I’m going to be speaking at SCALE 9x this year and giving a session on Scalable Virtualization with Ganeti on Saturday February 26th at 6pm.  I will be going over the basics of what Ganeti is and how you use it. This session will be very similar to the ones I gave last year at Open Source Bridge and LinuxCon Boston.

If you want to meet me in person and talk about what’s going on at the Open Source Lab, Supercell, Ganeti,Gentoo, or just other random stuff, feel free to! I’ll be the only person coming from the OSUOSL but I’ll be sure to represent us the best that I can.

See you at SCALE9x in a few weeks!

Recently I had one of the nodes in a Ganeti cluster go down because of a faulty hard drive. Normally we would have RAID on machines in our ganeti clusters, but this particular machine didn’t.  Having a machine go offline like that would usually be a big deal, but with ganeti and DRBD this isn’t the case usually.

After I triaged the situation and decided that the HDD on the machine node3 was a lost cause, I decided to see what ganeti showed as the situation. Below is what I found:

# gnt-cluster verify
* Verifying global settings
* Gathering data (3 nodes)
* Verifying node status
  - ERROR: node node1.osuosl.bak: ssh communication with node 'node3.osuosl.bak': ssh problem: exited with exit code 255 (no output)
  - ERROR: node node1.osuosl.bak: tcp communication with node 'node3.osuosl.bak': failure using the primary and secondary interface(s)
  - ERROR: node node2.osuosl.bak: ssh communication with node 'node3.osuosl.bak': ssh problem: exited with exit code 255 (no output)
  - ERROR: node node2.osuosl.bak: tcp communication with node 'node3.osuosl.bak': failure using the primary and secondary interface(s)
  - ERROR: node node3.osuosl.bak: while contacting node: Error 7: Failed connect to 10.1.0.179:1811; Success
* Verifying instance status
  - ERROR: node node3.osuosl.bak: instance vm1.osuosl.org, connection to secondary node failed
  - ERROR: node node3.osuosl.bak: instance vm2.osuosl.org, connection to secondary node failed
  - ERROR: node node3.osuosl.bak: instance vm3.osuosl.org, connection to secondary node failed
  - ERROR: instance vm4.osuosl.org: instance not running on its primary node node3.osuosl.bak
  - ERROR: node node3.osuosl.bak: instance vm4.osuosl.org, connection to primary node failed
  - ERROR: instance vm5.osuosl.org: instance not running on its primary node node3.osuosl.bak
  - ERROR: node node3.osuosl.bak: instance vm5.osuosl.org, connection to primary node failed
* Verifying orphan volumes
* Verifying orphan instances
* Verifying N+1 Memory redundancy
  - ERROR: node node3.osuosl.bak: not enough memory on to accommodate failovers should peer node node1.osuosl.bak fail
  - ERROR: node node3.osuosl.bak: not enough memory on to accommodate failovers should peer node node2.osuosl.bak fail
* Other Notes
 - WARNING: Communication failure to node node3.osuosl.bak: Error 7: Failed connect to 10.1.0.179:1811; Success
* Hooks Results
  - ERROR: node node3.osuosl.bak: Communication failure in hooks execution: Error 7: Failed connect to 10.1.0.179:1811; Success

That’s a lot of information to just say one of the nodes is offline. To summarize, this is what Ganeti is saying:

  • node1 & node2 can’t talk to node3
  • node3 isn’t responding to the master node
  • vm1, vm2, vm3′s secondary drbd connection failed
  • vm4 & vm5 is not running
  • node3 doesn’t have enough memory to deal with failovers (probably because ganeti can’t see its resources)
  • node3 connections failure

Needless to say, node3 is down. Now lets mark node3 offline and see what ganeti shows.

# gnt-node modify -O yes node3
 - WARNING: Communication failure to node node3.osuosl.bak: Error 7: Failed connect to 10.1.0.179:1811; Success
# gnt-cluster verify
* Verifying node status
* Verifying instance status
  - ERROR: instance vm1.osuosl.org: instance lives on offline node(s) node3.osuosl.bak
  - ERROR: instance vm2.osuosl.org: instance lives on offline node(s) node3.osuosl.bak
  - ERROR: instance vm3.osuosl.org: instance lives on offline node(s) node3.osuosl.bak
  - ERROR: instance vm4.osuosl.org: instance lives on offline node(s) node3.osuosl.bak
  - ERROR: instance vm5.osuosl.org: instance lives on offline node(s) node3.osuosl.bak
* Verifying orphan volumes
* Verifying orphan instances
* Verifying N+1 Memory redundancy
  - ERROR: node node3.osuosl.bak: not enough memory on to accommodate failovers should peer node node1.osuosl.bak fail
  - ERROR: node node3.osuosl.bak: not enough memory on to accommodate failovers should peer node osdv2.osuosl.bak fail
* Other Notes
  - NOTICE: 1 offline node(s) found.
* Hooks Results

That’s much easier to read and handle. At this point I’m ready to failover the instances that are offline.

# gnt-instance failover --ignore-consistency vm4
* checking disk consistency between source and target
* shutting down instance on source node
 - WARNING: Could not shutdown instance vm4.osuosl.org on node node3.osuosl.bak. Proceeding anyway. Please make sure node node3.osuosl.bak is down. Error details: Node is marked offline
* deactivating the instance's disks on source node
 - WARNING: Could not shutdown block device disk/0 on node node3.osuosl.bak: Node is marked offline
* activating the instance's disks on target node
 - WARNING: Could not prepare block device disk/0 on node node3.osuosl.bak (is_primary=False, pass=1): Node is marked offline
* starting the instance on the target node
# gnt-instance failover --ignore-consistency vm5

Now lets fix the secondary storage for the other instances.

