On Mon, Apr 27, 2020 at 20:58:19 +0200, Paul van der Vlis wrote:
Op 27-04-2020 om 10:41 schreef Peter Krempa:
> On Mon, Apr 27, 2020 at 10:13:37 +0200, Paul van der Vlis wrote:
>> A point is that I have to create disk(s) on the other side with
>> qemu-img, I did not found a way to do that automatically. My question
>
> We are able to pre-create the storage given that a full copy is
> requested (copy-storage-all, not copy-storage-inc) and the images reside
> in a location covered by a libvirt 'directory' storage pool at least on
> the destination of the migration.
Really interesting. I see an option "--migrate-disks" and I guess this
will do this. Something like:
virsh migrate --live --p2p --copy-storage-all --persistent \
--undefinesource --verbose ----migrate-disks vda \
$vm qemu+ssh://$other/system
Is there a way to simply migrate all writeable disks without specifying
them?
Yes. --copy-storage-all without actually using --migrate-disks. In the
end --migrate-disks even requires you to specify either --copy-storage-all
or --copy-storage-inc.
> Unfortunately we can't do it for incremental at this point.
So far I understand it, incremental means something like a
synchronisation like rsync does. So parts what are allready there, don't
have to be copied again. Please correct me when I am wrong.
If you have a backing chain, that means an overlay image on top of the
original base image e.g. a snapshot, then --copy-storage-inc copies only
the overlay image, not all data.
Obviously if you have only one/base image then everything is copied. So
if you meant to use a full copy, but got it just accidentally I suggest
you use --copy-storage-all.
When the disks are not there at the other side, an incremental
backup
would be the same as a full copy.
No, that is not entirely so. This unfortunately has to do with external
snapshots and it's most probably not documented clear enough.
>> was what would happen when I would create a bigger disk there then the
>> original one.
>
> I'm not sure now whether the new size will be picked up, but nothing
> should break, so you can give it a try. Certainly a shutdown and start
> of the VM will fix it if it's not picked up or a blockresize.
Again thanks for your help!
With regards,
Paul
--
Paul van der Vlis Linux systeembeheer Groningen
https://www.vandervlis.nl/