Ploop/readme
This document explains how to use user-space ploop
utility for typical
use-cases.
Warning: The commands below are low-level stuff. It's better to use vzctl which has all the features in place. |
Contents
Getting help
All user-space ploop management operations are available via "ploop
"
utility. Run it w/o args to get help:
# ploop
Run with a cmd as the only arg to get cmd-specific help, e.g.:
# ploop init
Load modules
Further ploop commands assume that all necessary modules are loaded:
# modprobe ploop # modprobe pfmt_ploop1 # modprobe pfmt_raw # modprobe pio_direct
It's not always required to load both pfmt_ploop1
(support of ploop1 format) and
pfmt_raw
(support of raw format). If we're going to use ploop1 image file,
loading pfmt_raw
can be omitted. If we're going to use raw image file and have no
plans to snapshot it, pfmt_ploop1
can be omitted.
Initialize image file
In-kernel ploop operates on image files of "raw
" or "ploop1
" format.
An image file should be created and initialized (entirely in user-space)
before asking in-kernel ploop to start using it.
To just create and initialize a ploop image file with a GPT partition table and an ext4 filesystem inside:
# ploop init -s 1g -t ext4 /ploop.image
where /ploop.image
is full path to new image file and 1g is block-device size
equal to 1GB. This command succeed only if the file /ploop.image
didn't
exist at the time of running "ploop init
".
Mount
Assuming that previous steps were done, the following command is used to "mount" ploop device over image file.
# ploop mount /ploop.image
Since this point, /dev/ploopXXXX
is operable. One can read/write any data from/to
it (e.g. with "dd"), manipulate partition table on it (with parted
, since ploop uses GUID Partition Table, or GPT), format it with mkfs.ext4
and mount it on some mount-point. In the other words, since
now /dev/ploop0
can be used as any other ordinary block device.
Snapshot
Let /dev/ploop0
be a ploop device running over /ploop.image
(i.e. step 5 was
done) and /ploop-delta.image
- some full path to non-existent file. Then the
command:
# ploop snapshot -d /dev/ploop0 /ploop-delta.image
will create empty "ploop1" image file and register it in kernel ploop
forming "snapshotted" configuration top_delta → base_delta
where base_delta
is /ploop.image
and top_delta
is /ploop-delta.image
.
Since now, all i/o targeted at /dev/ploop0
will change only top_delta
.
Actually, while performing snapshot operation in kernel, ploop re-open
base_delta
read-only. So, when "ploop snapshot
" is completed, it's quite safe,
for example, to backup base_delta
.
It's allowable to snapshot snapshotted configuration. Following example above, the command:
# ploop snapshot -d /dev/ploop0 /ploop-delta1.image
will form top_delta → delta → base_delta
configuration where:
top_delta := /ploop-delta1.image delta := /ploop-delta.image base_delta := /ploop.image.
All deltas in snapshotted configuration are enumerated in kernel ploop in
the natural order starting from 0 for base_delta
:
base_delta' number is 0 delta' number is 1 top_delta' number is 2.
This knowledge is useful for online merge below.
Merge
Merge operation implies copying all new data from an upper delta to a lower delta. In simplest case of delta2-->delta1 configuration, merge will copy new data from delta2 to delta1. In case of deltaN-->...-->delta1 configuration. merge will copy new data from <deltaN, ..., delta2> to delta1.
There are two types of merge: offline and online. "offline" means that we have a bunch of stand-alone image files w/o kernel ploop running over them. "online" means that we have kernel ploop running over them. It's OK to perform online merge concurrently with other i/o activity (i.e. no need to stop ploop device or freeze upper-layer apps).
Offline merge
ploop has no heruistic about determining raw/ploop1 format of image file. So, in case of offline merge, user should specify the format of base_delta explicitly. If it's ploop1, merge command looks like:
# ploop merge /ploop-delta.image /ploop.image
This will merge /ploop-delta.image into /ploop.image. More than one source delta can be specified:
# ploop merge /ploop-d2.image /ploop-d1.image /ploop-d.image /ploop.image
This will merge /ploop-d2.image, /ploop-d1.image and /ploop-d.image into
/ploop.image.
When merge completed, source deltas can be deleted because all data that
was present in them has been copied to destination delta.
For raw format, "-f raw" should be added as option. E.g.:
# ploop merge -f raw /ploop-d1.image /ploop.image
Online merge
In this case user should only specify ploop device and a range of deltas in the form of LEVEL1..LEVEL2 where LEVEL1 and LEVEL2 should be non-negative integers corresponding to in-kernel delta enumeration (see the end of 5th section above) and LEVEL1 must be lesser than LEVEL2. When merge completed, source deltas are deregistered from kernel ploop and can be deleted by user.
Let's consider simple snapshotted configuration as example:
# ploop mount -f ploop1 -d /dev/ploop0 /ploop.image # ploop snapshot -d /dev/ploop0 /ploop-delta.image # ploop snapshot -d /dev/ploop0 /ploop-delta1.image
In this configuration the command:
# ploop merge -d /dev/ploop0 -l 0..2
will merge /ploop-delta1.image and /ploop-delta.image into /ploop.image. Here /ploop-delta1.image and /ploop-delta.image are source deltas and can be deleted.
Alternatively, the command:
# ploop merge -d /dev/ploop0 -l 0..1
will merge /ploop-delta.image into /ploop.image. Here /ploop-delta.image is source delta and can be deleted.
The last example is:
# ploop merge -d /dev/ploop0 -l 1..2
It will merge /ploop-delta1.image into /ploop-delta.image. Here /ploop-delta1.image is source delta and can be deleted.
