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Two paragraphs containing local links were reformulated and rewrapped. Signed-off-by: Peter Krempa <pkrempa@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Ján Tomko <jtomko@redhat.com>
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.. role:: since
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==================
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Storage Management
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==================
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Libvirt provides storage management on the physical host through storage pools
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and volumes.
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A storage pool is a quantity of storage set aside by an administrator, often a
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dedicated storage administrator, for use by virtual machines. Storage pools are
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divided into storage volumes either by the storage administrator or the system
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administrator, and the volumes are assigned to VMs as block devices.
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For example, the storage administrator responsible for an NFS server creates a
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share to store virtual machines' data. The system administrator defines a pool
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on the virtualization host with the details of the share (e.g.
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nfs.example.com:/path/to/share should be mounted on /vm_data). When the pool is
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started, libvirt mounts the share on the specified directory, just as if the
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system administrator logged in and executed 'mount
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nfs.example.com:/path/to/share /vmdata'. If the pool is configured to autostart,
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libvirt ensures that the NFS share is mounted on the directory specified when
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libvirt is started.
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Once the pool is started, the files in the NFS share are reported as volumes,
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and the storage volumes' paths may be queried using the libvirt APIs. The
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volumes' paths can then be copied into the section of a VM's XML definition
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describing the source storage for the VM's block devices. In the case of NFS, an
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application using the libvirt APIs can create and delete volumes in the pool
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(files in the NFS share) up to the limit of the size of the pool (the storage
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capacity of the share). Not all pool types support creating and deleting
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volumes. Stopping the pool (somewhat unfortunately referred to by virsh and the
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API as "pool-destroy") undoes the start operation, in this case, unmounting the
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NFS share. The data on the share is not modified by the destroy operation,
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despite the name. See man virsh for more details.
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A second example is an iSCSI pool. A storage administrator provisions an iSCSI
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target to present a set of LUNs to the host running the VMs. When libvirt is
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configured to manage that iSCSI target as a pool, libvirt will ensure that the
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host logs into the iSCSI target and libvirt can then report the available LUNs
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as storage volumes. The volumes' paths can be queried and used in VM's XML
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definitions as in the NFS example. In this case, the LUNs are defined on the
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iSCSI server, and libvirt cannot create and delete volumes.
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Storage pools and volumes are not required for the proper operation of VMs.
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Pools and volumes provide a way for libvirt to ensure that a particular piece of
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storage will be available for a VM, but some administrators will prefer to
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manage their own storage and VMs will operate properly without any pools or
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volumes defined. On systems that do not use pools, system administrators must
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ensure the availability of the VMs' storage using whatever tools they prefer,
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for example, adding the NFS share to the host's fstab so that the share is
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mounted at boot time.
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If at this point the value of pools and volumes over traditional system
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administration tools is unclear, note that one of the features of libvirt is its
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remote protocol, so it's possible to manage all aspects of a virtual machine's
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lifecycle as well as the configuration of the resources required by the VM.
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These operations can be performed on a remote host entirely within the libvirt
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API. In other words, a management application using libvirt can enable a user to
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perform all the required tasks for configuring the host for a VM: allocating
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resources, running the VM, shutting it down and deallocating the resources,
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without requiring shell access or any other control channel.
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Libvirt supports the following storage pool types:
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.. contents::
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Directory pool
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--------------
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A pool with a type of ``dir`` provides the means to manage files within a
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directory. The files can be fully allocated raw files, sparsely allocated raw
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files, or one of the special disk formats such as ``qcow2``, ``vmdk``, etc as
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supported by the ``qemu-img`` program. If the directory does not exist at the
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time the pool is defined, the ``build`` operation can be used to create it.
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Example directory pool input definition
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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::
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<pool type="dir">
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<name>virtimages</name>
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<target>
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<path>/var/lib/virt/images</path>
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</target>
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</pool>
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Valid directory pool format types
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The directory pool does not use the pool format type element.
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Valid directory volume format types
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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One of the following options:
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- ``raw``: a plain file
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- ``bochs``: Bochs disk image format
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- ``cloop``: compressed loopback disk image format
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- ``cow``: User Mode Linux disk image format
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- ``dmg``: Mac disk image format
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- ``iso``: CDROM disk image format
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- ``qcow``: QEMU v1 disk image format
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- ``qcow2``: QEMU v2 disk image format
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- ``qed``: QEMU Enhanced Disk image format
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- ``vmdk``: VMware disk image format
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- ``vpc``: VirtualPC disk image format
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When listing existing volumes all these formats are supported natively. When
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creating new volumes, only a subset may be available. The ``raw`` type is
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guaranteed always available. The ``qcow2`` type can be created if the
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``qemu-img`` tool is present. The others are dependent on support of the
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``qemu-img`` tool.
