First of all I'd like to suggest not using the LSM acronym as it can also mean
live-storage-migration and maybe other things.
Secondly I would like to avoid talking about what needs to be changed in VDSM before we
figure out what exactly we want to accomplish.
Also, there is no mention on credentials in any part of the process.
How does VDSM or the host get access to actually modify the storage array?
Who holds the creds for that and how?
How does the user set this up?
In the array as domain case. How are the luns being mapped to initiators. What about
setting discovery credentials.
In the array set up case. How will the hosts be represented in regards to credentials?
How will the different schemes and capabilities in regard to authentication methods will
be expressed.
Rest of the comments inline
----- Original Message -----
From: "Deepak C Shetty"
<deepakcs(a)linux.vnet.ibm.com>
To: "VDSM Project Development" <vdsm-devel(a)lists.fedorahosted.org>
Cc: libstoragemgmt-devel(a)lists.sourceforge.net, engine-devel(a)ovirt.org
Sent: Wednesday, May 30, 2012 5:38:46 AM
Subject: [Engine-devel] RFC: Writeup on VDSM-libstoragemgmt integration
Hello All,
I have a draft write-up on the VDSM-libstoragemgmt integration.
I wanted to run this thru' the mailing list(s) to help tune and
crystallize it, before putting it on the ovirt wiki.
I have run this once thru Ayal and Tony, so have some of their
comments
incorporated.
I still have few doubts/questions, which I have posted below with
lines
ending with '?'
Comments / Suggestions are welcome & appreciated.
thanx,
deepak
[Ccing engine-devel and libstoragemgmt lists as this stuff is
relevant
to them too]
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1) Background:
VDSM provides high level API for node virtualization management. It
acts
in response to the requests sent by oVirt Engine, which uses VDSM to
do
all node virtualization related tasks, including but not limited to
storage management.
libstoragemgmt aims to provide vendor agnostic API for managing
external
storage array. It should help system administrators utilizing open
source solutions have a way to programmatically manage their storage
hardware in a vendor neutral way. It also aims to facilitate
management
automation, ease of use and take advantage of storage vendor
supported
features which improve storage performance and space utilization.
Home Page:
http://sourceforge.net/apps/trac/libstoragemgmt/
libstoragemgmt (LSM) today supports C and python plugins for talking
to
external storage array using SMI-S as well as native interfaces (eg:
netapp plugin )
Plan is to grow the SMI-S interface as needed over time and add more
vendor specific plugins for exploiting features not possible via
SMI-S
or have better alternatives than using SMI-S.
For eg: Many of the copy offload features require to use vendor
specific
commands, which justifies the need for a vendor specific plugin.
2) Goals:
2a) Ability to plugin external storage array into oVirt/VDSM
virtualization stack, in a vendor neutral way.
2b) Ability to list features/capabilities and other statistical
info of the array
2c) Ability to utilize the storage array offload capabilities
from
oVirt/VDSM.
3) Details:
LSM will sit as a new repository engine in VDSM.
VDSM Repository Engine WIP @
http://gerrit.ovirt.org/#change,192
Current plan is to have LSM co-exist with VDSM on the virtualization
nodes.
*Note : 'storage' used below is generic. It can be a file/nfs-export
for
NAS targets and LUN/logical-drive for SAN targets.
VDSM can use LSM and do the following...
- Provision storage
- Consume storage
3.1) Provisioning Storage using LSM
Typically this will be done by a Storage administrator.
oVirt/VDSM should provide storage admin the
- ability to list the different storage arrays along with their
types (NAS/SAN), capabilities, free/used space.
- ability to provision storage using any of the array
capabilities
(eg: thin provisioned lun or new NFS export )
- ability to manage the provisioned storage (eg: resize/delete
storage)
Once the storage is provisioned by the storage admin, VDSM will have
to
refresh the host(s) for them to be able to see the newly provisioned
storage.
[SM] What about the clustered case, The management or the mailbox will
have to be involved. Pros\Cons? Is there a capability for the storage to announce a change
in topology? Can libstoragemgmt consume it? Does it even make sense?
3.1.1) Potential flows:
Mgmt -> vdsm -> lsm: create LUN + LUN Mapping / Zoning / whatever is
needed to make LUN available to list of hosts passed by mgmt
Mgmt -> vdsm: getDeviceList (refreshes host and gets list of devices)
Repeat above for all relevant hosts (depending on list passed
earlier,
mostly relevant when extending an existing VG)
Mgmt -> use LUN in normal flows.
[SM] This is all a bit vague in my opinion,
concrete cases might prove more beneficial.
3.1.2) How oVirt Engine will know which LSM to use ?
Normally the way this works today is that user can choose the host to
use (default today is SPM), however there are a few flows where mgmt
will know which host to use:
1. extend storage domain (add LUN to existing VG) - Use SPM and make
sure *all* hosts that need access to this SD can see the new LUN
2. attach new LUN to a VM which is pinned to a specific host - use
this host
3. attach new LUN to a VM which is not pinned - use a host from the
cluster the VM belongs to and make sure all nodes in cluster can see
the
new LUN
Flows for which there is no clear candidate (Maybe we can use the SPM
host itself which is the default ?)
