Yes, I just gave an example case. If you want to use vms with a backup,
then you can just copy that vm or disk into another domain and make it as
backup domain as you do it in export domain.
In simple language, main aim of creating backup domain is just to use all
the features available in export domain without creating a dedicated export
domain.
Hope you understand now:)
On 2 Oct 2017 8:55 pm, "Pavel Gashev" <Pax(a)acronis.com> wrote:
Shubham,
I don’t really understand the process you described. If I need to backup
the whole datacenter, you say I have to turn off all VMs, and make them
non-runnable. It doesn’t look like a backing up. It looks like an
archiving. But what if I need to keep my VMs running?
*From: *shubham dubey <sdubey504(a)gmail.com>
*Date: *Monday, 2 October 2017 at 15:55
*To: *Charles Kozler <ckozleriii(a)gmail.com>
*Cc: *Pavel Gashev <Pax(a)acronis.com>, users <users(a)ovirt.org>, Maor
Lipchuk <mlipchuk(a)redhat.com>
*Subject: *Re: [ovirt-users] deprecating export domain?
Hi,
The backup storage domain is quite like export storage domain but with
easy usability.
Since you can change any data domain into backup domain any time, you not
need to create a dedicated
export storage domain for backup or disaster recovery purpose. Altough its
working is same as export sd.
The process of backup can be as simple as this:
1) turn off all the vms in your storage domain
2) select backup flag to convert that into backup domain.
Once the domain is used for backup, you cannot make any changes to its
vms, disk etc as mentioned by maor.
And yes, you can convert export sd to data domain using cli script but it
is not required anymore.
If in future export storage domain get deprecated, you not need to be
worry about that much since you can convert all your
export sd into data domain anytime and start using backup feature instead.
Regards,
Shubham
On Mon, Oct 2, 2017 at 6:04 PM, Charles Kozler <ckozleriii(a)gmail.com>
wrote:
Thank you for clearing this up for me everyone. My concern that something
like the export domain wasnt going to exist and it was just going to be
deprecated with no alternative. Glad to hear all the news of the SD
On Mon, Oct 2, 2017 at 8:31 AM, Pavel Gashev <Pax(a)acronis.com> wrote:
Maor,
Could you please clarify, what would be the process of making backup of a
running VM to an existing backup storage domain?
I’m asking because it looks like the process is going to be quite the same:
1. Clone VM from a snapshot
2. Move the cloned VM to a backup storage domain
An ability of choosing destination storage for cloned VMs would increase
backup efficiency. On the other hand, an ability of exporting VM from a
snapshot would increase the efficiency in the same way even without
creating new entity.
Indeed, Backup SDs would increase efficiency of disaster recovery. But the
same would be achieved by converting Export SDs to Data SDs using a small
CLI utility.
On 01/10/2017, 15:32, "users-bounces(a)ovirt.org on behalf of Maor Lipchuk"
<users-bounces(a)ovirt.org on behalf of mlipchuk(a)redhat.com> wrote:
On Sun, Oct 1, 2017 at 2:50 PM, Nir Soffer <nsoffer(a)redhat.com> wrote:
>
> Attaching and detaching data domain was not designed for backing up
vms.
> How would you use it for backup?
>
> How do you ensure that a backup clone of a vm is not started by
mistake,
> changing the backup contents?
That is a good question.
We recently introduced a new feature called "backup storage domain"
which you can mark the storage domain as backup storage domain.
That can guarantee that no VMs will run with disks/leases reside on
the storage domain.
The feature should already exist in oVirt 4.2 (despite a bug that
should be handled with this patch
https://gerrit.ovirt.org/#/c/81290/)
You can find more information on this here:
https://github.com/shubham0d/ovirt-site/blob/
41dcb0f1791d90d1ae0ac43cd34a399cfedf54d8/source/develop/
release-management/features/storage/backup-storage-domain.html.md
Basically the OVF that is being saved in the export domain should be
similar to the same one that is being saved in the OVF_STORE disk in
the storage domain.
If the user manages replication on that storage domain it can be
re-used for backup purposes by importing it to a setup.
Actually it is much more efficient to use a data storage domain than
to use the copy operation to/from the export storage domain.
>
> Nir
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