Anaconda and Kickstart are dangerous in FC environments and have been known
to wipe all kinds of data if zoning wasn't properly done prior to os
deployment to new hosts.
Nothing to do with oVirt, it's a common mistake people make at least once
before they step on this specific rake.
On Jun 21, 2015 2:09 PM, "Nathanaël Blanchet" <blanchet(a)abes.fr> wrote:
In a traditional installation of an ovirt host, it seems that
provisionning the OS is the first step before talking about vdsm. I didn't
go further, the problem is that this host saw the production LUN and the
kickstart took all the lun into the same VG with a XFS format.
Yes it is an error from myself for not having dissociated the lun.
Yes it is an error from myself for not having taken care of having
snapshot lun level backup.
But now what should I do?
My idea was to use pvreduce to unlabel the LUN, and then using the
/etc/lvm/backup/lun for recovering physical volume metadata on that lun (
http://www.tldp.org/HOWTO/LVM-HOWTO/recovermetadata.html)
Le 21/06/2015 12:02, mots a écrit :
> Let me get this straight:
>
> You added a new host and instead of letting VDSM manage the VM storage
> you added it manually, completely independent from oVirt, during an
> unattended installation of the host OS? In a production environment?
>
> Why?
> -----Ursprüngliche Nachricht-----
>
>> Von:Nathanaël Blanchet <blanchet(a)abes.fr>
>> Gesendet: Fre 19 Juni 2015 14:09
>> An: users(a)ovirt.org
>> Betreff: [ovirt-users] disaster recovery
>>
>> Hello all,
>>
>> Here is what can happen as a nightmare for a sysadmin:
>>
>> I installed a new host to my pool of pre existing ovirt hosts with a
>> kickstart file and a default partitionning. I used to do this with vms
>> that usually get one local disk.
>> But..
>> This time this host was attached to several existing ovirt (production)
>> lun and anaconda gathered all existing disk (local and lun) into the
>> same VG (lv_home) et formatted them with XFS....
>> In the webadmin, the domain storage became unvailaible, vms were still
>> up (thankgoodness), but it was impossible to interact with them. If I
>> stopped them, it was impossible to reboot them. If I launch lvs command,
>> some hosts can still see the ovirt LV, but other see only the lv_home
>> while /dev/[idofvms] are still present.
>> So it was my chance that vms were still present, and I began to export
>> them with a tar at file system level so as to import them in a new
>> domain storage.
>>
>> It seems that data are still present because the vms are still running.
>> So my question is really : instead of this difficult export step, is
>> there a way to recover the initial format of the ovirt lun so as to make
>> the lvm index come back on the disk?
>>
>> Any help or disaster experience would be much appreciated.
>>
>> --
>> Nathanaël Blanchet
>>
>> Supervision réseau
>> Pôle Infrastrutures Informatiques
>> 227 avenue Professeur-Jean-Louis-Viala
>> 34193 MONTPELLIER CEDEX 5
>> Tél. 33 (0)4 67 54 84 55
>> Fax 33 (0)4 67 54 84 14
>> blanchet(a)abes.fr
>>
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