Description
Live migrate a VM between 2 Fedora hosts, and verify it is running correctly on the new host. These test steps aim for the simplest setup possible, using just a single host and two VMs: one as the migration destination, and one VM to migrate.
Setup
If you've been following along with a test day, you should have an up to date Fedora VM available. This will be the host that we migrate the VM to.
SSH key access
- On the physical host, create an SSH key for root:
su -
ssh-keygen
- Set up the SSH key as an authorized key for the destination host VM
sudo virsh start test-day-vm
virt-viewer --connect qemu:///system test-day-vm
- Open a terminal,
su -
mkdir -p /root/.ssh && chmod 700 /root/.ssh
Create the VM to migrate
If you've been following the test day, you likely only have 1 VM created. Feel free to skip this step if you have multiple VMs available.
- Clone the existing test day VM:
sudo virt-clone -o test-day-vm -n test-day-vm-migrate --auto-clone
- If your test day VM is using nested virt, you want to turn that off for the new VM since it can cause migration compatibility issues since we are migrating into a VM:
sudo virsh edit test-day-vm-migrate
- Delete the entire <cpu> block
- Edit the guest so that it has a smaller amount of memory. My destination had 4G, and the migrating VM had 2G. You can likely much smaller.
- Start the VM, verify it works correctly.
Sharing storage
Inside the destination VM, setup shared storage using sshfs:
sudo virsh start test-day-vm && virt-viewer --connect qemu:///system test-day-vm
yum install sshfs
sshfs root@HOST-IP:/var/lib/libvirt/images /var/lib/libvirt/images
sudo setsebool -P virt_use_fusefs=1
- Edit /etc/libvirt/qemu.conf, uncomment user=root and group=root,
sudo service libvirtd restart
- XXX: That part is likely a bug
How to test
- On the source host, prep the migration:
source-host$ sudo virsh start test-day-vm-migrate< && virt-viewer --connect qemu:///system test-day-vm-migrate/code>
- Log in to the guest graphical desktop. Open a terminal, start a simple loop like
dest-vm$ for i in
seq 1 10000
; do echo $i; sleep 1; done
- The destination host VM should be started and have storage prepped as mentioned above.
- On the source host, perform the migration:
source-host$ sudo virsh migrate --verbose --live --p2p --tunnelled test-day-vm-migrate
- After migration completes, verify the migrated VM is running on the destination
source-host$ virt-viewer --connect qemu:///system test-day-vm
dest-vm$ virt-viewer --connect qemu:///system test-day-vm-migrate
- Verify the simple echo loop is still running, guest appears to be working okay.
- Stop the migrated VM:
dest-vm$ sudo virsh destroy test-day-vm-migrate
- Verify that after destroying the VM, it no longer appears in
dest-vm$ sudo virsh list --all
. (that is because we didn't pass the --persistent option to 'virsh migrate')
- Verify that the VM is stopped on the original host:
source-host$ sudo virsh list --all
(the VM is still there because we didn't pass the --undefinesource option to 'virsh migrate')
Expected Results
All steps complete without error and the migrated VM behaves as expected.
- Step #1 completes without error
- The system boots into runlevel 5
- Program completes with exit code 0
Optional
If you have pre-existing VMs of other operating systems, please try migrating those as well.