KVM Snapshot/Backup Script
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@Romo said in KVM Snapshot/Backup Script:
@stacksofplates yeah it must be my hardware, and indeed it is way faster than building by hand. I will still be jealous of your cloning times =).
Oh mine is nothing. Google can spin up thousands with Kubernetes in seconds. That's something to be jealous of.
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@stacksofplates said in KVM Snapshot/Backup Script:
@Romo said in KVM Snapshot/Backup Script:
@stacksofplates yeah it must be my hardware, and indeed it is way faster than building by hand. I will still be jealous of your cloning times =).
Oh mine is nothing. Google can spin up thousands with Kubernetes in seconds. That's something to be jealous of.
But they spin up containers don't they.
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@Romo said in KVM Snapshot/Backup Script:
@stacksofplates said in KVM Snapshot/Backup Script:
@Romo said in KVM Snapshot/Backup Script:
@stacksofplates yeah it must be my hardware, and indeed it is way faster than building by hand. I will still be jealous of your cloning times =).
Oh mine is nothing. Google can spin up thousands with Kubernetes in seconds. That's something to be jealous of.
But they spin up containers don't they.
True, good point but I would think it's relative. For example I could probably only spin up a handful in a few seconds. With their equipment they have to be able to spin up a ton of full VMs pretty quickly.
Plus there are the really trimmed down cloud versions of these OSs that spin up even faster.
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Thanks.
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Very nice!
Question:
I'm looking to setup a oVIRT engine + node setup. I think this script will help, as Ideally, i do not want to store my snapshots on the primary VM storage (iSCSI). Would rather have them be saved to a secondary storage location (NFS) location.
how would I modify your script to specify another storage location? I do not see the argument where to modify the snap location
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@ntoxicator I think he is grabbing a temp snapshot and then he tar.gz's the snap to the destination (e.g. an NFS mount). Then the snap is destroyed, otherwise you get worse and worse on performance.
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@matteo-nunziati said in KVM Snapshot/Backup Script:
@ntoxicator I think he is grabbing a temp snapshot and then he tar.gz's the snap to the destination (e.g. an NFS mount). Then the snap is destroyed, otherwise you get worse and worse on performance.
This is correct. The snapshot only lives long enough to copy the disk to the specified location and is then merged back into the original disk. Here's what it would look like using a disk called vm-test.qcow2
vm-test.qcow2 (base) < ---- vm-test-snap.qcow2 (overlay)
When the snapshot is taken, writes are directed to the overlay file (vm-test-snap.qcow2) and reads are done from the base (vm-test.qcow2). The script then copies the base image to whatever storage you want. Once it's copied, the overlay is blockcommitted to the base disk and the VM is pivoted back to the base disk. Then it just deletes the snapshot and the overlay file.
The snapshots shouldn't be very large at all. If there is nothing going on, the size could be kilobytes until it's blockcommitted.
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Thank you for clarification.
Once snap is stored / saved to location - can a full VM be recreated from that snap taken?
What if the original VM disk (.qcow2) was destroyed or lost (say failure). Could the VM be recreated from that said snap taken? (Restored from snap save location)
Essentially, Trying to find a way to completely backup KVM's within a production environment. As most snapshots will take larger space on the originating VM storage location. Have snaps offloaded to a NFS Share -- less expensive storage than the originating VM location
Snaps be stored for life on the NFS - and can restore from snapshot or roll-back. As would like to use these Snapshots for production within or for Xen Desktop....
As trying to find a production replacement for XenServer - due to storage virtual disk limitations. can only have 2TB vdisk assigned to any VM at any time. The storage repository or iSCSI LUN can be of any size, but am capp'd at 2TB for a VM disk...
its love at first sight for Xen Orchestra integration for XS (Snapshots, rolling/delta, etc) But the storage limitation kills me..
Sorry for gettint off topic! Just trying to show my proof of concept and need for said snapshot script.
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What if the original VM disk (.qcow2) was destroyed or lost (say failure). Could the VM be recreated from that said snap taken? (Restored from snap save location)
Snapshots would not work if the base file is written to or doesn't exist.
As @stacksofplates responded
the snapshot only lives long enough to copy the disk to the specified location and is then merged back into the original disk. Here's what it would look like using a disk called vm-test.qcow2.
Think of the process as cloning the original disk without shutting down the vm, the snapshot is just temporal ceases to exist once the original file is copied.
As most snapshots will take larger space on the originating VM storage location. Have snaps offloaded to a NFS Share -- less expensive storage than the originating VM location
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Right, we aren't copying the snapshot, we are copying the disk before the snapshot was taken. Then the snapshot is blockcommitted back into the original.
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@ntoxicator said in KVM Snapshot/Backup Script:
What if the original VM disk (.qcow2) was destroyed or lost (say failure). Could the VM be recreated from that said snap taken? (Restored from snap save location)
Yes, the saved disk (not the snapshot) can be copied back to the normal image directory and you can start the VM again.
This is assuming you are using images and not block storage. If you've just mounted the LUN through the hypervisor and are using block storage, this won't work. If you've mounted the LUN to a directory and created a file system on it to store images, then this will work.
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@ntoxicator when you grab a snapshot on libvirt/kvm is like if you grab a snapshot in LVM or ZFS: the snap is a (tempeorary) log of changes since it was taken (usually, but not necessarily a COW). it is used to allow the freeze of the data at a given time, infact the actual VM disk is not written anymore, but the snapshot is.
when you have done with the processing of the VM disk (whatever this working on is) you re-merge back the snapshot (you commit it) so that the actual VM disk gets all the write changes occurred between the snapshotting and the processing of the VM disk.
this ensures that the VM disk doesn't change while you backup it!
**note ** that this not implies that the disk is in a coherent state: it is simply frozen. the fact that the disk is correctly flushed and a proper write barrier is posed on it when snapshotted depends on other factors, which kvm honors via host/guest FS settings.
A brief about barriers is here. Here is a description of what to expect from a KVM/libvirt snapshot. -
@stacksofplates I know this is an old thread but I have a question about this script. Why are you backing up the snapshot? Shouldn't the base image be backed up instead right before the block commit? Therefore, if you want to roll back, you just copy the original base image out of your specified backup directory back over the broken base image and away you go.
Unless I don't understand how external snapshots work, I don't see the purpose holding onto a snapshot AFTER you have committed it. The base image before the commit is the "backup" that's needed.
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@biggen said in KVM Snapshot/Backup Script:
@stacksofplates I know this is an old thread but I have a question about this script. Why are you backing up the snapshot? Shouldn't the base image be backed up instead right before the block commit? Therefore, if you want to roll back, you just copy the original base image out of your specified backup directory back over the broken base image and away you go.
Unless I don't understand how external snapshots work, I don't see the purpose holding onto a snapshot AFTER you have committed it. The base image before the commit is the "backup" that's needed.
It's not copying the snapshot. This line tars up the disk image in wherever you define for your backup location and names it the snapshot name with the date.
tar -czvf $location/$snap-$today.tar.gz $diskPath
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@stacksofplates Ah ok. I misread the script last night when I was looking it over. I thought since it was renaming it “snapshot” that it wasn’t copying the base image. I missed the $diskpath variable at the top of the script. Thanks for clearing that up!
This is a handy little script. I ended up installing the QEMU guest agent in my VM so I’ll add the “—quiesce” switch to the backup command line. Thanks for sharing this!
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We are using this, by the way. Just deployed one this past week or so.