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Filesystem pool
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---------------
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This is a variant of the directory pool. Instead of creating a directory on an
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existing mounted filesystem though, it expects a source block device to be
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named. This block device will be mounted and files managed in the directory of
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its mount point. It will default to allowing the kernel to automatically
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discover the filesystem type, though it can be specified manually if required.
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Example filesystem pool input
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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::
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<pool type="fs">
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<name>virtimages</name>
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<source>
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<device path="/dev/VolGroup00/VirtImages"/>
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</source>
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<target>
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<path>/var/lib/virt/images</path>
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</target>
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</pool>
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Valid filesystem pool format types
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The filesystem pool supports the following formats:
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- ``auto`` - automatically determine format
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- ``ext2``
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- ``ext3``
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- ``ext4``
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- ``ufs``
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- ``iso9660``
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- ``udf``
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- ``gfs``
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- ``gfs2``
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- ``vfat``
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- ``hfs+``
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- ``xfs``
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- ``ocfs2``
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- ``vmfs``
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Valid filesystem volume format types
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The valid volume types are the same as for the ``directory`` pool type.
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Network filesystem pool
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-----------------------
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This is a variant of the filesystem pool. Instead of requiring a local block
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device as the source, it requires the name of a host and path of an exported
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directory. It will mount this network filesystem and manage files within the
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directory of its mount point. It will default to using ``auto`` as the protocol,
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which generally tries a mount via NFS first.
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Example network filesystem pool input
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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::
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<pool type="netfs">
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<name>virtimages</name>
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<source>
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<host name="nfs.example.com"/>
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<dir path="/var/lib/virt/images"/>
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<format type='nfs'/>
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</source>
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<target>
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<path>/var/lib/virt/images</path>
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</target>
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</pool>
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Valid network filesystem pool format types
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The network filesystem pool supports the following formats:
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- ``auto`` - automatically determine format
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- ``nfs``
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- ``glusterfs`` - use the glusterfs FUSE file system. For now, the ``dir``
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specified as the source can only be a gluster volume name, as gluster does
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not provide a way to directly mount subdirectories within a volume. (To
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bypass the file system completely, see the `Gluster pool`_).
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- ``cifs`` - use the SMB (samba) or CIFS file system. The mount will use "-o
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guest" to mount the directory anonymously.
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Valid network filesystem volume format types
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The valid volume types are the same as for the ``directory`` pool type.
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Logical volume pool
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-------------------
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This provides a pool based on an LVM volume group. For a pre-defined LVM volume
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group, simply providing the group name is sufficient, while to build a new group
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requires providing a list of source devices to serve as physical volumes.
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Volumes will be allocated by carving out chunks of storage from the volume
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group.
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Example logical pool input
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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::
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<pool type="logical">
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<name>HostVG</name>
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<source>
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<device path="/dev/sda1"/>
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<device path="/dev/sdb1"/>
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<device path="/dev/sdc1"/>
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</source>
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<target>
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<path>/dev/HostVG</path>
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</target>
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</pool>
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Valid logical pool format types
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The logical volume pool supports only the ``lvm2`` format, although not
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supplying a format value will result in automatic selection of the\ ``lvm2``
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format.
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Valid logical volume format types
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The logical volume pool does not use the volume format type element.
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Disk pool
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---------
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This provides a pool based on a physical disk. Volumes are created by adding
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partitions to the disk. Disk pools have constraints on the size and placement of
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volumes. The 'free extents' information will detail the regions which are
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available for creating new volumes. A volume cannot span across two different
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free extents. It will default to using ``dos`` as the pool source format.
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Example disk pool input
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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::
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<pool type="disk">
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<name>sda</name>
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<source>
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<device path='/dev/sda'/>
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</source>
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<target>
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<path>/dev</path>
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</target>
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</pool>
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Valid disk pool format types
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The disk volume pool accepts the following pool format types, representing the
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common partition table types:
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- ``dos``
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- ``dvh``
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- ``gpt``
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- ``mac``
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- ``bsd``
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- ``pc98``
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- ``sun``
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- ``lvm2``
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The formats ``dos`` ("msdos" in parted terminology, good for BIOS systems) or
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``gpt`` (good for UEFI systems) are recommended for best portability - the
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latter is needed for disks larger than 2TB. Note that the ``lvm2`` format refers
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to the physical volume format (i.e. the whole disk is a physical volume - not
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the usual usage of LVM where physical volumes are partitions). This is not
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really a partition table and such pool cannot be built by libvirt, only
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detected.
