Hi Asai,

To answer your previous question - VM snapshots are inline in the qcow2 image, 
i.e. contained in the disk itself, and you need to use qemu-img convert to 
write this to a separate file. The following should point you in the right 
direction:

root@ref-trl-678-k-M7-dsonstebo-kvm2:~# virsh list
 Id    Name                           State
----------------------------------------------------
 1     s-1-VM                         running
 2     v-3-VM                         running
 4     i-2-4-VM                       running

root@ref-trl-678-k-M7-dsonstebo-kvm2:~# virsh snapshot-list 4
 Name                 Creation Time             State
------------------------------------------------------------
 i-2-4-VM_VS_20180824084100 2018-08-24 08:34:00 +0000 running

root@ref-trl-678-k-M7-dsonstebo-kvm2:~# virsh snapshot-info 4 --snapshotname  
i-2-4-VM_VS_20180824084100
Name:           i-2-4-VM_VS_20180824084100
Domain:         i-2-4-VM
Current:        yes
State:          running
Location:       internal
Parent:         -
Children:       0
Descendants:    0
Metadata:       yes

============

In the db:

> SELECT * FROM cloud.vm_snapshots

******************** 1. row *********************
                 id: 1
               uuid: 4ad297d6-ea70-418c-9df3-bf9ccde3eb8c
               name: i-2-4-VM_VS_20180824084100
       display_name: livesnap1
        description: 
              vm_id: 4
         account_id: 2
          domain_id: 1
service_offering_id: 1
   vm_snapshot_type: DiskAndMemory
              state: Ready
             parent: 
            current: 1
       update_count: 2
            updated: 2018-08-24 08:42:30
            created: 2018-08-24 08:41:00
            removed:


============

To write the above inline snapshot to disk you would do something like this:

qemu-img convert -f qcow2 -O qcow2 -s i-2-4-VM_VS_20180824084100 
/mnt/pathtoqcow2fileforVM /tmp/mycopiedsnapshot.qcow2



Regards,
Dag Sonstebo
Cloud Architect
ShapeBlue

On 24/08/2018, 02:13, "Ivan Kudryavtsev" <kudryavtsev...@bw-sw.com> wrote:

    Therea are API calls which enable creation of image snapshots from VM
    snapshot. I suppose it's the thing Simon is talking about. It doesn't help
    with full VM image backup (incl RAM) but it helps doing synchronous same
    timestamp backup across all VM volumes. Actually it's the result most
    persons require for backups.
    
    Also, take a look at:
    https://wiki.libvirt.org/page/Qemu_guest_agent
    It is a part of the strategy for proper backups.
    
    пт, 24 авг. 2018 г., 7:59 Asai <a...@globalchangemusic.org>:
    
    > This sounds like a great idea, except where can I find the VM snapshot in
    > the file system?  I’ve checked the database for some kind of indication,
    > and I’ve check primary and secondary storage to try to locate this 
snapshot
    > file but I can’t find it… Any insights on this?
    >
    > Thanks!
    >
    > Asai
    >
    >
    > > On Aug 23, 2018, at 2:25 PM, Simon Weller <swel...@ena.com.INVALID>
    > wrote:
    > >
    > > There are lots of ways you can implement a Business Continuity or DR
    > plan.
    > >
    > > Some folks implement a second region or zone in a different market and
    > build their applications or services to be resilient across different data
    > centers (and/or markets). This often involved various forms of data
    > replication (DB, file et al).
    > >
    > > If you rely on secondary storage for backups, the assumption here is
    > that it uses a different storage system than your primary storage and it
    > can be used for recovery if your primary storage was to fail.
    > >
    > >
    > > Now since the VM snapshot feature can be called by API and the resulting
    > QCOW2 file is written to primary storage, you could use a script to 
execute
    > the snapshot and then copy off the QCOW2 files somewhere else.
    > >
    > > You could also use something like the Veeam agent -
    > https://www.veeam.com/windows-linux-availability-agents.html and backup
    > your VMs to an offsite NFS mount.
    > >
    > >
    > > - Si
    > >
    > >
    > >
    > >
    > > ________________________________
    > > From: Asai <a...@globalchangemusic.org>
    > > Sent: Thursday, August 23, 2018 4:06 PM
    > > To: users@cloudstack.apache.org
    > > Subject: Re: KVM Live Snapshots
    > >
    > > So, I think this is kind of an elephant in the room.
    > >
    > > How do we get a standalone VM backup?  Or what is the best way to back
    > up Cloudstack?
    > >
    > > Right now we are making regular DB backups, and backing up secondary
    > storage (for volume snapshots).  But in case of disaster, how do we 
recover
    > this?
    > >
    > > Is there third party software available?
    > > Asai
    > >
    > >
    > >> On Aug 22, 2018, at 10:17 AM, Ivan Kudryavtsev <
    > kudryavtsev...@bw-sw.com> wrote:
    > >>
    > >> There is no way to run scheduled snapshots for whole vm, at least with
    > KVM.
    > >> I suppose the function is for adhoc only, especially as you may know
    > they
    > >> are not copied to secondary storage.
    > >>
    > >> чт, 23 авг. 2018 г., 0:10 Asai <a...@globalchangemusic.org>:
    > >>
    > >>> Great, thanks for that.
    > >>>
    > >>> So, is there a way then to make these whole VM snapshots recurring 
like
    > >>> recurring volume snapshots?
    > >>>
    > >>> What are best practices for recovering a volume snapshot?  e.g.
    > disaster
    > >>> recovery scenario?
    > >>>
    > >>> Asai
    > >>>
    > >>>
    > >>>
    > >>>
    > >
    >
    >
    


dag.sonst...@shapeblue.com 
www.shapeblue.com
Amadeus House, Floral Street, London  WC2E 9DPUK
@shapeblue
  
 

Reply via email to