In vCenter 5.5, once a volume is migrated the VMDKs are renamed to match the name of the VM.
Update volume path for every volume belonging to the VM to the corresponding new disk filename.
Conflicts:
plugins/hypervisors/vmware/src/com/cloud/hypervisor/vmware/resource/VmwareResource.java
plugins/hypervisors/vmware/src/org/apache/cloudstack/storage/motion/VmwareStorageMotionStrategy.java
In vCenter 5.5, once a volume is migrated the VMDKs are renamed to match the name of the VM.
If a volume has been renamed upon migration update its volumePath to that of the new disk filename.
Conflicts:
plugins/hypervisors/vmware/src/com/cloud/hypervisor/vmware/resource/VmwareResource.java
vmware-base/src/com/cloud/hypervisor/vmware/mo/VirtualMachineMO.java
With VirtIO enabled on KVM. FreeBSD 10 supports VirtIO for both the
network and the disks. This frees us from IDE and E1000 which should
also improve performance.
By default all network disks are in RAW format. Gluster works fine with
QCOW2 which has some advantages.
Disks are by default in QCOW2 format. It is possible to run into
a mismatch, where the disk is in QCOW2 format, but QEMU gets started
with format=raw. This causes the virtual machines to lockup on boot.
Failures to start a virtual machine can be verified by checking the log
of the virtual machine, and compare the output of 'qemu-img info'.
In /var/log/libvirt/qemu/<VM>.log find the URL for the drive:
-drive file=gluster+tcp://...,format=raw,..
Compare this with the 'qemu-img info' output of the same file, mounted
under /mnt/<pool-uuid>/<img-uuid>:
# qemu-img info /mnt/<pool-uuid>/<img-uuid>
...
file format: qcow2
...
This change makes passes the format when creating a disk located on RBD
(RAW only) and Gluster (QCOW2).
Signed-off-by: Niels de Vos <ndevos@redhat.com>
The support for Gluster as Primary Storage is mostly based on the
implementation for NFS. Like NFS, libvirt can address a Gluster environment
through the 'netfs' pool-type.
PrepareForMigrationCommand, so that destination hypervisor can
mount pool. This further exposed an issue for KVM where iso
was not getting cleaned up upon successful migration, fixed as well.
By default only the Integers between -128..127 are cached (unless overridden by java.lang.Integer.IntegerCache.high system property)
If the inbound or outbound values are higher, the reference comparison won't work.
Signed-off-by: Laszlo Hornyak <laszlo.hornyak@gmail.com>
- minor resource leak cleaned up
- cpu-speed reading method extracted
- test added
- logging added in case of exception
Signed-off-by: Laszlo Hornyak <laszlo.hornyak@gmail.com>