[Users] so, what do you want next in oVirt?

Doron Fediuck dfediuck at redhat.com
Mon Sep 9 12:02:32 EDT 2013



----- Original Message -----
> From: "Itamar Heim" <iheim at redhat.com>
> To: suporte at logicworks.pt
> Cc: users at ovirt.org
> Sent: Monday, September 9, 2013 4:10:58 PM
> Subject: Re: [Users] so, what do you want next in oVirt?
> 
> On 09/09/2013 04:09 PM, suporte at logicworks.pt wrote:
> > Hi Doron,
> >
> > But first you have to install the engine, before the VM. So, the idea is
> > to make a backup and restore it to a VM?
> 
> there is a special flow to create the engine VM.
> there is a deep dive right now on this.

Hi Jose,
I hope you had a chance to join the session.
You can find the lides explaining the process here:
http://www.ovirt.org/OVirt_3.3_release_notes#Deep_dives

Doron

> 
> >
> > ------------------------------------------------------------------------
> > *From: *"Doron Fediuck" <dfediuck at redhat.com>
> > *To: *suporte at logicworks.pt
> > *Cc: *users at ovirt.org
> > *Sent: *Domingo, 8 de Setembro de 2013 23:06:20
> > *Subject: *Re: [Users] so, what do you want next in oVirt?
> >
> > Hi Jose,
> > the latter is available by hosted engine, which is a highly
> > available VM which will be migrated / restarted on a different
> > host if something goes wrong.
> >
> > ----- Original Message -----
> >  > From: suporte at logicworks.pt
> >  > To: users at ovirt.org
> >  > Sent: Friday, September 6, 2013 1:43:04 PM
> >  > Subject: Re: [Users] so, what do you want next in oVirt?
> >  >
> >  > Could be great o have on the Engine:
> >  > - An upload option for the ISO files
> >  > - A backup and restore option
> >  > - An high availability for the engine: install the engine on 2 platforms
> >  > (hardware?), than integrate them for synchronization
> >  >
> >  > Jose
> >  >
> >  >
> >  > From: "noc" <noc at nieuwland.nl>
> >  > Cc: users at ovirt.org
> >  > Sent: Sexta-feira, 6 de Setembro de 2013 10:28:09
> >  > Subject: Re: [Users] so, what do you want next in oVirt?
> >  >
> >  > On 6-9-2013 10:12, Itamar Heim wrote:
> >  > > On 09/05/2013 10:30 AM, noc wrote:
> >  > >>>> On 08/21/2013 12:11 PM, Itamar Heim wrote:
> >  > >>>>> On 08/21/2013 02:40 AM, Joop van de Wege wrote:
> >  > >>>>>>
> >  > >>>>>> What I would like to see in the ! next version is pxe boot of the
> >  > >>>>>> nodes.
> >  > >>>>>> Probably not easy to achieve because of dependency on dhcp.
> >  > >>>>>
> >  > >>>>> Hi Joop,
> >  > >>>>>
> >  > >>>>> can you please give a bit more information on the use case /
> > how you
> >  > >>>>> envision this?
> >  > >>>>>
> >  > >>>>> current thinking around bare metal provisioning of hosts is to
> > extend
> >  > >>>>> the functionality around the foreman provider for this, but you
> >  > >>>>> may
> >  > >>>>> have other suggestions?
> >  > >>>>
> >  > >>>> I think Joop means to be able to add hosts (nodes) to a cluster by
> >  > >>>> adding their MAC address to the dhcp list for PXE boot into
> > ovirt-node
> >  > >>>> and thus join the cluster. This would make it easy to add new
> > physical
> >  > >>>> nodes without any spinning disks or other local storage
> > requirements.
> >  > >>>
> >  > >>> we started adding foreman integration in 3.3:
> >  > >>> http://www.ovirt.org/Features/ForemanIntegration
> >  > >>>
> >  > >>> adding ohad and oved for their thoughts on this.
> >  > >>>
> >  > >>>>
> >  > >>>> I suppose this may not be easy with complex network connections
> > (bonds
> >  > >>>> on mgmt network, mgmt network on a tagged vlan, etc), but it
> > should be
> >  > >>>> possible if the management network interface is plain and physical.
> >  > >>>>
> >  > >>>> /Simon
> >  > >>>>
> >  > >>>> PS, Perhaps Joop can confirm this idea, we've talked about it IRL.
> >  > >>>> _______________________________________________
> >  > >>>> Users mailing list
> >  > >>>> Users at ovirt.org
> >  > >>>> http://lists.ovirt.org/mailman/listinfo/users
> >  > >>>
