
I figured out part of it! After I figured out how to access the DB, I was able to update to correct entry in the "vm_dynamic" status to 0. I did this by: sudo su postgres psql engine -c "SELECT vm_guid, vm_name from vm_static WHERE vm_name = 'Clonezilla_Server';" Returns:0eb29824-f1ca-4d27-bf57-a3ed36c40c18 psql engine -c "update vm_dynamic SET status=0 where vm_guid='0eb29824-f1ca-4d27-bf57-a3ed36c40c18';" After this I was able to delete the entry from ovirt. I am not sure why a disk would not import, but at least I dont have a locked image in the queue anymore! On Mon, Aug 14, 2017 at 12:24 AM, Wesley Stewart <wstewart3@gmail.com> wrote:
I was doing some testing and recently rebuilt my homelab using a Xeon-D based board. I did not have anything too important, so I thought this would be a good chance to test re-importing my backups and seeing how well it works.
I created a new export domain and copied all of my old VM's into this new export domain. But the problem is, the images are in a "Locked" state. The console tells me:
Aug 13, 2017 11:59:38 PM Failed to import Vm Clonezilla_Server_BACKUP_20170807_010018 to Data Center OVIRT-Datacenter, Cluster OVIRT-Cluster Aug 13, 2017 11:59:38 PM VDSM command DeleteImageGroupVDS failed: Image does not exist in domain: u'image=a5c8780e-3166-4801-b71a-1ef7d9b21783, domain=35cd8fab-4347-4201- bf4e-4dcbde19fb0f' Aug 13, 2017 11:59:37 PM VDSM OVIRT-Host command HSMGetAllTasksStatusesVDS failed: low level Image copy failed
This happens for all the VMs shown in the Export-Domain.
I also tried the unlock_entity.sh script, but I am having some postgres access issues:
unlock_entity.sh -r -t vm -i Clonezilla_Server -s localhost psql: FATAL: no PostgreSQL user name specified in startup packet FATAL: Cannot execute sql command: --file=./unlock_entity.sql
I thought I could just poke around the database by running:
psql -d engine -U postgres
But this also fails psql: FATAL: Peer authentication failed for user "postgres"
Was just hoping someone had some suggestions. I can't event delete this VM! Thanks!