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Virtuozzo Storage

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Virtuozzo Storage is a highly-available distributed storage (virtual SAN) with built-in replication and disaster recovery.

Virtuozzo Storage provides a storage virtualization platform on top of commodity hardware with locally attached hard drives and enables the unification of storage into a cluster in scenarios like virtualization with the help of virtual machines (VMs) and/or Containers (CTs). Pstorage ensures a fast live migration of VMs and CTs across hardware nodes, without the need to copy VM/CT data, and high availability as the storage becomes available remotely.

Contents

FeaturesEdit


The main Virtuozzo Storage features are listed below:

  • No special hardware requirements. Commodity hardware (SATA/SAS drives, 1Gbit+ Ethernet) can be used to create a storage.
  • Strong consistency semantics. This makes Pstorage suitable for iSCSI, VMs and CTs running on top of it (unlike object storage such as Amazon S3 or Swift).
  • Usable for Containers or exportable as iSCSI, NFS, S3 object storage
  • Built-in replication.
  • Automatic disaster recovery on hard drive or node failures.
  • High availability. Data remain accessible even in case of hard drive or node failures.
  • Optional SSD caching. SSD caches boost the overall performance in the cluster on write and read operations.
  • Data checksumming and scrubbing. Checksumming and scrubbing greatly enhance data reliability.
  • Grow on demand. More storage nodes can be added to the cluster to increase its disk space. A VM/CT image size is not limited by the size of any of the hard drives.
  • Scales to Petabytes
  • More uniform hardware performance and capacity utilization across the nodes, so overutilized nodes benefit from idle ones.
  • High performance - comparable to SAN.

See a brief video on YouTube.

Pstorage for OpenVZ limitationsEdit

  Warning:
  • Virtuozzo Storage is available as a TECHNOLOGY PREVIEW ONLY for OpenVZ users and can't be licensed for production.
  • To unlock for running in production, you should upgrade to a full Virtuozzo product (see below).
  • Maximum capacity limited for usage in technology preview mode is 100 GB of logical (usable by containers) disk space.
  • After hitting this limit, writers can get blocked w/o errors expecting for a limit to be extended, so please avoid hitting the limit (it's not a bug :) ).

ComponentsEdit

 

Any Virtuozzo Storage includes three components:

  • Metadata server (MDS). MDSs manage metadata, like file names, and keep control over how files are split into chunks and where the chunks are stored. They also track versions of chunks and ensure that the cluster has enough replicas. An MDS can be run in multiple instances to provide high availability. Besides, MDSs keep a global log of important events that happen in the cluster.
  • Chunk server (CS). A CS is a service responsible for storing real user data chunks and providing access to these data. A Pstorage cluster must have multiple instances of CSs for high availability.
  • Clients. Clients access a Virtuozzo Storage cluster by communicating with MDSs and CSs. Virtuozzo Containers and virtual machines can be run natively, i.e. directly from the Virtuozzo Storage cluster. An additional Virtuozzo Storage client - can be used to mount Virtuozzo Storage as a conventional file system (though Pstorage is not POSIX-compliant). Besides, Pstorage files can be mounted as a block device using the "ploop" feature and formatted as ext4 file system for other needs.

A recommended cluster setup includes from 3 to 5 MDS instances (allowing you to survive the loss of 1 or 2 of MDSs, respectively) and multiple CSs providing storage capacity.

SetupEdit

This HOWTO explains how to setup Virtuozzo Storage cluster and run OpenVZ containers stored there. Please note, that it's just a brief HOWTO for quick and easy evaluation of Virtuozzo Storage (configuring only 1x MDS and CS service) and is not a real manual. We highly recommend to consult Pstorage manual and man pages (such as pstorage, pstorage-make-cs, pstorage-make-mds etc.) as it contain a lot of important details on types of SSD drives supported, what are the recommended configurations, how to configure big clusters with failure domains and so on.

Installing Virtuozzo Storage softwareEdit

In order to install Pstorage RPM packages, log in as root to all the machines planned to be added to the cluster and perform the following actions.

Set up pstorage yum repository:

cat << EOF > /etc/yum.repos.d/pstorage.repo
[openvz-pstorage]
name=Virtuozzo Storage for OpenVZ
baseurl=http://download.openvz.org/pstorage/current
enabled=1
gpgcheck=0
EOF

Install needed packages:

yum install pstorage-metadata-server pstorage-chunk-server pstorage-client

Creating a clusterEdit

Every Pstorage cluster has a unique cluster name used for remote service discovery and during authorization. So choose a name for the cluster that will uniquely identify it among other clusters in your network and avoid reusing it on cluster recreate. A name may contain the characters a-z, A-Z, 0-9, dash (-), and underscore (_). Here we will use 'test_cluster' as a cluster name.

