On Mon, May 15, 2017 at 10:52 PM, Arik Hadas <aha...@redhat.com> wrote:
> > > On Mon, May 15, 2017 at 8:05 PM, Richard W.M. Jones <rjo...@redhat.com> > wrote: > >> On Sun, May 14, 2017 at 04:56:56PM +0300, Arik Hadas wrote: >> > Hi everyone, >> > >> > We would like to share our plan for extending the currently provided >> > support for OVA files with: >> > 1. Support for uploading OVA. >> > 2. Support for exporting a VM/template as OVA. >> > 3. Support for importing OVA that was generated by oVirt (today, we only >> > support those that are VMware-compatible). >> > 4. Support for downloading OVA. >> > >> > This can be found on the feature page >> > <http://www.ovirt.org/develop/release-management/features/vi >> rt/enhance-import-export-with-ova/> >> > . >> > >> > Your feedback and cooperation will be highly appreciated. >> >> The plan as stated seems fine, but I have some reservations which I >> don't think are answered by the page: >> >> (1) How will oVirt know the difference between an OVA generated >> by oVirt and one generated by VMware (or indeed other sources)? >> A VMware OVF has an XML comment: >> >> <!--Generated by VMware ESX Server, [...] --> >> >> but not any official metadata that I could see. > > > So that's something that we have not decided on yet. > Indeed, we need some indication of the system that generated the OVA and > it makes sense to have it inside the OVF. I thought about a field that is > part of the VM configuration, like the "origin" field of VMs in > ovirt-engine. Having a comment like you mentioned is also an option. > > >> >> (By the way, I don't think importing via virt-v2v vs directly will be >> any quicker. The v2v conversion / device installation takes only a >> fraction of the time. Most of the time is consumed doing the format >> conversion from VMDK to qcow2. However you are correct that when you >> know that the source is oVirt/KVM, you should not run virt-v2v.) >> > > Note that the disks within the OVA will be of type qcow2. So not only that > no v2v conversion / device installation is needed, but also no format > conversion will be needed on the import and upload flows. > > >> >> (2) I think you're going to have a lot of fun generating OVAs which >> work on VMware. As Yaniv says, the devices aren't the same so you'd >> be having to do some virt-v2v -like driver installation / registry >> modification. Plus the OVF file is essentially a VMware data dump >> encoded as XML. OVF isn't a real standard. I bet there are a million >> strange corner cases. Even writing VMDK files is full of pitfalls. >> >> VMware has a reasonable V2V import tool (actually their P2V tooling is >> very decent). Of course it's proprietary, but then so is their >> hypervisor. Maybe oVirt can drive their tools? >> > > No no, that fun is not part of the plan :) > The OVAs we'll generate are supposed to contain: > 1. OVF - it should be similar to the one virt-v2v generates for oVirt > (that is similar to the one we use internally in oVirt for snapshots and > for backup within storage domains, i.e., OVF-stores). We will definitely > need some extensions, like an indication that the OVA was generated by > oVirt. We may make some tweaks here and there, like removing network > interfaces from the list of resources. But we already are generally aligned > with what the specification says about OVFs. > > 2. qcow2 disks - thus, no conversion (device installation) and no format > conversion will be needed (we may consider to convert them to raw later on, > since they are expected to be the base volumes of the disks, not sure it > worth the effort though). > I wonder if it's worth looking into several options when exporting: 1. Run virt-sysprep with 'harmless' operations such as 'abrt-data,backup-files,crash-data,tmp-files' > 2. Run virt-sparsify on the disks. 3. Convert to compressed qcow2. In most cases it certainly can have a significant saving (1:2 should be reasonable, but some can get 1:6 even) of disk space (and later, file transfer times, etc). If we are already converting, we can also convert from qcow2 to qcow2v3 (compat 0.1 to compat 1.1). Y. > I will add this to the feature page. > > We are aware to the fact that with this design, the OVAs could not be > directly consumed by others, like VMware. But this could make it easier for > them to make the needed conversion - they won't need to query the VM > configuration from oVirt and won't need to lookup the disks inside oVirt's > storage domains. Anyway, we assume that this conversion is done by other > tools. > > >> Rich. >> >> -- >> Richard Jones, Virtualization Group, Red Hat >> http://people.redhat.com/~rjones >> Read my programming and virtualization blog: http://rwmj.wordpress.com >> Fedora Windows cross-compiler. Compile Windows programs, test, and >> build Windows installers. Over 100 libraries supported. >> http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/MinGW >> > > > _______________________________________________ > Devel mailing list > Devel@ovirt.org > http://lists.ovirt.org/mailman/listinfo/devel >
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