Hi Didi,
Thanks for the response. So, I eventually figured out that the new HE did not have the
correct entries in the resolv.conf file, so that explains why everything was showing as
down, even though it was actually up. I did the full migration of my two lab environments
and they are running smoothly.
Thanks
Anton Louw
Cloud Engineer: Storage and Virtualization
______________________________________
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A: Rutherford Estate, 1 Scott Street, Waverley, Johannesburg
anton.louw(a)voxtelecom.co.za
www.vox.co.za
From: Yedidyah Bar David <didi(a)redhat.com>
Sent: 20 May 2020 11:59
To: Anton Louw <Anton.Louw(a)voxtelecom.co.za>
Cc: users(a)ovirt.org
Subject: Re: [ovirt-users] Re: Migrate hosted engine to standalone host
On Mon, May 18, 2020 at 1:33 PM Anton Louw via Users
<users@ovirt.org<mailto:users@ovirt.org>> wrote:
Hello,
I am not sure if the below thread went missing somewhere. Just to add on as well, when
moving the hosted engine to a standalone host, will the process look similar to the
below:
I never tried that, but:
Backup and remove Hosted Engine:
1. Backup Hosted Engine (engine-backup --scope=all --mode=backup --file=Full
--log=Log_Full)
2. Download the backup files from HE using WinSCP
3. Enable global Maintenance (hosted-engine --set-maintenance --mode=global)
4. Power down hosted engine (hosted-engine --vm-shutdown)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Redeploy Hosted Engine:
Build new CentOS VM in another environment
*Same IP
*Same name
*Same resources
1. sudo yum install
https://resources.ovirt.org/pub/yum-repo/ovirt-release43.rpm<https://r...
2. sudo yum install -y ovirt-engine
3. Copy backup files to newly deployed CentOS VM
4. engine-backup --mode=restore --file=Full --log=Log_Full --provision-db
--provision-dwh-db --restore-permissions
You might want to pass also --he-remove-storage-vm , and perhaps also --he-remove-hosts .
This removes them, obviously, only from the database, does not connect to them or do
anything on them.
You'll then have to add them again. You will not be able to do that if there are
running VMs on them, I think.
So:
If you need to keep the VMs up, and have some of them on the hosted-engine hosts, do not
use these options, but do test very well, and study the bugs for which these options were
added - you can check git log for this file searching this:
https://github.com/oVirt/ovirt-engine/commits/master?after=3cd2766ae1576b...
https://github.com/oVirt/ovirt-engine/commit/542e4a318584c8601159b4bd6d57...
Bug-Url:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/1240466<https://bugzilla.redhat.com/124046...
Bug-Url:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/1235200<https://bugzilla.redhat.com/123520...
The engine will still think that it's a hosted-engine, so it will likely be confused.
Perhaps --he-remove-storage-vm is enough for that.
This is likely to be problematic, see above bugs.
If you don't need to keep the VMs up, it's probably safer to just take all of them
down, pass also --he-remove-hosts, and then, in the new engine, add back the hosts. Or
even:
Install a new engine, do not restore the backup, add the hosts, and import the storage
domains.
5. after retore has completed, run engine-setup
Or are there any additional steps I need to take? I have tried this in my one lab
environment, and it works without any issues, however when trying this on my second lab
environment, everything shows as “down”, ie. Hosts, Data Center and Storage Domains.
No idea why they are down. Check engine.log. How long did you wait? Did the engine have
access to the hosts? Can you manually ssh to them from the engine machine?
Best regards,
--
Didi