Create metadata servers (MDS)Edit

Log in to the computers you want to configure as a metadata server as root.

To create the cluster and the very first MDS type:

pstorage -c test_cluster make-mds -I -a 10.30.100.101 -r /pstorage/test_cluster-mds -p

This command creates new Virtuozzo Storage cluster and metadata server and configures the IP address of 10.30.100.101 for communication with this server (replace 10.30.100.101 with IP address of your own MDS server). MDS will store its data at location specified by -r option. The command will also ask you to enter the password for authentication in your cluster.

After you have created the MDS server, start the MDS management service (pstorage-mdsd) and configure it to start automatically when the server boots:

service pstorage-mdsd start
chkconfig pstorage-mdsd on

To create a 2nd and subsequent MDS services on other nodes, do the following:

1. Login to the node as root.

2. Setup cluster discovery. Normally, all the Pstorage components should be capable to discover each other on the network using multicast discovery (mDNS). This may not work however in Virtual Machines or if your network doesn't support multicasts. In this case you need to setup an MDS bootstrap list on the nodes manually. To do so create the bs.list file in the /etc/pstorage/clusters/<cluster_name> directory (make this directory if it does not exist) on the server you are configuring for the cluster and specify IP addresses and ports of the MDS servers in the cluster. For example to create a bootstrap list for above cluster created type:

echo "10.30.100.101:2510" >> /etc/pstorage/clusters/test_cluster/bs.list

Now future Pstorage services started on this machine will be able to discover other parties.

3. Authenticate the server in the cluster and add a new MDS to the cluster using similar to the above make-mds command w/o -I and -p options:

pstorage -c test_cluster auth-node
pstorage -c test_cluster make-mds -a 10.30.100.102 -r /pstorage/test_cluster-mds

Create a chunk server (CS)Edit

Log in to the computer you want to configure as a chunk server as root. Note, you may need to setup a bootstrap list as described above in case cluster auto-discovery doesn't work.

Authenticate the server in the cluster (skip this step if configured MDS or CS already on that server):

pstorage -c test_cluster auth-node

The command will ask you the password that you specified when setting up the first MDS server.

Create a CS:

pstorage -c test_cluster make-cs -r /pstorage/test_cluster-cs

This command will create a CS service and use the directory specified after -r option for CS data store. After you have created the chunk server, start is as a service (pstorage-csd) and configure it to start automatically when the machine boots:

service pstorage-csd start
chkconfig pstorage-csd on

Setting up a clientEdit

Log in to the computer you want to act as a client as root. Note, you may need to setup a bootstrap list as described above in case cluster auto-discovery doesn't work.

Authenticate the server in the cluster (skip this step if configured MDS or CS already on that server):

pstorage -c test_cluster auth-node

The command will ask you the password that you specified when setting up the first MDS server.

Create the directory to mount the Virtuozzo Storage cluster to and then mount it as a conventional file system:

mkdir -p /pcs
pstorage-mount -c test_cluster /pcs

You may want to add this mount to /etc/fstab to make it happen automatically on node reboot. Consult man pstorage-mount for more details.

Now you can access your data from all the client machines and ready to run containers!

Create a container running in the clusterEdit

Running a container over Pstrage is no different from any other local file system, so below example is just for the reference. Log in to the computer running OpenVZ and that you have configured to act as a client for the Virtuozzo Storage cluster.

Load OpenVZ ploop kernel modules if they aren't loaded yet:

modprobe ploop pfmt_ploop1 pio_kaio

Mount Pstorage cluster at /pcs as described above if not done yet. Create a folder on Pstorage for the containers:

mkdir -p /pcs/containers

Create a ploop-based container with CTID=101 (put your own template name below):

vzctl create 101 --layout ploop --ostemplate centos-6-x86_64 --private /pcs/containers/101

Now container with CTID=101 is ready for use and can be started on any Pstorage client node (note, however, that you need to register container first if want to run on node different from creator one):

vzctl start 101

In order to quickly relocate the container to another node (w/o data migration), just stop and unregister it on source node, then register and start on destination.

Upgrading to VirtuozzoEdit

Virtuozzo is a unique virtualization server platform combining both hypervisor and container-based virtualization together with innovative storage virtualization.

Please request more information on upgrading to Virtuozzo at the product page (look for Request Information button).

External linksEdit