> >  > >> This isn't about provisioning with Foreman. Its about having the
> > compute
> >  > >> nodes NOT having any spinning disks. So the only way to start a
> > node is
> >  > >> to pxeboot it and then let it (re)connect with the engine. Then it
> > will
> >  > >> be identified by engine as either a new node or a reconnecting
> > node and
> >  > >> it will get its configuration from the engine. For reference:
> > thats how
> >  > >> VirtualIron works. It has a managment network, just like ovirt, and
> >  > >> on
> >  > >> that it runs a tftp and dhcp server. Nodes are plugged into the
> >  > >> managment network, without disk, and then pxe booted after which they
> >  > >> appear in the webui as new unconfigured nodes. You then can set
> > various
> >  > >> settings and upon rebooting the nodes will recieve these settings
> >  > >> because it is recognised by its mac address. The advantage of this
> >  > >> construct is that you can place a new server into a rack, cable it,
> >  > >> power on and go back to you office where you'll find the new node
> >  > >> waiting to be configured. No messing around with CDs to install an
> >  > >> OS,
> >  > >> not being in the datacenter for hours on end, just in and out.
> >  > >>
> >  > >> Yes, disks are cheap but they brake down, need maintenance, means
> >  > >> downtime and in general more admin time then when you don't have
> > them. (
> >  > >> its a shame to have a raid1 of 2 1Tb disk just to install an OS of
> > less
> >  > >> then 10G)
> >  > >
> >  > > just wondering, how do they prevent a rogue node/guest from
> >  > > masquerading as such a host, getting access/secrets/VMs to be launched
> >  > > on such an untrusted node (they could easily report a different mac
> >  > > address if the layer 2 isn't hardened against that)?
> >  > >
> >  > They would need physical access to your rack which ofcourse is locked,
> >  > you would need to powerdown/up which would trigger an alert, switch port
> >  > down/up would trigger an alert, so probably you're notified that
> >  > something not quite right is happening. I haven't gone through the
> >  > source to see if there is more then just the mac address check.
> >  >
> >  > > other than that, yes. we actually used to have this via the
> >  > > AutoApprovePatterns config option, which would have the engine approve
> >  > > a pending node as it registers (I admit i don't think anyone used this
> >  > > last several years, and it may be totally broken by now).
> >  > >
> >  > > please note this doesn't solve the need for a disk, just the
> >  > > auto-registration part (if it still works)
> >  > What I would like is to have the ovirt Node pxe booting and getting its
> >  > config from engine or autoregister. I know there is a script which
> >  > converts the iso into a huge pxeboot kernel but don't know how to solve
> >  > or if its solved the config part.
> >  >
> >  > @karli:
> >  > If you run your cluster in Memory Optimization=None then you won't need
> >  > swap. Have been doing that for years and haven't had a single problem
> >  > attributed to that. I just would like to have the choice, pxe boot the
> >  > node and know that you don't have swap. Run with disks if you really
> >  > need overprovisioning.
> >  >
> >  > Regards,
> >  >
> >  > Joop
> >  >
> >  > _______________________________________________
> >  > Users mailing list
> >  > Users at ovirt.org
> >  > http://lists.ovirt.org/mailman/listinfo/users
> >  >
> >  >
> >  > _______________________________________________
> >  > Users mailing list
> >  > Users at ovirt.org
> >  > http://lists.ovirt.org/mailman/listinfo/users
> >  >
> >
> >
> >
> > _______________________________________________
> > Users mailing list
> > Users at ovirt.org
> > http://lists.ovirt.org/mailman/listinfo/users
> >
> 
> _______________________________________________
> Users mailing list
> Users at ovirt.org
> http://lists.ovirt.org/mailman/listinfo/users
> 
> 
> 


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