Hi Matthew,
I'm also using a HA TrueNAS as the storage. I have NFS as well as iscsi shares and did
do some in place upgrade. The failover went more or less smooth, it was more of an issue
on the TrueNas side where the different vlans didn't come up. This caused the engine
to take down the storage domain and things took some time until everything was up again.
The VMs in ovirt did go into paused mode and started to work again as soon as the failover
was done. I was failing over by rebooting one of the TrueNas nodes and this took some time
for the other node to take over. I was thinking about asking the TN guys if there is a
command or procedure to speed up the failover. In all I didn't stop any VMs although
the VMs paused. Depending on the critically of the VMs you might want to move to another
storage.
Sven
-----Ursprüngliche Nachricht-----
Von: users-bounces(a)ovirt.org [mailto:users-bounces@ovirt.org] Im Auftrag von Matthew
Trent
Gesendet: Montag, 5. Juni 2017 23:48
An: users <users(a)ovirt.org>
Betreff: [ovirt-users] Seamless SAN HA failovers with oVirt?
I'm using two TrueNAS HA SANs (FreeBSD-based ZFS) to provide storage via NFS to 7
oVirt boxes and about 25 VMs.
For SAN system upgrades I've always scheduled a maintenance window, shut down all the
oVirt stuff, upgraded the SANs, and spun everything back up. It's pretty disruptive,
but I assumed that was the thing to do.
However, in talking with the TrueNAS vendor they said the majority of their customers are
using VMWare and they almost always do TrueNAS updates in production. They just upgrade
one head of the TrueNAS HA pair then failover to the other head and upgrade it too.
There's a 30-ish second pause in I/O while the disk arrays are taken over by the other
HA head, but VMWare just tolerates it and continues without skipping a beat. They say this
is standard procedure in the SAN world and virtualization systems should tolerate 30-60
seconds of I/O pause for HA failovers seamlessly.
It sounds great to me, but I wanted to pick this lists' brain -- is anyone doing this
with oVirt? Are you able to failover your HA SAN with 30-60 seconds of no I/O without
oVirt freaking out?
If not, are there any tunables relating to this? I see the default NFS mount options look
fairly tolerant (proto=tcp,timeo=600,retrans=6), but are there VDSM or sanlock or some
other oVirt timeouts that will kick in and start putting storage domains into error
states, fencing hosts or something before that? I've never timed anything, but I want
to say my past experience is that ovirt hosted engine started showing errors almost
immediately when we've had SAN issues in the past.
Thanks!
--
Matthew Trent
Network Engineer
Lewis County IT Services
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