# gnt-instance replace-disks -n node2 vm1
 - INFO: Old secondary node3.osuosl.bak is offline, automatically enabling early-release mode
Replacing disk(s) 0 for vm1.osuosl.org
STEP 1/6 Check device existence
 - INFO: Checking disk/0 on node1.osuosl.bak
 - INFO: Checking volume groups
STEP 2/6 Check peer consistency
 - INFO: Checking disk/0 consistency on node node1.osuosl.bak
STEP 3/6 Allocate new storage
 - INFO: Adding new local storage on node2.osuosl.bak for disk/0
STEP 4/6 Changing drbd configuration
 - INFO: activating a new drbd on node2.osuosl.bak for disk/0
 - INFO: Shutting down drbd for disk/0 on old node
 - WARNING: Failed to shutdown drbd for disk/0 on oldnode: Node is marked offline
      Hint: Please cleanup this device manually as soon as possible
 - INFO: Detaching primary drbds from the network (=> standalone)
 - INFO: Updating instance configuration
 - INFO: Attaching primary drbds to new secondary (standalone => connected)
STEP 5/6 Removing old storage
 - INFO: Remove logical volumes for 0
 - WARNING: Can't remove old LV: Node is marked offline
      Hint: remove unused LVs manually
 - WARNING: Can't remove old LV: Node is marked offline
      Hint: remove unused LVs manually
STEP 6/6 Sync devices
 - INFO: Waiting for instance vm1.osuosl.org to sync disks.
 - INFO: - device disk/0:  0.00% done, no time estimate
 - INFO: - device disk/0: 25.00% done, 2h 23m 24s remaining (estimated)
 - INFO: - device disk/0: 50.40% done, 47m 38s remaining (estimated)
 - INFO: - device disk/0: 76.40% done, 26m 46s remaining (estimated)
 - INFO: - device disk/0: 92.20% done, 7m 49s remaining (estimated)
 - INFO: - device disk/0: 100.00% done, 0s remaining (estimated)
 - INFO: Instance vm1.osuosl.org's disks are in sync.

By using --submit you are able to let the output go into the background. You can view the output in real-time by running gnt-job watch <job id>. I went ahead and told ganeti replace the secondary disks on the other two machines at the same time. Be careful running too many replace disk operations as you may run into disk I/O issues on the nodes.

Now there is another way I could have fixed this and would have required less steps by using gnt-node evacuate. This command allows you to move all the secondary storage from a single node to another node quickly instead of doing it vm-by-vm. The command probably would have looked something similar to this:

# gnt-node evacuate --force -n node2 node3 

Instead of specifying which node to migrate storage to, you can also use an IAllocator plugin to automatically pick which node to use. So the command above would have been:

# gnt-node evacuate --force -I hail node3 

After a few minutes I brought redundancy back into my cluster, instances back online, an with no data loss.

Ganeti rocks!

After nearly a month and a half (42 days) of development since 0.4 was released, the OSUOSL has released Ganeti Web Manager 0.5 today. This second release has some very nice new features included in it:

Read the full ChangeLog for more details.

noVNC Console

My favorite new feature by far is the inclusion of noVNC by default for VNC console access. This removes the Java requirement for your browsers and makes it much easier to use. It works the best using Chrome/Chromium but you can also use Firefox.

noVNC console

New Overview Page

I’m also excited about the new overview pages for users and admins. It makes it much easier to see the usage of your cluster(s) quickly. For users it will show some basic resource/quota usage.

New Overview Page

Upgrading

If you’re upgrading from 0.4 be sure to read the upgrading wiki page and go over the installation page again. We’ve added a few new requirements such as South for database migrations and Twisted for the new VNC Auth Proxy.

Be sure to also check out Peter’s blog post about the 0.5 release as well!

Want to work at the coolest place for open source and support the missions of some of the most important open source projects?

Oregon State University’s Open Source Lab is recruiting a full-time software developer who will analyze, design, and test software code for Ganeti Web Manager, the Protein Geometry Database and several other homegrown Open Source Lab projects. Development at the OSUOSL includes collaborations with academic and research faculty internal and external to OSU.

Reporting to the Operations Manager of the Open Source Lab, the Analyst Programmer will contribute in-depth knowledge of open source software development using languages such as Python, Ruby and Java. The person in this position is responsible for developing and modifying complex software applications, documenting code and development processes, and overseeing student software developers. This position will allow the candidate to interact with many of the open source projects hosted by the OSL. We seek candidates with a high level of initiative, motivation, and a high degree of success in previous endeavors.

To review more a more detailed job description and apply, check out the Analyst Programmer role on Oregon State University’s Jobs page.

Lead OSUOSL Developer Peter Krenesky has written an excellent blog post going over how the permission system works in Ganeti Web Manager. A key feature I’m looking forward to using more at the OSUOSL is managing our clusters with the following scenarios:

  • Fully managed - users have no access at all.  Only admins can create, reboot, or modify.
  • Partially managed - users can’t create virtual machines, but they have some limited ability to manage them.
  • Self Service - users can create virtual machines on demand.  They can create and manage their own virtual machines as needed.
  • User Managed Cluster - a user has control of an entire cluster.

The permission system in GWM will enable Ganeti cluster admins the ability to manage each cluster and virtual machine in finer detail. Ganeti by itself doesn’t come with any sort of user access management system, nor should it really. It makes sense to build tools like GWM on top of Ganeti to deal with such situations. I hope to see more features and bug fixes related to the permissions and quota system.

I’d love to see some feedback on how we implemented the system and how we can improve it!