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xen-devel
Re: [Xen-devel] A migration framework for external devices
 
Hi Stefan,
Thanks for sending this note out.  Comments inlined.
Stefan Berger wrote:
 
Hello!
  As part of our off-list discussion on how to migrate the virtual TPM 
in support of virtual machine migration (live migration), we came up 
with the idea of having a migration framework that could be used for 
general migration of 'external devices' such as disk images and 
possibly serialized state of device models. I was going to look into 
this now and was wondering whether a framework like this is the right 
approach, particularly since it would exist next to XenD, which I 
believe is handling live migration ?
 I'm immediately wary of any framework for migration.  There's been talk 
(at least) of moving to a push/pull migration model which would avoid 
having to constantly listen for incoming migrations (and also add a bit 
of security too).  Any sort of framework seems like its just going to 
make those sort of changes harder.
 To be a bit clearer on the idea of the framework: It would consist of 
a deamon running on the target machine whose different plug-ins know 
how to handle the migration of different pieces of state information 
and know how to de-serialize them (which mere 'scp' would not do).
 Plug-ins concern me even more as it implies a stable interface.  There's 
a lot of churning going on in Xend right now and we're just not there 
yet.  Also, I'd like to see us move away from using a daemon for 
migration anyway.
 I'm assuming TPM migration requires bidirectional communication right?  
Is it static throughout the lifetime of the domain or does it change?  
How much state are we talking about migrating?
 I think simple patches that introduce TPM migration would be a 
preferable start.  If we end up having a lot of code that handles 
individual device migration than we can abstract it.
Regards,
Anthony Liguori
 Clients on the source machine would communicate with that daemon and 
transfer the state. The clients would have to be triggered by XenD 
after a partition is not scheduled anymore and be given the IP address 
of the target machine. Afterwards there needs to be some 
synchronization on resuming the scheduling on the target machine after 
all state has been deserialized.
  The plugable deamon itself would handle the communication sockets, a 
low-level protocol which the plugins and clients would use, have 
support for timing and protocol time-outs and provide threading. The 
plugins would have to do the rest of what's necessary to communicate 
with the infrastructure and the higher-level protocol shared with the 
clients.
  Comments?
  Stefan
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- Re: [Xen-devel] A migration framework for external devices, (continued)
 
 
Re: [Xen-devel] A migration framework for external devices,
Anthony Liguori <=
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