Adds a new flag to VM metadata to allow setting the VM live migration
max downtime. This will enable very busy VMs that hang live migration to
have this value changed.
Major improvements to autobackup and backups, including additional
information/fields in the backup JSON itself, improved error handling,
and the ability to email reports of autobackups using a local sendmail
utility.
Adds additional information about failures, runtime, file sizes, etc. to
the JSON output of a VM backup.
This helps enable additional reporting and summary information for
autobackup runs.
This helps ensure an easier restore as the tar archive(s) can be sent
directly to the API via the normal process of image uploading, instead
of individual disks.
Solves two problems:
1. How match fuzziness was used was very inconsistent; make them all the
same, i.e. "if is_fuzzy and limit, apply .* to both sides".
2. Use re.fullmatch instead of re.match to ensure exact matching of the
regex to the value. Without fuzziness, this would sometimes cause
inconsistent behavior, for instance if a limit was non-fuzzy "vm",
expecting to match the actual "vm", but also matching "vm1" too.
Instead of requiring the VM to already be stopped, instead allow disable
state changes to perform a shutdown first. Also add a force option which
will do a hard stop instead of a shutdown.
References #148
When using the "state", "node", or "tag" arguments to a VM list, add
support for a "negate" flag to look for all VMs *not in* the state,
node, or tag state.
Ensures that a VM won't:
(a) Have provisioned more RAM than there is available on a given node.
Due to memory overprovisioning, this is simply a "is the VM memory count
more than the node count", and doesn't factor in free or used memory on
a node, total cluster usage, etc. So if a node has 64GB total RAM, the
VM limit is 64GB. It is up to an administrator to ensure sanity *below*
that value.
(b) Have provisioned more vCPUs than there are CPU cores on the node,
minus 2 to account for hypervisor/storage processes. Will ensure there
is no severe CPU contention caused by a single VM having more vCPUs than
there are actual execution threads available.
Closes#139
Adds a new API endpoint to support hot attach/detach of devices, and the
corresponding client-side logic to use this endpoint when doing VM
network/storage add/remove actions.
The live attach is now the default behaviour for these types of
additions and removals, and can be disabled if needed.
Closes#141
Add an additional protected class, limit manipulation to one at a time,
and ensure future flexibility. Also makes display consistent with other
VM elements.
Adds tags to schema (v3), to VM definition, adds function to modify
tags, adds function to get tags, and adds tags to VM data output.
Tags will enable more granular classification of VMs based either on
administrator configuration or from automated system events.
Prevents bad states where the VM is "removed" but some of its disks
remain due to e.g. stuck watchers.
Rearrange the sequence so it goes stop, delete disks, then delete VM,
and then return a failure if any of the disk(s) fail to remove, allowing
the task to be rerun after fixing the problem.
This helps parallelize the numerous Zookeeper calls a little bit, at
least within the bounds of the GIL, to improve performance when getting
a large list of VMs. The max_workers value is capped at 32 to avoid
causing too many threads during concurrent executions, but still
provides a noticeable speedup (on the order of 0.2-0.4 seconds with 75
VMs, scaling up further as counts grow).
This *was* valuable when passing a full UUID in, so go back to that.
Verify first that the limit string is an actual UUID, and then compare
against it if applicable.
I can see no possible reason to want to do limits against UUIDs, but
supporting that means match is not what one would expect since a random
UUID could match the limit. So only limit based on the name.
With many VMs this slows down linearly. Rework it a bit so there are
fewer calls to getInformationFromXML and so the processing could happen
in parallel at some point.
Trying to do this on the VMInstance side had problems because we can't
differentiate the 3 types of migration there. So, just update this in
the API side and hope everything goes well.
This introduces an edge bug: if a VM is using a macvtap SR-IOV device,
and then tries to migrate, and the migrate is aborted, the NIC lists
will be inconsistent.
When I revamp the VMInstance in the future, I should be able to correct
this, but for now we'll have to live with that edgecase.
Sets in the node daemon, returns via the API, and shows in the CLI,
information about the live VNC listen address and port for VNC-enabled
VMs.
Closes#115
Allow a VM to specify its migration type as a default choice. The valid
options are "default" (i.e. behave as now), "live" which forces a live
migration only, and "shutdown" which forces a shutdown migration only.
The new option is treated as a VM meta option and is set to default if
not found.
Use exclusive locks during API events which change VM state. This is
fairly critical to avoid potential duplicate updates. Only implemented
for these specifically required functions to avoid major performance
hits elsewhere.