin. To get protection for disks, it is thus
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necessary to reconfigure QEMU to activate the **lockd** driver. This is
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achieved by editing the QEMU driver configuration file
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(``/etc/libvirt/qemu.conf``) and changing the ``lock_manager``
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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 lockd
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# service libvirtd restart
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Every time you start a guest, the virtlockd daemon will acquire locks on
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the disk files directly, or in one of the configured lookaside
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directories based on SHA256 sum. To check that locks are being acquired
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as expected, the ``lslocks`` tool can be run.
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