On Wed, Aug 11, 2021 at 12:43 AM Shantur Rathore
<shantur.rathore(a)gmail.com> wrote:
Thanks for the detailed response Nir.
In my use case, we keep creating VMs from templates and deleting them so we need the VMs
to be created quickly and cloning it will use a lot of time and storage.
That's a good reason to use a template.
If your vm is temporary and you like to drop the data written while
the vm is running, you
could use a temporary disk based on the template. This is called a
"transient disk" in vdsm.
Arik, maybe you remember how transient disks are used in engine?
Do we have an API to run a VM once, dropping the changes to the disk
done while the VM was running?
I will try to add the config and try again tomorrow. Also I like the
Managed Block storage idea, I had read about it in the past and used it with Ceph.
Just to understand it better, is this issue only on iSCSI based storage?
Yes, on file based storage a snapshot is a file, and it grows as
needed. On block based
storage, a snapshot is a logical volume, and oVirt needs to extend it
when needed.
Nir
Thanks again.
Regards
Shantur
On Tue, Aug 10, 2021 at 9:26 PM Nir Soffer <nsoffer(a)redhat.com> wrote:
>
> On Tue, Aug 10, 2021 at 4:24 PM Shantur Rathore
> <shantur.rathore(a)gmail.com> wrote:
> >
> > Hi all,
> >
> > I have a setup as detailed below
> >
> > - iSCSI Storage Domain
> > - Template with Thin QCOW2 disk
> > - Multiple VMs from Template with Thin disk
>
> Note that a single template disk used by many vms can become a performance
> bottleneck, and is a single point of failure. Cloning the template when creating
> vms avoids such issues.
>
> > oVirt Node 4.4.4
>
> 4.4.4 is old, you should upgrade to 4.4.7.
>
> > When the VMs boots up it downloads some data to it and that leads to increase in
volume size.
> > I see that every few seconds the VM gets paused with
> >
> > "VM X has been paused due to no Storage space error."
> >
> > and then after few seconds
> >
> > "VM X has recovered from paused back to up"
>
> This is normal operation when a vm writes too quickly and oVirt cannot
> extend the disk quick enough. To mitigate this, you can increase the
> volume chunk size.
>
> Created this configuration drop in file:
>
> # cat /etc/vdsm/vdsm.conf.d/99-local.conf
> [irs]
> volume_utilization_percent = 25
> volume_utilization_chunk_mb = 2048
>
> And restart vdsm.
>
> With this setting, when free space in a disk is 1.5g, the disk will
> be extended by 2g. With the default setting, when free space is
> 0.5g the disk was extended by 1g.
>
> If this does not eliminate the pauses, try a larger chunk size
> like 4096.
>
> > Sometimes after a many pause and recovery the VM dies with
> >
> > "VM X is down with error. Exit message: Lost connection with qemu
process."
>
> This means qemu has crashed. You can find more info in the vm log at:
> /var/log/libvirt/qemu/vm-name.log
>
> We know about bugs in qemu that cause such crashes when vm disk is
> extended. I think the latest bug was fixed in 4.4.6, so upgrading to 4.4.7
> will fix this issue.
>
> Even with these settings, if you have a very bursty io in the vm, it may
> become paused. The only way to completely avoid these pauses is to
> use a preallocated disk, or use file storage (e.g. NFS). Preallocated disk
> can be thin provisioned on the server side so it does not mean you need
> more storage, but you will not be able to use shared templates in the way
> you use them now. You can create vm from template, but the template
> is cloned to the new vm.
>
> Another option with (still tech preview) is Managed Block Storage (Cinder
> based storage). If your storage server is supported by Cinder, we can
> managed it using cinderlib. In this setup every disk is a LUN, which may
> be thin provisioned on the storage server. This can also offload storage
> operations to the server, like cloning disks, which may be much faster and
> more efficient.
>
> Nir
>