Quoting "Craig Sanders" <[email protected]>
> On Fri, Apr 12, 2013 at 03:31:20PM +1000, Kevin wrote:
>> On Fri, Apr 12, 2013 at 3:17 PM, James Harper  
>> <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>> > My last remaining reservation on going ahead with some testing is is
>> > there an equivalent of clvm for zfs? Or is that the right  
>> approach for zfs?
>> > My main server cluster is:
>> >
>> > 2 machines each running 2 x 2TB disks with DRBD with the primary  
>> exporting the whole disk as an iSCSI volume
>> > 2 machines each importing the iSCSI volume running lvm (clvm) on  
>> top, and using the lv's as backing stores for xen VM's.
>
>> > How would this best be done using zfs?
>
> short answer: zfs doesn't do that.
>
> in theory you could export each disk individually with iscsi and build
> ZFS pools (two mirrored pools). if that actually worked, you'd have to
> do a lot of manual stuffing around to make sure that the pools were only
> in use on one machine at a time, and more drudgery to handle fail-over
> events. seems like a fragile PITA and not worth the bother, even if it
> could be made to work.

James, you want ZFS mirrored over the net as the backend for VM  
storage (virtual disks?)

In case you really want..

"Poor man's version" similar as Russell described (zfs send/receive)  
is used by me:

I am looking for running Jails and VirtualBoxes (well, the later is  
just one here..) and run zfs snapshot/send/receive to send all  
filesystems of the active Jails/VMs to the other side.

In case one machine is broken I bring them up on the "other side".

To mirror them without delay, you can create, one both sides, a volume  
on top of ZFS

(zfs create -V 5gb MyPool/MyVM),

export them over iscsi and mirror them.

The fail-over between Virtual Machines is a problem independent of the  
sharing on the file system layer.

A semaphore on the shared volume can be used for a cluster solution to  
manage it.

BTW: You can put any file system, including a clustered one, inside  
these ZFS volumes, and combine the benefits of ZFS volume management  
with the benefits of the filesystem "inside".

Regards
Peter

_______________________________________________
luv-main mailing list
[email protected]
http://lists.luv.asn.au/listinfo/luv-main

Reply via email to