Go to file
Joshua Boniface 08cb16bfbc Revamp VM migration handling
This was very old code that was hard to follow and quite fragile, with
failures and infinite loops occurring fairly frequently. These changes
make the code more robust, including the addition of timeouts, some code
cleanup, and some improvements to the logical flow.

Also forces the libvirt migration to occur on the cluster network, which
couples to changes in the libvirtd listen (via pvc-ansible) and in
Daemon.py via the previous commit.
2019-06-25 22:23:48 -04:00
client-api Add new endpoints 2019-05-10 23:26:59 -04:00
client-cli Add hostname into confirmation 2019-06-21 15:54:54 -04:00
client-common Make conditionals more Pythonic 2019-06-25 12:36:37 -04:00
debian Remove disable of pvc-flush 2019-05-23 23:47:57 -04:00
docs Remove backup file 2019-05-30 21:59:56 -04:00
node-daemon Revamp VM migration handling 2019-06-25 22:23:48 -04:00
.file-header Add file header template 2018-09-10 01:19:08 -04:00
.gitignore Ignore swap files 2018-06-18 21:26:36 -04:00
.gitlab-ci.yml Massive rejigger into single daemon 2018-10-14 02:40:54 -04:00
LICENSE Remove licence blurb for python_dhcp_server 2018-10-14 16:29:39 -04:00
README.md Minor tweaks to README appearance 2019-03-14 20:37:47 -04:00
build-deb.sh Massive rejigger into single daemon 2018-10-14 02:40:54 -04:00
mkdocs.yml Add documentation to project 2019-03-14 20:23:39 -04:00
pvc_logo.svg A few more tweaks 2018-06-06 02:43:34 -04:00

README.md

PVC - The Parallel Virtual Cluster suite

Logo banner

Release Pipeline Status Documentation Status

PVC is a suite of Python 3 tools to manage virtualized clusters. It provides a fully-functional private cloud based on four key principles:

  1. Be Free Software Forever (or Bust)
  2. Be Opinionated and Efficient and Pick The Best Software
  3. Be Scalable and Redundant but Not Hyperscale
  4. Be Simple To Use, Configure, and Maintain

It is designed to be an administrator-friendly but extremely powerful and rich modern private cloud system, but without the feature bloat and complexity of tools like OpenStack. With PVC, an administrator can provision, manage, and update a cluster of dozens or more hypervisors running thousands of VMs using a simple CLI tool, HTTP API, or web interface. PVC is based entirely on Debian GNU/Linux and Free-and-Open-Source tools, providing the glue to bootstrap, provision and manage the cluster, then getting out of the administrators' way.

Your cloud, the best way; just add physical servers.

See the documentation here