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[Xen-users] FW: Advice on HighAvailable/Failover Xen machines

To: <florian.heigl@xxxxxxxxx>, "Maximilian Wilhelm" <max@xxxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: [Xen-users] FW: Advice on HighAvailable/Failover Xen machines
From: "Nyers, Gabor" <Gabor.Nyers@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: Thu, 29 Nov 2007 10:41:27 -0000
Cc: xen-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
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Thread-topic: Advice on HighAvailable/Failover Xen machines
For some reason my below post haven't appeared on the list even after a day, so 
I'm re-sending it directly to the involved in the thread. 

Regards,
Gábor Nyers

-----Original Message-----
From: Nyers, Gabor 
Sent: woensdag 28 november 2007 13:18
To: 'xen-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx'
Subject: RE: Advice on HighAvailable/Failover Xen machines

Hi,

Based on my own experience with EVMS and Heartbeat together, I share Florian's 
assessment: EVMS can be a pain in the butt. But once you learn its quirks it 
does the job. I found multipathing one of the near-showstoppers with EVMS. It 
took a while to figure out the solution for different seemingly random 
problems: just let EVMS ignore all /dev/sd* devices and use only multipathed 
devs in /dev/mapper/* (same goes btw for LVM2 as well)

Depending on what you want to achieve, having a cluster aware volume manager is 
not a requisite for running highly available Xen domUs. As Florian pointed out, 
you can just put disk images on OCFS2 and run the domUs from there. This has 
also worked for me quite well.

Even the setup what you're trying, where each VM has its own logical volume, 
does not necessarily require cluster aware volume manager. That is, if your LV 
layout is fairly static, even with LVM2 your domUs will run just fine. Sure, if 
you add or change a volume, the other node won't see it immediately. With 
careful planning it can be done. I tried this and every time I let LVM2 rescan 
the volumes, it found out about the new layout. This might, however, not be the 
safest way to do it. On the other hand EVMS destroyed the layout on more than 
one occasion.

The option I finally decided on to be perhaps the most flexible, is where each 
domU also has its own dedicated LUN. On these LUNs I used old-school PC 
partition table. No LVs, so no need for cluster aware volume manager. It's more 
simple, more compartmentized and the trade-offs are something I could live 
with. One example for this is that you'll need more LUNs. But since it's a SAN, 
who cares if it's 3 LUNs or 30, right? (unless of course your specific storage 
system has limitations on the nr. of LUNs) Resizing filesystems is also more 
involved this way than with LVs. Btw: if you take my tip: don't put anything 
but OS related stuff on the domU's disk. Especially databases should always 
have their dedicated disks.

The Heartbeat resource agent for Xen does provide you with the automatic 
restart or fail-over of a domU. Another nice thing Heartbeat provides is that 
it's supports up to 16 nodes. (I've stuck with 4 btw.) 
You don't mention the distro that you're using, but if it's SLES10, Novell will 
provide you with enterprise grade support for any of the above configurations.

Hope this helps.

Regards,
Gábor Nyers

-----Original Message-----

Date: Wed, 28 Nov 2007 12:24:19 +0100
From: "Florian Heigl" <florian.heigl@xxxxxxxxx>
Subject: Re: [Xen-users] Advice on HighAvailable/Failover Xen machines
To: xen-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Message-ID:
        <77abe410711280324i14c7e35et8045605bdc346159@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1

Hi,

2007/11/28, Maximilian Wilhelm <max@xxxxxxxxxxx>:
> Hi!
>
> I want to accomplish the following setup:
>  Two (maybe leter more) Xen systems running on two machines with HBAs
>  inside connected to a SAN.
>
>  I would like to place the DomU block-devices on logical volumes on
>  top of a LUN of the SAN which is available at both (all) Dom0s.
>
> I read about the possibiliy to use EVMS as one solutions which could
> fullfil my needs.
>
> Is this a good idea?
> How could I do some kind of failover in case one Dom0 has gone?
> Can Xen detect this and move the affected DomUs automagically?
>
> Any hints how to set something like this up would be highly
> appreaciated.

I've played around a lot on this path.
With EMVS you can either use the cluster segment manager or the OCFS2 Plugin
with SAN Storage, either has it's advantages, both will nicely
integrate with Linux-HA / heartbeat.

EVMS also is greatly helpful for fully automated/scripted storage
setup etc which comes to mind for HA setups.

But, now for the downside:
EVMS is unfortunately quite dead, the OCFS2 plugin never made it into
mainline, the heartbeat integration needs patches, the BBR patches
need dm patches for the dom0 kernel, there is almost no irc support
left, the devs are.. well, i don't know where AND as it was designed
by IBM gurus it is really well thought through and perfectly
structured, but INCREDIBLY annoying to use!
Once you go into larger Xen setups you might have to handle 100s of
volumes and on occassion it might be manually - personally i think the
EVMS management is unbearable.

I still run my system on EVMS and i don't really see a good
alternative for a logical-volume based attempt (yes clvm exists but,
as always, can't mirror LVs in a feasible way)

for a new HA system i'd try to tie together opensharedroot(.org),
ocfs2 and the san, booting from ocfs2 root, with another volume(s) for
the domU images.
But that implies you don't use a JBOD on the san but higher end
(active-active) storage.

if your site has SDRF-ed EMC^2 Symmetrix that's no issue, otherwise it
might well turn into one.

Regards,
Florian


-- 
'Sie brauchen sich um Ihre Zukunft keine Gedanken zu machen

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