Virtual cluster support¶
Documents Ganeti version 3.0
Introduction¶
This is a description of Ganeti’s support for virtual clusters introduced in version 2.7. The original design is described in a separate design document.
A virtual cluster consists of multiple virtual nodes (instances of Ganeti daemons) running on the same physical machine within one operating system. This way multiple (virtual) nodes can be simulated using a single machine. Virtual clusters can be run as a user without root privileges (see limitations).
While not implemented in the helper setup script at the time of this writing, virtual clusters can also be split over multiple physical machines, allowing for even more virtual nodes.
Limitations¶
Due to historical and practical design decisions virtual clusters have several limitations.
“fake” hypervisor only
Instances must be diskless or file-backed
Node information is the same over multiple virtual nodes (e.g. free memory)
If running as a user without root privileges, certain operations are not available; some operations are not useful even when running as root (e.g. powercycle)
OS definitions must be prepared for this setup
Setup is partially manual, especially when not running as root
Basics¶
Ganeti programs act as running on a virtual node if the environment
variables GANETI_ROOTDIR
and GANETI_HOSTNAME
are set. The former
must be an absolute path to a directory with the last component being
equal to the value of GANETI_HOSTNAME
, which contains the name of
the virtual node. The reason for this requirement is that one virtual
node must be able to compute an absolute path on another node for
copying files via SSH.
The whole content of GANETI_ROOTDIR
is the node directory, its
parent directory (without hostname) is the cluster directory.
Example for environment variables:
GANETI_ROOTDIR=/tmp/vcluster/node1.example.com
GANETI_HOSTNAME=node1.example.com
With this example the node directory is
/tmp/vcluster/node1.example.com
and the cluster directory
/tmp/vcluster
.
Setup¶
A script to configure virtual clusters is included with Ganeti as
tools/vcluster-setup
(usually installed as
/usr/lib/ganeti/tools/vcluster-setup
). Running it with the -h
option prints a usage description. The script creates all necessary
directories, configures network interfaces, adds or updates entries in
/etc/hosts
and generates a small number of helper scripts.
Use¶
Once the virtual cluster has been set up, the
cluster can be initialized. The instructions for doing so have been
printed by the vcluster-setup
script together with other useful
information, such as the list of virtual nodes. The commands printed
should be used to configure the list of enabled hypervisors and other
settings.
To run commands for a specific virtual node, the script named cmd
located in the node directory can be used. It takes a command as its
argument(s), sets the environment variables GANETI_ROOTDIR
and
GANETI_HOSTNAME
and then runs the command. Example:
# Let's create a cluster with node1 as its master node
$ cd /tmp/vcluster
$ node1.example.com/cmd gnt-cluster info
Cluster name: cluster.example.com
…
Master node: node1.example.com
…
# Configure cluster as per "vcluster-setup" script
$ node1.example.com/cmd gnt-cluster modify …
Scripts are provided in the cluster root directory to start, stop or
restart all daemons for all virtual nodes. These are named
start-all
, stop-all
and restart-all
. ganeti-watcher
can
be run for all virtual nodes using watcher-all
.
Adding an instance (assuming node1.example.com is the master node as per the example above):
$ node1.example.com/cmd gnt-instance add --os-size 1G \
--disk-template=file --os-type dummy -B memory=192 -I hail \
instance1.example.com