Testing oVirt...
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Backup report via email:
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Backup & Restore...
Fedora 28 vm (in my homelab), full backup was taken this afternoon:
I restored the vm to a different Fedora 28 host (at the co-lo)
On the left is the original vm (homelab), on the right is the "restored" vm (co-lo)
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Installing/testing oVirt 4.2.6:
- 3 node gluster (hyperconverged)
- this install is "nested" on a Fedora 28 host
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I've loosey been reading the posts on this but what is oVirt? Is it just a management thing for KVM or is it and KVM based hypervisor in it's self?
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I'm not using LV Cache, Compression or Dedupe, but it is available:
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@hobbit666 said in Testing oVirt...:
I've loosey been reading the posts on this but what is oVirt? Is it just a management thing for KVM or is it and KVM based hypervisor in it's self?
Think of it as the KVM equivalent of vmWare vSphere.
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So would you only use it in a "cluster" of servers?
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@hobbit666 said in Testing oVirt...:
So would you only use it in a "cluster" of servers?
You can do a single node or 3 nodes. (nodes aka hosts)
Those are your typical setups. -
oVirt single node gluster install
In the next release (which will 4.2.7), you'll be able to deploy a single node install from Cockpit UI.
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@fateknollogee That's awesome!
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@hobbit666 said in Testing oVirt...:
I've loosey been reading the posts on this but what is oVirt? Is it just a management thing for KVM or is it and KVM based hypervisor in it's self?
It's a cloud infrastructure software, I'd call it a cloud stack but there's a product named that... it's a competitor of OpenStack or Apache's CloudStack.
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@hobbit666 said in Testing oVirt...:
I've loosey been reading the posts on this but what is oVirt? Is it just a management thing for KVM or is it and KVM based hypervisor in it's self?
It's KVM management. It is not cloud, nor a hypervisor. Just a management console.
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@obsolesce said in Testing oVirt...:
@hobbit666 said in Testing oVirt...:
I've loosey been reading the posts on this but what is oVirt? Is it just a management thing for KVM or is it and KVM based hypervisor in it's self?
It's a cloud infrastructure software, I'd call it a cloud stack but there's a product named that... it's a competitor of OpenStack or Apache's CloudStack.
It's not a cloud, nor a stack. It's only one layer of a virtualization management "stack". The stacks include the storage, storage management, virtualization management, cloud components, etc. This is only the one piece. It lacks the pieces necessary to be cloud (autoprovisioning and API based access.)
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@scottalanmiller said in Testing oVirt...:
@obsolesce said in Testing oVirt...:
@hobbit666 said in Testing oVirt...:
I've loosey been reading the posts on this but what is oVirt? Is it just a management thing for KVM or is it and KVM based hypervisor in it's self?
It's a cloud infrastructure software, I'd call it a cloud stack but there's a product named that... it's a competitor of OpenStack or Apache's CloudStack.
It's not a cloud, nor a stack. It's only one layer of a virtualization management "stack". The stacks include the storage, storage management, virtualization management, cloud components, etc. This is only the one piece. It lacks the pieces necessary to be cloud (autoprovisioning and API based access.)
It does have API based access and just because autoprovisioning isn't ready to go out of the box, doesn't mean it can't. You can easily create scripts that autoprovision resources and for example, VPSs using the API.
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@scottalanmiller said in Testing oVirt...:
It's not a cloud, nor a stack. It's only one layer of a virtualization management "stack".
I'll agree to this.
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@obsolesce said in Testing oVirt...:
It does have API based access and just because autoprovisioning isn't ready to go out of the box, doesn't mean it can't. You can easily create scripts that autoprovision resources and for example, VPSs using the API.
I looked up the API and it looked like it was just for monitoring. They have a full provisioning API now?
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@obsolesce said in Testing oVirt...:
@scottalanmiller said in Testing oVirt...:
@obsolesce said in Testing oVirt...:
@hobbit666 said in Testing oVirt...:
I've loosey been reading the posts on this but what is oVirt? Is it just a management thing for KVM or is it and KVM based hypervisor in it's self?
