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author | Kashyap Chamarthy | 2017-07-17 12:52:04 +0200 |
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committer | Jeff Cody | 2017-07-18 06:11:01 +0200 |
commit | 7746cf8aab6887bf5d0e12d53506a4a374c6b5f4 (patch) | |
tree | c40745f9e502494d2b2d6247476a0fc4dc0bd0af /docs/interop | |
parent | Merge remote-tracking branch 'remotes/kraxel/tags/usb-20170717-pull-request' ... (diff) | |
download | qemu-7746cf8aab6887bf5d0e12d53506a4a374c6b5f4.tar.gz qemu-7746cf8aab6887bf5d0e12d53506a4a374c6b5f4.tar.xz qemu-7746cf8aab6887bf5d0e12d53506a4a374c6b5f4.zip |
bitmaps.md: Convert to rST; move it into 'interop' dir
This is part of the on-going effort to convert QEMU upstream
documentation syntax to reStructuredText (rST).
The conversion to rST was done using:
$ pandoc -f markdown -t rst bitmaps.md -o bitmaps.rst
Then, make a couple of small syntactical adjustments. While at it,
reword a statement to avoid ambiguity. Addressing the feedback from
this thread:
https://lists.nongnu.org/archive/html/qemu-devel/2017-06/msg05428.html
Signed-off-by: Kashyap Chamarthy <kchamart@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: John Snow <jsnow@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Message-id: 20170717105205.32639-2-kchamart@redhat.com
Signed-off-by: Jeff Cody <jcody@redhat.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'docs/interop')
-rw-r--r-- | docs/interop/bitmaps.rst | 555 |
1 files changed, 555 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/docs/interop/bitmaps.rst b/docs/interop/bitmaps.rst new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..7bcfe7f461 --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/interop/bitmaps.rst @@ -0,0 +1,555 @@ +.. + Copyright 2015 John Snow <jsnow@redhat.com> and Red Hat, Inc. + All rights reserved. + + This file is licensed via The FreeBSD Documentation License, the full + text of which is included at the end of this document. + +==================================== +Dirty Bitmaps and Incremental Backup +==================================== + +- Dirty Bitmaps are objects that track which data needs to be backed up + for the next incremental backup. + +- Dirty bitmaps can be created at any time and attached to any node + (not just complete drives). + +.. contents:: + +Dirty Bitmap Names +------------------ + +- A dirty bitmap's name is unique to the node, but bitmaps attached to + different nodes can share the same name. + +- Dirty bitmaps created for internal use by QEMU may be anonymous and + have no name, but any user-created bitmaps must have a name. There + can be any number of anonymous bitmaps per node. + +- The name of a user-created bitmap must not be empty (""). + +Bitmap Modes +------------ + +- A bitmap can be "frozen," which means that it is currently in-use by + a backup operation and cannot be deleted, renamed, written to, reset, + etc. + +- The normal operating mode for a bitmap is "active." + +Basic QMP Usage +--------------- + +Supported Commands +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +- ``block-dirty-bitmap-add`` +- ``block-dirty-bitmap-remove`` +- ``block-dirty-bitmap-clear`` + +Creation +~~~~~~~~ + +- To create a new bitmap, enabled, on the drive with id=drive0: + +.. code:: json + + { "execute": "block-dirty-bitmap-add", + "arguments": { + "node": "drive0", + "name": "bitmap0" + } + } + +- This bitmap will have a default granularity that matches the cluster + size of its associated drive, if available, clamped to between [4KiB, + 64KiB]. The current default for qcow2 is 64KiB. + +- To create a new bitmap that tracks changes in 32KiB segments: + +.. code:: json + + { "execute": "block-dirty-bitmap-add", + "arguments": { + "node": "drive0", + "name": "bitmap0", + "granularity": 32768 + } + } + +Deletion +~~~~~~~~ + +- Bitmaps that are frozen cannot be deleted. + +- Deleting the bitmap does not impact any other bitmaps attached to the + same node, nor does it affect any backups already created from this + node. + +- Because bitmaps are only unique to the node to which they are + attached, you must specify the node/drive name here, too. + +.. code:: json + + { "execute": "block-dirty-bitmap-remove", + "arguments": { + "node": "drive0", + "name": "bitmap0" + } + } + +Resetting +~~~~~~~~~ + +- Resetting a bitmap will clear all information it holds. + +- An incremental backup created