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Building a pool of a certain format depends on its availability in ``parted``.
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Valid disk volume format types
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The disk volume pool accepts the following volume format types, representing the
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common partition entry types:
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- ``none``
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- ``linux``
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- ``fat16``
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- ``fat32``
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- ``linux-swap``
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- ``linux-lvm``
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- ``linux-raid``
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- ``extended``
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iSCSI pool
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----------
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This provides a pool based on an iSCSI target. Volumes must be pre-allocated on
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the iSCSI server, and cannot be created via the libvirt APIs. Since /dev/XXX
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names may change each time libvirt logs into the iSCSI target, it is recommended
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to configure the pool to use ``/dev/disk/by-path`` or ``/dev/disk/by-id`` for
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the target path. These provide persistent stable naming for LUNs
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The libvirt iSCSI storage backend does not resolve the provided host name or IP
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address when finding the available target IQN's on the host; therefore, defining
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two pools to use the same IQN on the same host will fail the duplicate source
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pool checks.
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Example iSCSI pool input
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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::
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<pool type="iscsi">
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<name>virtimages</name>
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<source>
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<host name="iscsi.example.com"/>
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<device path="iqn.2013-06.com.example:iscsi-pool"/>
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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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Valid iSCSI pool format types
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The iSCSI volume pool does not use the pool format type element.
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Valid iSCSI volume format types
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The iSCSI volume pool does not use the volume format type element.
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iSCSI direct pool
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-----------------
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This is a variant of the iSCSI pool. Instead of using iscsiadm, it uses
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libiscsi. It requires a host, a path which is the target IQN, and an initiator
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IQN.
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Example iSCSI direct pool input
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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::
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<pool type="iscsi-direct">
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<name>virtimages</name>
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<source>
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<host name="iscsi.example.com"/>
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<device path="iqn.2013-06.com.example:iscsi-pool"/>
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<initiator>
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<iqn name="iqn.2013-06.com.example:iscsi-initiator"/>
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</initiator>
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</source>
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</pool>
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Valid iSCSI direct pool format types
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The iSCSI direct volume pool does not use the pool format type element.
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Valid iSCSI direct volume format types
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The iSCSI direct volume pool does not use the volume format type element.
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SCSI pool
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---------
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This provides a pool based on a SCSI HBA. Volumes are preexisting SCSI LUNs, and
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cannot be created via the libvirt APIs. Since /dev/XXX names aren't generally
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stable, it is recommended to configure the pool to use ``/dev/disk/by-path`` or
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``/dev/disk/by-id`` for the target path. These provide persistent stable naming
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for LUNs :since:`Since 0.6.2`
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Example SCSI pool input
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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::
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<pool type="scsi">
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<name>virtimages</name>
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<source>
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<adapter name="host0"/>
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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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Valid SCSI pool format types
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The SCSI volume pool does not use the pool format type element.
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Valid SCSI volume format types
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The SCSI volume pool does not use the volume format type element.
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Multipath pool
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--------------
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This provides a pool that contains all the multipath devices on the host.
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Therefore, only one Multipath pool may be configured per host. Volume creating
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is not supported via the libvirt APIs. The target element is actually ignored,
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but one is required to appease the libvirt XML parser.
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Configuring multipathing is not currently supported, this just covers the case
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where users want to discover all the available multipath devices, and assign
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them to guests. :since:`Since 0.7.1`
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Example multipath pool input
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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::
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<pool type="mpath">
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<name>virtimages</name>
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<target>
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<path>/dev/mapper</path>
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</target>
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</pool>
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Valid multipath pool format types
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The Multipath volume pool does not use the pool format type element.
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Valid multipath volume format types
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The Multipath volume pool does not use the volume format type element.
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RBD pool
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--------
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This storage driver provides a pool which contains all RBD images in a RADOS
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pool. RBD (RADOS Block Device) is part of the Ceph distributed storage project.
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This backend *only* supports QEMU with RBD support. Kernel RBD which exposes RBD
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devices as block devices in /dev is *not* supported. RBD images created with
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this storage backend can be accessed through kernel RBD if configured manually,
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but this backend does not provide mapping for these images.
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Images created with this backend can be attached to QEMU guests when QEMU is
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build with RBD support (Since QEMU 0.14.0). The backend supports cephx
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authentication for communication with the Ceph cluster. Storing the cephx
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authentication key is done with the libvirt secret mechanism. The UUID in the
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example pool input refers to the UUID of the stored secret.
