cinder/doc/source/admin/blockstorage-volume-migration.rst
Andreas Jaeger 99ec31f53f Docs: Make links more robust
Some docs used external links which cannot be verified and thus we
easily might get broken links. Use internal links that Sphinx can verify.

Some additional updates:
* Update tox.ini to not publish the dirtrees.
* Update openstack mailing list to openstack-discuss
* Remove reference to not anymore existing 'OpenStack Configuration
  Reference'

Change-Id: I9a613fa682021fab7bbaba90b219adaa7d9384d3
2019-08-10 10:49:23 +02:00

9.8 KiB

Migrate volumes

OpenStack has the ability to migrate volumes between back ends which support its volume-type. Migrating a volume transparently moves its data from the current back end for the volume to a new one. This is an administrator function, and can be used for functions including storage evacuation (for maintenance or decommissioning), or manual optimizations (for example, performance, reliability, or cost).

These workflows are possible for a migration:

  1. If the storage can migrate the volume on its own, it is given the opportunity to do so. This allows the Block Storage driver to enable optimizations that the storage might be able to perform. If the back end is not able to perform the migration, the Block Storage uses one of two generic flows, as follows.

  2. If the volume is not attached, the Block Storage service creates a volume and copies the data from the original to the new volume.

    Note

    While most back ends support this function, not all do. See the driver documentation </configuration/block-storage/volume-drivers> for more details.

  3. If the volume is attached to a VM instance, the Block Storage creates a volume, and calls Compute to copy the data from the original to the new volume. Currently this is supported only by the Compute libvirt driver.

As an example, this scenario shows two LVM back ends and migrates an attached volume from one to the other. This scenario uses the third migration flow.

First, list the available back ends:

# cinder get-pools
+----------+----------------------------------------------------+
| Property |                       Value                        |
+----------+----------------------------------------------------+
|   name   |           server1@lvmstorage-1#lvmstorage-1        |
+----------+----------------------------------------------------+
+----------+----------------------------------------------------+
| Property |                      Value                         |
+----------+----------------------------------------------------+
|   name   |           server2@lvmstorage-2#lvmstorage-2        |
+----------+----------------------------------------------------+

Note

Block Storage API supports cinder get-pools since V2 version.

You can also get available back ends like following:

# cinder-manage host list
server1@lvmstorage-1    zone1
server2@lvmstorage-2    zone1

But it needs to add pool name in the end. For example, server1@lvmstorage-1#zone1.

Next, as the admin user, you can see the current status of the volume (replace the example ID with your own):

$ openstack volume show 6088f80a-f116-4331-ad48-9afb0dfb196c

+--------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
| Field                          | Value                                |
+--------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
| attachments                    | []                                   |
| availability_zone              | zone1                                |
| bootable                       | false                                |
| consistencygroup_id            | None                                 |
| created_at                     | 2013-09-01T14:53:22.000000           |
| description                    | test                                 |
| encrypted                      | False                                |
| id                             | 6088f80a-f116-4331-ad48-9afb0dfb196c |
| migration_status               | None                                 |
| multiattach                    | False                                |
| name                           | test                                 |
| os-vol-host-attr:host          | server1@lvmstorage-1#lvmstorage-1    |
| os-vol-mig-status-attr:migstat | None                                 |
| os-vol-mig-status-attr:name_id | None                                 |
| os-vol-tenant-attr:tenant_id   | d88310717a8e4ebcae84ed075f82c51e     |
| properties                     | readonly='False'                     |
| replication_status             | disabled                             |
| size                           | 1                                    |
| snapshot_id                    | None                                 |
| source_volid                   | None                                 |
| status                         | in-use                               |
| type                           | None                                 |
| updated_at                     | 2016-07-31T07:22:19.000000           |
| user_id                        | d8e5e5727f3a4ce1886ac8ecec058e83     |
+--------------------------------+--------------------------------------+

Note these attributes:

  • os-vol-host-attr:host - the volume's current back end.

  • os-vol-mig-status-attr:migstat - the status of this volume's migration (None means that a migration is not currently in progress).

  • os-vol-mig-status-attr:name_id - the volume ID that this volume's name on the back end is based on. Before a volume is ever migrated, its name on the back end storage may be based on the volume's ID (see the volume_name_template configuration parameter). For example, if volume_name_template is kept as the default value (volume-%s), your first LVM back end has a logical volume named volume-6088f80a-f116-4331-ad48-9afb0dfb196c. During the course of a migration, if you create a volume and copy over the data, the volume get the new name but keeps its original ID. This is exposed by the name_id attribute.

    Note

    If you plan to decommission a block storage node, you must stop the cinder volume service on the node after performing the migration.

    On nodes that run CentOS, Fedora, openSUSE, Red Hat Enterprise Linux, or SUSE Linux Enterprise, run:

    # service openstack-cinder-volume stop
    # chkconfig openstack-cinder-volume off

    On nodes that run Ubuntu or Debian, run:

    # service cinder-volume stop
    # chkconfig cinder-volume off

    Stopping the cinder volume service will prevent volumes from being allocated to the node.

Migrate this volume to the second LVM back end:

$ openstack volume migrate 6088f80a-f116-4331-ad48-9afb0dfb196c \
  --host server2@lvmstorage-2#lvmstorage-2

You can use the openstack volume show command to see the status of the migration. While migrating, the migstat attribute shows states such as migrating or completing. On error, migstat is set to None and the host attribute shows the original host. On success, in this example, the output looks like:

$ openstack volume show 6088f80a-f116-4331-ad48-9afb0dfb196c

+--------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
| Field                          | Value                                |
+--------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
| attachments                    | []                                   |
| availability_zone              | zone1                                |
| bootable                       | false                                |
| consistencygroup_id            | None                                 |
| created_at                     | 2013-09-01T14:53:22.000000           |
| description                    | test                                 |
| encrypted                      | False                                |
| id                             | 6088f80a-f116-4331-ad48-9afb0dfb196c |
| migration_status               | None                                 |
| multiattach                    | False                                |
| name                           | test                                 |
| os-vol-host-attr:host          | server2@lvmstorage-2#lvmstorage-2    |
| os-vol-mig-status-attr:migstat | completing                           |
| os-vol-mig-status-attr:name_id | None                                 |
| os-vol-tenant-attr:tenant_id   | d88310717a8e4ebcae84ed075f82c51e     |
| properties                     | readonly='False'                     |
| replication_status             | disabled                             |
| size                           | 1                                    |
| snapshot_id                    | None                                 |
| source_volid                   | None                                 |
| status                         | in-use                               |
| type                           | None                                 |
| updated_at                     | 2017-02-22T02:35:03.000000           |
| user_id                        | d8e5e5727f3a4ce1886ac8ecec058e83     |
+--------------------------------+--------------------------------------+

Note that migstat is None, host is the new host, and name_id holds the ID of the volume created by the migration. If you look at the second LVM back end, you find the logical volume volume-133d1f56-9ffc-4f57-8798-d5217d851862.

Note

The migration is not visible to non-admin users (for example, through the volume status). However, some operations are not allowed while a migration is taking place, such as attaching/detaching a volume and deleting a volume. If a user performs such an action during a migration, an error is returned.

Note

Migrating volumes that have snapshots are currently not allowed.