from an empty bitmap will copy no data, + as if nothing has changed. + +.. code:: json + + { "execute": "block-dirty-bitmap-clear", + "arguments": { + "node": "drive0", + "name": "bitmap0" + } + } + +Transactions +------------ + +Justification +~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +Bitmaps can be safely modified when the VM is paused or halted by using +the basic QMP commands. For instance, you might perform the following +actions: + +1. Boot the VM in a paused state. +2. Create a full drive backup of drive0. +3. Create a new bitmap attached to drive0. +4. Resume execution of the VM. +5. Incremental backups are ready to be created. + +At this point, the bitmap and drive backup would be correctly in sync, +and incremental backups made from this point forward would be correctly +aligned to the full drive backup. + +This is not particularly useful if we decide we want to start +incremental backups after the VM has been running for a while, for which +we will need to perform actions such as the following: + +1. Boot the VM and begin execution. +2. Using a single transaction, perform the following operations: + + - Create ``bitmap0``. + - Create a full drive backup of ``drive0``. + +3. Incremental backups are now ready to be created. + +Supported Bitmap Transactions +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +- ``block-dirty-bitmap-add`` +- ``block-dirty-bitmap-clear`` + +The usages are identical to their respective QMP commands, but see below +for examples. + +Example: New Incremental Backup +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +As outlined in the justification, perhaps we want to create a new +incremental backup chain attached to a drive. + +.. code:: json + + { "execute": "transaction", + "arguments": { + "actions": [ + {"type": "block-dirty-bitmap-add", + "data": {"node": "drive0", "name": "bitmap0"} }, + {"type": "drive-backup", + "data": {"device": "drive0", "target": "/path/to/full_backup.img", + "sync": "full", "format": "qcow2"} } + ] + } + } + +Example: New Incremental Backup Anchor Point +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +Maybe we just want to create a new full backup with an existing bitmap +and want to reset the bitmap to track the new chain. + +.. code:: json + + { "execute": "transaction", + "arguments": { + "actions": [ + {"type": "block-dirty-bitmap-clear", + "data": {"node": "drive0", "name": "bitmap0"} }, + {"type": "drive-backup", + "data": {"device": "drive0", "target": "/path/to/new_full_backup.img", + "sync": "full", "format": "qcow2"} } + ] + } + } + +Incremental Backups +------------------- + +The star of the show. + +**Nota Bene!** Only incremental backups of entire drives are supported +for now. So despite the fact that you can attach a bitmap to any +arbitrary node, they are only currently useful when attached to the root +node. This is because drive-backup only supports drives/devices instead +of arbitrary nodes. + +Example: First Incremental Backup +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +1. Create a full backup and sync it to the dirty bitmap, as in the + transactional examples above; or with the VM offline, manually create + a full copy and then create a new bitmap before the VM begins + execution. + + - Let's assume the full backup is named ``full_backup.img``. + - Let's assume the bitmap you created is ``bitmap0`` attached to + ``drive0``. + +2. Create a destination image for the incremental backup that utilizes + the full backup as a backing image. + + - Let's assume the new incremental image is named + ``incremental.0.img``. + + .. code:: bash + + $ qemu-img create -f qcow2 incremental.0.img -b full_backup.img -F qcow2 + +3. Issue the incremental backup command: + + .. code:: json + + { "execute": "drive-backup", + "arguments": { + "device": "drive0", + "bitmap": "bitmap0", + "target": "incremental.0.img", + "format": "qcow2", + "sync": "incremental", + "mode": "existing" + } + } + +Example: Second Incremental Backup +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +1. Create a new destination image for the incremental backup that points + to the previous one, e.g.: ``incremental.1.img`` + + .. code:: bash + + $ qemu-img create -f qcow2 incremental.1.img -b incremental.0.img -F qcow2 + +2. Issue a new incremental backup command. The only difference here is + that we have changed the target image below. + + .. code:: json + + { "execute": "drive-backup", + "arguments": { + "device": "drive0", + "bitmap": "bitmap0", + "target": "incremental.1.img", + "format": "qcow2", + "sync": "incremental", + "mode": "existing" + } + } + +Errors +------ + +- In the event of an error that occurs after a backup job is + successfully launched, either by a direct QMP command or a QMP + transaction, the user will receive a ``BLOCK_JOB_COMPLETE`` event with + a failure message, accompanied by a ``BLOCK_JOB_ERROR`` event. + +- In the case of an event being cancelled, the user will receive a + ``BLOCK_JOB_CANCELLED`` event instead of a pair of COMPLETE and ERROR + events. + +- In either case, the incremental backup data contained within the + bitmap is safely rolled back, and the data within the bitmap is not + lost. The image file created for the failed attempt can be safely + deleted. + +- Once the underlying problem is fixed (e.g. more storage space is + freed up), you can simply retry the incremental backup command with + the same bitmap. + +Example +~~~~~~~ + +1. Create a target image: + + .. code:: bash + + $ qemu-img create -f qcow2 incremental.0.img -b full_backup.img -F qcow2 + +2. Attempt to create an incremental backup via QMP: + + .. code:: json + + { "execute": "drive-backup", + "arguments": { + "device": "drive0", + "bitmap": "bitmap0", + "target": "incremental.0.img", + "format": "qcow2", + "sync": "incremental", + "mode": "existing" + } + } + +3. Receive an event notifying us of failure: + + .. code:: json + + { "timestamp": { "seconds": 1424709442, "microseconds": 844524 }, + "data": { "speed": 0, "offset": 0, "len": 67108864, + "error": "No space left on device", + "device": "drive1", "type": "backup" }, + "event": "BLOCK_JOB_COMPLETED" } + +4. Delete the failed incremental, and re-create the image. + + .. code:: bash + + $ rm incremental.0.img + $ qemu-img create -f qcow2 incremental.0.img -b full_backup.img -F qcow2 + +5. Retry the command after fixing the underlying problem, such as + freeing up space on the backup volume: + + .. code:: json + + { "execute": "drive-backup", + "arguments": { + "device": "drive0", + "bitmap": "bitmap0", + "target": "incremental.0.img", + "format": "qcow2", + "sync": "incremental", + "mode": "existing" + } + } + +6. Receive confirmation that the job completed successfully: + + .. code:: json + + { "timestamp": { "seconds": 1424709668, "microseconds": 526525 }, + "data": { "device": "drive1", "type": "backup", + "speed": 0, "len": 67108864, "offset": 67108864}, + "event": "BLOCK_JOB_COMPLETED" } + +Partial Transactional Failures +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +- Sometimes, a transaction will succeed in launching and return + success, but then later the backup jobs themselves may fail. It is + possible that a management application may have to deal with a + partial backup failure after a successful transaction. + +- If multiple backup jobs are specified in a single transaction, when + one of them fails, it will not interact with the other backup jobs in + any way. + +- The job(s) that succeeded will clear the dirty bitmap associated with + the operation, but the job(s) that failed will not. It is not "safe" + to delete any incremental backups that were created successfully in + this scenario, even though others failed. + +Example +^^^^^^^ + +- QMP example highlighting two backup jobs: + + .. code:: json + + { "execute": "transaction", + "arguments": { + "actions": [ + { "type": "drive-backup", + "data": { "device": "drive0", "bitmap": "bitmap0", + "format": "qcow2", "mode": "existing", + "sync": "incremental", "target": "d0-incr-1.qcow2" } }, + { "type": "drive-backup", + "data": { "device": "drive1", "bitmap": "bitmap1", + "format": "qcow2", "mode": "existing", + "sync": "incremental", "target": "d1-incr-1.qcow2" } }, + ] + } + } + +- QMP example response, highlighting one success and one failure: + + - Acknowledgement that the Transaction was accepted and jobs were + launched: + + .. code:: json + + { "return": {} } + + - Later, QEMU sends notice that the first job was completed: + + .. code:: json + + { "timestamp": { "seconds": 1447192343, "microseconds": 615698 }, + "data": { "device": "drive0", "type": "backup", + "speed": 0, "len": 67108864, "offset": 67108864 }, + "event": "BLOCK_JOB_COMPLETED" + } + + - Later yet, QEMU sends notice that the second job has failed: + + .. code:: json + + { "timestamp": { "seconds": 1447192399, "microseconds": 683015 }, + "data": { "device": "drive1", "action": "report", + "operation": "read" }, + "event": "BLOCK_JOB_ERROR" } + + .. code:: json + + { "timestamp": { "seconds": 1447192399, "microseconds": + 685853 }, "data": { "speed": 0, "offset": 0, "len": 67108864, + "error": "Input/output error", "device": "drive1", "type": + "backup" }, "event": "BLOCK_JOB_COMPLETED" } + +- In the above example, ``d0-incr-1.qcow2`` is valid and must be kept, + but ``d1-incr-1.qcow2`` is invalid and should be deleted. If a VM-wide + incremental backup of all drives at a point-in-time is to be made, + new backups for both drives will need to be made, taking into account + that a new incremental backup for drive0 needs to be based on top of + ``d0-incr-1.qcow2``. + +Grouped Completion Mode +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +- While jobs launched by transactions normally complete or fail on + their own, it is possible to instruct them to complete or fail + together as a group. + +- QMP transactions take an optional properties structure that can + affect the semantics of the transaction. + +- The "completion-mode" transaction property can be either "individual" + which is the default, legacy behavior described above, or "grouped," + a new behavior detailed below. + +- Delayed Completion: In grouped completion mode, no jobs will report + success until all jobs are ready to report success. + +- Grouped failure: If any job fails in grouped completion mode, all + remaining jobs will be cancelled. Any incremental backups will + restore their dirty bitmap objects as if no backup command was ever + issued. + + - Regardless of if QEMU reports a particular incremental backup job + as CANCELLED or as an ERROR, the in-memory bitmap will be + restored. + +Example +^^^^^^^ + +- Here's the same example scenario from above with the new property: + + .. code:: json + + { "execute": "transaction", + "arguments": { + "actions": [ + { "type": "drive-backup", + "data": { "device": "drive0", "bitmap": "bitmap0", + "format": "qcow2", "mode": "existing", + "sync": "incremental", "target": "d0-incr-1.qcow2" } }, + { "type": "drive-backup", + "data": { "device": "drive1", "bitmap": "bitmap1", + "format": "qcow2", "mode": "existing", + "sync": "incremental", "target": "d1-incr-1.qcow2" } }, + ], + "properties": { + "completion-mode": "grouped" + } + } + } + +- QMP example response, highlighting a failure for ``drive2``: + + - Acknowledgement that the Transaction was accepted and jobs were + launched: + + .. code:: json + + { "return": {} } + + - Later, QEMU sends notice that the second job has errored out, but + that the first job was also cancelled: + + .. code:: json + + { "timestamp": { "seconds": 1447193702, "microseconds": 632377 }, + "data": { "device": "drive1", "action": "report", + "operation": "read" }, + "event": "BLOCK_JOB_ERROR" } + + .. code:: json + + { "timestamp": { "seconds": 1447193702, "microseconds": 640074 }, + "data": { "speed": 0, "offset": 0, "len": 67108864, + "error": "Input/output error", + "device": "drive1", "type": "backup" }, + "event": "BLOCK_JOB_COMPLETED" } + + .. code:: json + + { "timestamp": { "seconds": 1447193702, "microseconds": 640163 }, + "data": { "device": "drive0", "type": "backup", "speed": 0, + "len": 67108864, "offset": 16777216 }, + "event": "BLOCK_JOB_CANCELLED" } + +.. raw:: html + + <!-- + The FreeBSD Documentation License + + Redistribution and use in source (Markdown) and 'compiled' forms (SGML, HTML, + PDF, PostScript, RTF and so forth) with or without modification, are permitted + provided that the following conditions are met: + + Redistributions of source code (Markdown) must retain the above copyright + notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer of this file + unmodified. + + Redistributions in compiled form (transformed to other DTDs, converted to PDF, + PostScript, RTF and other formats) must reproduce the above copyright notice, + this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the documentation and/or + other materials provided with the distribution. + + THIS DOCUMENTATION IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS "AS IS" + AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE + IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE + DISCLAIMED. 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