* Daniel P. Berrange (berrange(a)redhat.com) wrote:
On Tue, May 19, 2015 at 10:15:17AM -0400, Laine Stump wrote:
> On 05/19/2015 05:07 AM, Michael S. Tsirkin wrote:
> > On Wed, Apr 22, 2015 at 10:23:04AM +0100, Daniel P. Berrange wrote:
> >> On Fri, Apr 17, 2015 at 04:53:02PM +0800, Chen Fan wrote:
> >>> backgrond:
> >>> Live migration is one of the most important features of virtualization
technology.
> >>> With regard to recent virtualization techniques, performance of network
I/O is critical.
> >>> Current network I/O virtualization (e.g. Para-virtualized I/O, VMDq)
has a significant
> >>> performance gap with native network I/O. Pass-through network devices
have near
> >>> native performance, however, they have thus far prevented live
migration. No existing
> >>> methods solve the problem of live migration with pass-through devices
perfectly.
> >>>
> >>> There was an idea to solve the problem in website:
> >>>
https://www.kernel.org/doc/ols/2008/ols2008v2-pages-261-267.pdf
> >>> Please refer to above document for detailed information.
> >>>
> >>> So I think this problem maybe could be solved by using the combination
of existing
> >>> technology. and the following steps are we considering to implement:
> >>>
> >>> - before boot VM, we anticipate to specify two NICs for creating
bonding device
> >>> (one plugged and one virtual NIC) in XML. here we can specify the
NIC's mac addresses
> >>> in XML, which could facilitate qemu-guest-agent to find the network
interfaces in guest.
> >>>
> >>> - when qemu-guest-agent startup in guest it would send a notification
to libvirt,
> >>> then libvirt will call the previous registered initialize callbacks.
so through
> >>> the callback functions, we can create the bonding device according
to the XML
> >>> configuration. and here we use netcf tool which can facilitate to
create bonding device
> >>> easily.
> >> I'm not really clear on why libvirt/guest agent needs to be involved in
this.
> >> I think configuration of networking is really something that must be left
to
> >> the guest OS admin to control. I don't think the guest agent should be
trying
> >> to reconfigure guest networking itself, as that is inevitably going to
conflict
> >> with configuration attempted by things in the guest like NetworkManager or
> >> systemd-networkd.
> > There should not be a conflict.
> > guest agent should just give NM the information, and have NM do
> > the right thing.
>
> That assumes the guest will have NM running. Unless you want to severely
> limit the scope of usefulness, you also need to handle systems that have
> NM disabled, and among those the different styles of system network
> config. It gets messy very fast.
Also OpenStack already has a way to pass guest information about the
required network setup, via cloud-init, so it would not be interested
in any thing that used the QEMU guest agent to configure network
manager. Which is really just another example of why this does not
belong anywhere in libvirt or lower. The decision to use NM is a
policy decision that will always be wrong for a non-negligble set
of use cases and as such does not belong in libvirt or QEMU. It is
the job of higher level apps to make that kind of policy decision.
This is exactly my worry though; why should every higher level management
system have it's own way of communicating network config for hotpluggable
devices. You shoudln't need to reconfigure a VM to move it between them.
This just makes it hard to move it between management layers; there needs
to be some standardisation (or abstraction) of this; if libvirt isn't the place
to do it, then what is?
Dave
> > Users are actually asking for this functionality.
> >
> > Configuring everything manually is possible but error
> > prone.
>
> Yes, but attempting to do it automatically is also error prone (due to
> the myriad of different guest network config systems, even just within
> the seemingly narrow category of "Linux guests"). Pick your poison :-)
Also note I'm not debating the usefulness of the overall concept
or the need for automation. It simply doesn't belong in libvirt or
lower - it is a job for the higher level management applications to
define a policy for that fits in with the way they are managing the
virtual machines and the networking.
Regards,
Daniel
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