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The port attribute for a Ceph monitor does not have to be provided. If not
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provided librados will use the default Ceph monitor port. :since:`Since 0.9.13`
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Example RBD pool input
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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::
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<pool type="rbd">
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<name>myrbdpool</name>
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<source>
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<name>rbdpool</name>
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<host name='1.2.3.4'/>
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<host name='my.ceph.monitor'/>
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<host name='third.ceph.monitor' port='6789'/>
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<auth username='admin' type='ceph'>
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<secret uuid='2ec115d7-3a88-3ceb-bc12-0ac909a6fd87'/>
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</auth>
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</source>
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</pool>
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Example RBD volume output
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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::
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<volume>
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<name>myvol</name>
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<key>rbd/myvol</key>
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<source>
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</source>
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<capacity unit='bytes'>53687091200</capacity>
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<allocation unit='bytes'>53687091200</allocation>
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<target>
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<path>rbd:rbd/myvol</path>
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<format type='unknown'/>
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<permissions>
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<mode>00</mode>
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<owner>0</owner>
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<group>0</group>
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</permissions>
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</target>
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</volume>
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Example RBD disk attachment
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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RBD images can be attached to QEMU guests when QEMU is built with RBD support.
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Information about attaching a RBD image to a guest can be found at `format
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domain <formatdomain.html#hard-drives-floppy-disks-cdroms>`__ page.
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Valid RBD pool format types
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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|
The RBD pool does not use the pool format type element.
|
|
|
|
Valid RBD volume format types
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
Only raw volumes are supported.
|
|
|
|
Sheepdog pool
|
|
-------------
|
|
|
|
This provides a pool based on a Sheepdog Cluster. Sheepdog is a distributed
|
|
storage system for QEMU/KVM. It provides highly available block level storage
|
|
volumes that can be attached to QEMU/KVM virtual machines. The cluster must
|
|
already be formatted. :since:`Since 0.9.13`
|
|
|
|
Example Sheepdog pool input
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
::
|
|
|
|
<pool type="sheepdog">
|
|
<name>mysheeppool</name>
|
|
<source>
|
|
<name>mysheeppool</name>
|
|
<host name='localhost' port='7000'/>
|
|
</source>
|
|
</pool>
|
|
|
|
Example Sheepdog volume output
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
::
|
|
|
|
<volume>
|
|
<name>myvol</name>
|
|
<key>sheep/myvol</key>
|
|
<source>
|
|
</source>
|
|
<capacity unit='bytes'>53687091200</capacity>
|
|
<allocation unit='bytes'>53687091200</allocation>
|
|
<target>
|
|
<path>sheepdog:myvol</path>
|
|
<format type='unknown'/>
|
|
<permissions>
|
|
<mode>00</mode>
|
|
<owner>0</owner>
|
|
<group>0</group>
|
|
</permissions>
|
|
</target>
|
|
</volume>
|
|
|
|
Example Sheepdog disk attachment
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
Sheepdog images can be attached to QEMU guests. Information about attaching a
|
|
Sheepdog image to a guest can be found at the `format
|
|
domain <formatdomain.html#hard-drives-floppy-disks-cdroms>`__ page.
|
|
|
|
Valid Sheepdog pool format types
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
The Sheepdog pool does not use the pool format type element.
|
|
|
|
Valid Sheepdog volume format types
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
The Sheepdog pool does not use the volume format type element.
|
|
|
|
Gluster pool
|
|
------------
|
|
|
|
This provides a pool based on native Gluster access. Gluster is a distributed
|
|
file system that can be exposed to the user via FUSE, NFS or SMB (see the
|
|
`Network filesystem pool`_ for that usage); but for minimal overhead,
|
|
the ideal access is via native access (only possible for QEMU/KVM compiled with
|
|
libgfapi support). The cluster and storage volume must already be running, and
|
|
it is recommended that the volume be configured with
|
|
``gluster volume set $volname storage.owner-uid=$uid`` and
|
|
``gluster volume set $volname storage.owner-gid=$gid`` for the uid and gid
|
|
that qemu will be run as. It may also be necessary to set
|
|
``rpc-auth-allow-insecure on`` for the glusterd service, as well as
|
|
``gluster set $volname server.allow-insecure on``, to allow access to the
|
|
gluster volume. :since:`Since 1.2.0`
|
|
|
|
Example Gluster pool input
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
A gluster volume corresponds to a libvirt storage pool. If a gluster volume
|
|
could be mounted as ``mount -t glusterfs localhost:/volname /some/path``,
|
|
then the following example will describe the same pool without having to create
|
|
a local mount point. Remember that with gluster, the mount point can be through
|
|
any machine in the cluster, and gluster will automatically pick the ideal
|
|
transport to the actual bricks backing the gluster volume, even if on a
|
|
different host than the one named in the ``host`` designation. The ``<name>``
|
|
element is always the volume name (no slash). The pool source also supports an
|
|
optional ``<dir>`` element with a ``path`` attribute that lists the absolute
|
|
name of a subdirectory relative to the gluster volume to use instead of the
|
|
top-level directory of the volume.