1. create a new disk without attaching it to any VM
2. create a LUN for a new storage domain
[SM] Maybe the engine should do the work? What about permission? Will all hosts have the
credentials to mess with the storage? Will they be passed on a per call basis to prevent
other users from having access to the storage?
3.2) Consuming storage using LSM
Typically this will be done by a virtualization administrator
oVirt/VDSM should allow virtualization admin to
- Create a new storage domain using the storage on the array.
- Be able to specify whether VDSM should use the storage offload
capability (default) or override it to use its own internal logic.
4) VDSM potential changes:
4.1) How to represent a VM disk, 1 LUN = 1 VMdisk or 1 LV = 1 VMdisk
I find this
hard to understand. Maybe a different notation?
In ant case there is an abstracted case ie. storage domain. And there is a direct case ie.
user provision luns to be used by VDSM and others as well.
The will both have different ways of representing the same underlying objects.
Also, I think that credentials might be tricky to represent as different arrays use
different schemes to allocated users\hosts to luns\targets.
?
which bring another question...1 array == 1 storage domain OR 1
LUN/nfs-export on the array == 1 storage domain ?
Pros & Cons of each...
1 array == 1 storage domain
- Each new vmdisk (aka volume) will be a new lun/file on the
array.
- Easier to exploit offload capabilities, as they are available
at
the LUN/File granularity
- Will there be any issues where there will be too many
LUNs/Files
... any maxluns limit on linux hosts that we might hit ?
-- VDSM has been tested with 1K LUNs and it worked fine -
ayal
- Storage array limitations on the number of LUNs can be a
downside
here.
- Would it be ok to share the array for hosting another storage
domain if need be ?
-- Provided the existing domain is not utilising all of the
free space
-- We can create new LUNs and hand it over to anyone needed
?
-- Changes needed in VDSM to work with raw LUNs, today it only
has
support for consuming LUNs via VG/LV.
1 LUN/nfs-export on the array == 1 storage domain
- How to represent a new vmdisk (aka vdsm volume) if its a LUN
provisioned using SAN target ?
-- Will it be VG/LV as is done today for block domains ?
-- If yes, then it will be difficult to exploit offload
capabilities, as they are at LUN level, not at LV level.
- Each new vmdisk will be a new file on the nfs-export, assuming
offload capability is available at the file level, so this should
work
for NAS targets ?
- Can use the storage array for hosting multiple storage
domains.
-- Provision one more LUN and use it for another storage
domain
if need be.
- VDSM already supports this today, as part of block storage
domains for LUNs case.
Note that we will allow user to do either one of the two options
above,
depending on need.
4.2) Storage domain metadata will also include the
features/capabilities
of the storage array as reported by LSM.
- Capabilities (taken via LSM) will be stored in the domain
metadata during storage domain create flow.
- Need changes in oVirt engine as well ( see 'oVirt Engine
potential changes' section below )
4.3) VDSM to poll LSM for array capabilities on a regular basis ?
Per ayal:
- If we have a 'storage array' entity in oVirt Engine (see
'oVirt
Engine potential changes' section below ) then we can have a 'refresh
capabilities' button/verb.
- We can periodically query the storage array.
- Query LSM before running operations (sounds redundant to me,
but
if it's cheap enough it could be simplest).
Probably need a combination of 1+2 (query at very low frequency
-
1/hour or 1/day + refresh button)
5) oVirt Engine potential changes - as described by ayal :
- We will either need a new 'storage array' entity in engine to
keep credentials, or, in case of storage array as storage domain,
just
keep this info as part of the domain at engine level.
- Have a 'storage array' entity in oVirt Engine to support
'refresh capabilities' as a button/verb.
- When user during storage provisioning, selects a LUN exported
from a storage array (via LSM), the oVirt Engine would know from then
onwards that this LUN is being served via LSM.
It would then be able to query the capabilities of the LUN
and
show it to the virt admin during storage consumption flow.
6) Potential flows:
- Create snapshot flow
-- VDSM will check the snapshot offload capability in the
domain metadata
-- If available, and override is not configured, it will use
LSM to offload LUN/File snapshot
-- If override is configured or capability is not available,
it
will use its internal logic to create
snapshot (qcow2).
- Copy/Clone vmdisk flow
-- VDSM will check the copy offload capability in the domain
metadata
-- If available, and override is not configured, it will use
LSM to offload LUN/File copy
-- If override is configured or capability is not available,
it
will use its internal logic to create
snapshot (eg: dd cmd in case of LUN).
7) LSM potential changes:
- list features/capabilities of the array. Eg: copy offload,
thin
prov. etc.
- list containers (aka pools) (present in LSM today)
- Ability to list different types of arrays being managed, their
capabilities and used/free space
- Ability to create/list/delete/resize volumes ( LUN or exports,
available in LSM as of today)
- Get monitoring info with object (LUN/snapshot/volume) as
optional
parameter for specific info. eg: container/pool free/used space, raid
type etc.
Need to make sure above info is listed in a coherent way across
arrays
(number of LUNs, raid type used? free/total per container/pool, per
LUN?. Also need I/O statistics wherever possible.
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