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Dave Allan wrote:
On 03/17/2010 06:38 AM, Nicolas Greneche wrote:
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>
> Hi,
>
> Former user of Xen and newbie in kvm/qemu/libvirt stuff, I give it a try
> on my network ;-)
>
> I need to run a VM with iSCSI target attached.
>
> I did it this way :
>
> 1) Creation of iscsi pool (equa.xml) :
>
> <pool type="iscsi">
> <name>equalog</name>
> <source>
> <host name="10.10.0.1"/>
> <device
>
path="iqn.2001-05.com.equallogic:0-8a0906-4992c7f05-39c000000114b8fc-vglog"/>
>
> </source>
> <target>
> <path>/dev/disk/by-path</path>
> </target>
> </pool>
>
> This pool start smoothly (when open-iscsi started), no problems. An
> entry is created in /dev/disk/by-path/ related to iscsi target.
>
> 2) I flagged it autostart :
>
> root@sandi:~# virsh pool-autostart equalog
> Pool equalog marked as autostarted
>
> root@sandi:~# virsh pool-list
> Name State Autostart
> - -----------------------------------------
> equalog active yes
>
> 3) In my guest VM, I have following section :
>
> <disk type='block' device='disk'>
> <driver name='qemu'/>
> <source
>
dev='/dev/disk/by-path/ip-10.10.0.1:3260-iscsi-iqn.2001-05.com.equallogic:0-8a0906-4992c7f05-39c000000114b8fc-vglog-lun-0'/>
>
> <target dev='vdc' bus='virtio'/>
> <alias name='virtio2'/>
> <address type='pci' domain='0x0000' bus='0x00'
slot='0x06'
> function='0x0'/>
> </disk>
>
> When I start VM, iscsi target is availaible.
>
> The snag is that when I reboot the host, the pool is not automatically
> started (making it impossible to autostart VM relying on this iscsi
> volume).
>
> I verified that open-iscsi is started first. Startup script is localised
> in /etc/rcS.d which is prior to /etc/rc2.d (my default runlevel).
> Libvirtd is started in rc2.d and not mentionned in rcS.d.
>
> My questions are :
> - - Is this the correct way to attach iscsi volume to a guest ?
> - - Did I missed something to have iscsi pool autostart working at boot
> time ?
You're doing everything right, so it's odd that the pool isn't
autostarting. Does the pool autostart properly if you restart libvirtd
when the system is fully booted?
Dave
Hi Dave,
It's a very odd problem. Making network debugging with tcpdump makes me
see that my network stack doesn't receive "arp reply" related to my target.
If I add an ARP entry by hand in cache or a sleep just before libvirtd
start function in startup script it works like a charm.
Very odd, I asked debian package maintainers for help :
http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=574358
Regards,
- --
Nicolas Greneche - RSSI et Sysadmin
Centre de Ressources Informatiques (CRI)
Doctorant au sein du projet SDS -
www.sds-project.fr
Mail : nicolas.greneche_(at)_univ-orleans.fr
GPG :
http://pgp.mit.edu:11371/pks/lookup?op=get&search=0x5FEBD0EF
Universite d'Orleans Web :
http://blog.garnett.fr
Batiment 3IA - 2e etage Tel : 02 38 49 25 26
6 rue Leonard de Vinci
BP 6102 45061 ORLEANS Cedex 2
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