|
|
|
|
::
|
|
|
|
<pool type="gluster">
|
|
<name>myglusterpool</name>
|
|
<source>
|
|
<name>volname</name>
|
|
<host name='localhost'/>
|
|
<dir path='/'/>
|
|
</source>
|
|
</pool>
|
|
|
|
Example Gluster volume output
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
Libvirt storage volumes associated with a gluster pool correspond to the files
|
|
that can be found when mounting the gluster volume. The ``name`` is the path
|
|
relative to the effective mount specified for the pool; and the ``key`` is a
|
|
string that identifies a single volume uniquely. Currently the ``key`` attribute
|
|
consists of the URI of the volume but it may be changed to a UUID of the volume
|
|
in the future.
|
|
|
|
::
|
|
|
|
<volume>
|
|
<name>myfile</name>
|
|
<key>gluster://localhost/volname/myfile</key>
|
|
<source>
|
|
</source>
|
|
<capacity unit='bytes'>53687091200</capacity>
|
|
<allocation unit='bytes'>53687091200</allocation>
|
|
</volume>
|
|
|
|
Example Gluster disk attachment
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
Files within a gluster volume can be attached to QEMU guests. Information about
|
|
attaching a Gluster image to a guest can be found at the `format
|
|
domain <formatdomain.html#hard-drives-floppy-disks-cdroms>`__ page.
|
|
|
|
Valid Gluster pool format types
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
The Gluster pool does not use the pool format type element.
|
|
|
|
Valid Gluster volume format types
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
The valid volume types are the same as for the ``directory`` pool type.
|
|
|
|
ZFS pool
|
|
--------
|
|
|
|
This provides a pool based on the ZFS filesystem. Initially it was developed for
|
|
FreeBSD, and :since:`since 1.3.2` experimental support for `ZFS on
|
|
Linux <https://zfsonlinux.org/>`__ version 0.6.4 or newer is available.
|
|
|
|
A pool could either be created manually using the ``zpool create`` command and
|
|
its name specified in the source section or :since:` since 1.2.9` source devices
|
|
could be specified to create a pool using libvirt.
|
|
|
|
Please refer to the ZFS documentation for details on a pool creation.
|
|
|
|
:since:`Since 1.2.8`
|
|
|
|
Example ZFS pool input
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
::
|
|
|
|
<pool type="zfs">
|
|
<name>myzfspool</name>
|
|
<source>
|
|
<name>zpoolname</name>
|
|
<device path="/dev/ada1"/>
|
|
<device path="/dev/ada2"/>
|
|
</source>
|
|
</pool>
|
|
|
|
Valid ZFS pool format types
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
The ZFS volume pool does not use the pool format type element.
|
|
|
|
Valid ZFS volume format types
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
The ZFS volume pool does not use the volume format type element.
|
|
|
|
Vstorage pool
|
|
-------------
|
|
|
|
This provides a pool based on Virtuozzo storage. Virtuozzo Storage is a highly
|
|
available distributed software-defined storage with built-in replication and
|
|
disaster recovery. More detailed information about Virtuozzo storage and its
|
|
management can be found here: `Virtuozzo
|
|
Storage <https://openvz.org/Virtuozzo_Storage>`__).
|
|
|
|
Please refer to the Virtuozzo Storage documentation for details on storage
|
|
management and usage.
|
|
|
|
Example vstorage pool input
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
In order to create storage pool with Virtuozzo Storage backend you have to
|
|
provide cluster name and be authorized within the cluster.
|
|
|
|
::
|
|
|
|
<pool type="vstorage">
|
|
<name>myvstoragepool</name>
|
|
<source>
|
|
<name>clustername</name>
|
|
</source>
|
|
<target>
|
|
<path>/mnt/clustername</path>
|
|
</target>
|
|
</pool>
|
|
|
|
Valid vstorage pool format types
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
The Vstorage volume pool does not use the pool format type element.
|
|
|
|
Valid vstorage volume format types
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
The valid volume types are the same as for the directory pool.
|