Migration support
Assuming that /dev/ploop0 is ploop device running over /ploop.image, /ploop1.image is the path to non-existent file and external_stop is some executable script or binary, the following command:
# ploop copy -s /dev/ploop0 -d /ploop1.image -F external_stop
will copy /home/ploop.image to /home/ploop1.image iteratively. external_stop should be an utility that completely freeze all i/o targeted at ploop device. For instance, container freeze.
From user view, the command above should be equivalent to "external_stop; cp /home/ploop.image /home/ploop1.image". The benefit of "ploop copy" is minimizing duration of freezed state: it will try to copy the most part of data before calling external_stop and only some (hopefully small) amount of data after external_stop.
It's also possible to split copy operation in two nodes:
node01# ploop copy -d /ploop1.image node02# ploop copy -s /dev/ploop0 -F external_stop
In this case "ploop copy" on node02 will write data to standard output in some special binary format and "ploop copy" on node01 will read data from standard input, parse that special format and store data in /home/ploop1.image ("-s" stands for "source", "-d" stands for "destination"). This should work if standard output of node02 and standard input of node01 are bound via pipe or socket connection.
Grow ploop device
"ploop grow" command is to extend image file as necessary (offline or online) and propagate new block-device size to linux kernel (in online case).
Offline grow
To grow image file offline, user should specify its format explicitly. The default is "ploop1" format:
# ploop grow -s 32g /ploop.image
will re-arrange "ploop1" image file /ploop.image to become 32GB size long.
For "raw" format, the command:
# ploop grow -s 32g -f raw /ploop.image
will do the same.
Online grow
Assuming that /dev/ploop0 is runnung ploop device, the command:
# ploop grow -s 32g -d /dev/ploop0
will re-arrange underlying image file, update internal kernel ploop structures and propagate changes to linux kernel making ploop device 32GB size long.
If user had ext4 formatted and mounted on /dev/ploop0, ext4 fs can be extended online (when "ploop grow" completed):
# resize2fs /dev/ploop0 32g
Ballooning
ploop doesn't support pure shrinking block-device size due to lack of online shrink support in ext4. As a workaround, "ballooning" technique is proposed. Ballooning operation consists of inflating special balloon file in user-space (the file will be invisible for ordinary users, e.g. inside container), loading fiemap info of inflated balloon to kernel, relocating blocks of image file from the tail to the space specified by fiemap info and truncating tail of image file.
Desired outcome is image file of smaller size. However, it's quite possible that inflated balloon file will span only blocks that were never touched before. They will look as "not allocated" space from kernel ploop view. In this case nothing will be relocated and nothing truncated.
So, if balloon operation succeeded, it's only guaranteed that user of ploop device won't be able to consume more space than initial block device size minus size of inflated balloon. On the other hand, if user of block device used a lot of space on it, then freed significant part of used space, balloon operation will result in significant truncate of image file.
To enable ballooning, ext4 residing on ploop device should be mounted with special "balloon_ino" option:
# mount -t ext4 -o balloon_ino=12 /dev/ploop0 /mnt_ploop
where 12 is inode number of balloon file as reported by "ls -i". (it's assumed that initially, e.g. while constructing container, someone mounted ext4 on ploop device w/o balloon_ino option, then created empty balloon file there, found out its inode number and saved it for the future use).
Currently, only online ballooning is supported. The following command performs this operation:
# ploop balloon change -s 1g -d /dev/ploop0 -m /mnt_ploop
where 1g is desired new size of balloon file, /dev/ploop0 is ploop block device, /mnt_ploop is mount-point where ext4 residing on /dev/ploop0 is mounted to.
If balloon file was empty, the command above simply inflates it to become 1GB size. If it was non-empty but smaller than 1GB, that command extends it to given size (1GB). If it was non-empty but larger that 1GB, that command truncates it down to given size. If it was exactly 1GB size, the command does nothing.
Along with "change" sub-command, "ploop balloon" supports a few auxiliary ones:
# ploop balloon show -m /mnt_ploop
will show current ploop balloon size.
# ploop balloon status -d /dev/ploop0 -m /mnt_ploop
will report current in-kernel status of maintenance like "merge in progress", "grow in progress", "ballooning started", etc. This is useful because on the one hand balloon operation can't be performed while merge or grow is in progress, and on the other hand previous "ploop balloon" could be killed by someone before its completion.
# ploop balloon clear -d /dev/ploop0 -m /mnt_ploop
will flush stale in-kernel "BALLOON" state of maintenance. This is useful if previous "ploop balloon" died early leaving in-kernel ploop locked.
# ploop balloon complete -d /dev/ploop0 -m /mnt_ploop
will complete previously interrupted balloon operation. An expectation is that user monitors exit status of ploop commands he/she runs in some way. If user issued "ploop balloon change" and it was killed in the middle, the user knows that it didn't complete with zero exit status. Then user should inquire current maintenance state with "ploop balloon status" command, and, if it reported "FBLOAD" or "RELOC", the user should use "ploop balloon complete" before proceeding with any other maintenance operations (snapshot, merge, grow, balloon).
# ploop balloon check -d /dev/ploop0 -m /mnt_ploop
will check whether existent balloon file was properly processed. This is useful if previous "ploop balloon" was interrupted, but "ploop balloon status" reports "OFF" or "BALLOON" maintenance state. In this case it's possible that balloon file was inflated but no further processing happened.
"ploop balloon check" reports total number of free blocks in existent balloon file. If it's not zero, the user should use the following command to repair balloon:
# ploop balloon repair -d /dev/ploop0 -m /mnt_ploop
This command does essentially the same as "ploop balloon change" but w/o inflating balloon.