It's a cloud infrastructure software, I'd call it a cloud stack but there's a product named that... it's a competitor of OpenStack or Apache's CloudStack.
It's not a cloud, nor a stack. It's only one layer of a virtualization management "stack". The stacks include the storage, storage management, virtualization management, cloud components, etc. This is only the one piece. It lacks the pieces necessary to be cloud (autoprovisioning and API based access.)
It does have API based access and just because autoprovisioning isn't ready to go out of the box, doesn't mean it can't. You can easily create scripts that autoprovision resources and for example, VPSs using the API.
Sure, all virtualization can be used to build cloud. But until you've built the cloud, what you have isn't cloud yet. Like Xen or KVM can be the power behind a cloud deployment. So can oVirt. But until the other pieces are there, they are still just building blocks, not the whole themselves.
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@scottalanmiller said in Testing oVirt...:
@obsolesce said in Testing oVirt...:
@scottalanmiller said in Testing oVirt...:
@obsolesce said in Testing oVirt...:
@hobbit666 said in Testing oVirt...:
I've loosey been reading the posts on this but what is oVirt? Is it just a management thing for KVM or is it and KVM based hypervisor in it's self?
It's a cloud infrastructure software, I'd call it a cloud stack but there's a product named that... it's a competitor of OpenStack or Apache's CloudStack.
It's not a cloud, nor a stack. It's only one layer of a virtualization management "stack". The stacks include the storage, storage management, virtualization management, cloud components, etc. This is only the one piece. It lacks the pieces necessary to be cloud (autoprovisioning and API based access.)
It does have API based access and just because autoprovisioning isn't ready to go out of the box, doesn't mean it can't. You can easily create scripts that autoprovision resources and for example, VPSs using the API.
Sure, all virtualization can be used to build cloud. But until you've built the cloud, what you have isn't cloud yet. Like Xen or KVM can be the power behind a cloud deployment. So can oVirt. But until the other pieces are there, they are still just building blocks, not the whole themselves.
I've only used and tested it in the context of being a cloud stack. Perhaps I'd be better off then with an actual cloud stack.
Thanks for the clarification.
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@obsolesce said in Testing oVirt...:
@scottalanmiller said in Testing oVirt...:
@obsolesce said in Testing oVirt...:
@scottalanmiller said in Testing oVirt...:
@obsolesce said in Testing oVirt...:
@hobbit666 said in Testing oVirt...:
I've loosey been reading the posts on this but what is oVirt? Is it just a management thing for KVM or is it and KVM based hypervisor in it's self?
It's a cloud infrastructure software, I'd call it a cloud stack but there's a product named that... it's a competitor of OpenStack or Apache's CloudStack.
It's not a cloud, nor a stack. It's only one layer of a virtualization management "stack". The stacks include the storage, storage management, virtualization management, cloud components, etc. This is only the one piece. It lacks the pieces necessary to be cloud (autoprovisioning and API based access.)
It does have API based access and just because autoprovisioning isn't ready to go out of the box, doesn't mean it can't. You can easily create scripts that autoprovision resources and for example, VPSs using the API.
Sure, all virtualization can be used to build cloud. But until you've built the cloud, what you have isn't cloud yet. Like Xen or KVM can be the power behind a cloud deployment. So can oVirt. But until the other pieces are there, they are still just building blocks, not the whole themselves.
I've only used and tested it in the context of being a cloud stack. Perhaps I'd be better off then with an actual cloud stack.
Thanks for the clarification.
What cloud system did you use it as a part of?
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@scottalanmiller said in Testing oVirt...:
@obsolesce said in Testing oVirt...:
It does have API based access and just because autoprovisioning isn't ready to go out of the box, doesn't mean it can't. You can easily create scripts that autoprovision resources and for example, VPSs using the API.
I looked up the API and it looked like it was just for monitoring. They have a full provisioning API now?
Yeah. I think they've had it for quite a while.