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xen-users
RE: [Xen-Users] How to clone a VM when it is running?
FWIW, I have taken an LVM snapshot of a running Windows VM, done
a dd out to a file on an NFS mount point of the snapshot, and restored the
resulting file inside an empty, but identically sized VM on another Xenserver
host without any issues. The Windows box basically reacts like you just cut
power. A checkdisk is the worst which has happened, and I always have
something I can use in the output file. I wish there were a way to generate an
XVA file from this output so that I could just import the snapshotted backup as
a normal Xen image.
Robert A. Wicks
ITC Engineer
desk: (404) 888-2428
mobile: (404) 606-4622
rwicks@xxxxxxxxxxx
From:
xen-users-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:xen-users-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Brian Krusic
Sent: Friday, March 20, 2009 12:40 PM
To: Nick Couchman
Cc: freddie weng; Xen-Users
Subject: Re: [Xen-Users] How to clone a VM when it is running?
Hi Nick,
I've experimented using LVMs and creating a snapshot volume
of the root partition where my vms live (/var/lib/xen/images).
You can then do whatever want with what's on the snapshot
volume. So for example. your virtual machine image is in a state in time
when the snapshot was taken.
Keep in mind that when you create a snapshot of VMware
instances, it pauses the VM before doing its thing.
When running popular cloning sw like Norton Ghost, etc...
the machines state is also fixed in time so I think you won't really be able to
get around the state-in-time/cloning thing.
On Mar 20, 2009, at 8:35 AM, Nick Couchman wrote:
Cloning
a VM while it is running isn't really a great idea. In order to maintain
filesystem consistency, at the time of the clone all filesystem activity must
be frozen and data needs to be flushed from the caches and buffers out to disk
devices. If order to do this while the VM is running, you have to
interact with the O/S of the VM to freeze filesystem transactions (XFS is the
only filesystem I've used that supports this), flush out the buffers and caches
("sync"), then clone the disk image, then unfreeze the filesystem.
A much easier option is to pause the domU temporarily ("xm pause
<domU>"), clone it, then unpause.
Why
is being able to clone while a domU is running so critical to you?
>>> On 3/20/2009 at 9:26 AM, freddie weng <freddieweng@xxxxxxxx> wrote:
Hi everybody,
I found that we can use virt-clone to clone a VM but only when that VM is
not running.
This is not useful most of the time.
Can we clone a VM even when it is running?
It's critical to my research, any idea is much appreciated!!!!
all the best,
Freddie
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