Migration

From KVM

Introduction

KVM currently supports savevm/loadvm and offline or live migration Migration commands are given when in qemu-monitor (Alt-Ctrl-2). Upon successful completion, the migrated VM continues to run on the destination host.

Note

You can migrate a guest between an AMD host to an Intel host and back. Naturally, a 64-bit guest can only be migrated to a 64-bit host, but a 32-bit guest can be migrated at will.

There are some older Intel processors which don't support NX (or XD), which may cause problems in a cluster which includes NX-supporting hosts. We may add a feature to hide NX if this proves to be a problem in actual deployments.

Requirements

  • The VM image is accessible on both source and destination hosts (located on a shared storage, e.g. using nfs).
  • It is recommended an images-directory would be found on the same path on both hosts (for migrations of a copy-on-write image -- an image created on top of a base-image using "qemu-image create -b ...")
  • The src and dst hosts must be on the same subnet (keeping guest's network when tap is used).
  • Do not use -snapshot qemu command line option.
  • For tcp: migration protocol
  • the guest on the destination must be started the same way it was started on the source.

highlights / merits

  • Almost unnoticeable guest down time
  • Guest is not involved (unique to KVM Live Migration [#1 1])
  • Capability to tunnel VM state through an external program (unique to KVM Live Migration [#1 1])
  • ssh/gzip/bzip2/gpg/your own
  • Upon success guest continues to run on destination host, upon failure guest continues to run on source host (with one exception)
  • Short and Simple
  • Easy to enhance
  • Hardware independence (almost).
  • Support for migration of stopped (paused) VMs.
  • Open

Anchor(1) 1 These features are unique to KVM Live Migration as far as I know. If you know of other hypervisor that support any of them please update this page or let me (Uri) know.

User Interface

The user interface is through the qemu monitor (alt-ctrl-2 on the SDL window)

Management

migrate [-d] <URI>
migrate_cancel    

The '-d' will let you query the status of the migration.

With no '-d' the monitor prompt returns when the migration completes. URI can be one of 'exec:<command>' or tcp:<ip:port>

Status

info migrate 

Migration Parameters

migrate_set_speed <speed>   set bandwidth control parameters (max transfer rate per second)

Example / HOWTO

A is the source host, B is the destination host:

  • TCP example:

1. Start the VM on B with the exact same parameters as the VM on A, in migration-listen mode (-incoming tcp:0:4444 (or other PORT)) 2. Start the migration (always on the source host):

A: migrate -d tcp:B:4444 (or other PORT)                                                                

3. Check the status (on A only):

info migrate                                                                                            
  • Offline example:

1. unlimit bandwidth used for migration:

A: migrate_set_speed 1g                

2. stop the guest:

A: stop                                

3. continue with either TCP or exec migration as described above.

Problems / Todo

  • TSC offset on the new host must be set in such a way that the guest sees a monotonically increasing TSC, otherwise the guest may hang indefinitely after migration.
  • usbdevice tablet complains after migration.
  • handle migration completion better (especially when network problems occur).
  • More informative status.
  • Migration does not work while CPU real-mode/protected mode are still changing.

savevm/loadvm to an external state file (using pseudo-migration)

  • let the state file be /saved_images/VM.STATE
  • savevm (qemu monitor):
stop                                                                 
migrate file:///saved_images/VM.STATE                                
  • loadvm (qemu command line and qemu monitor):
<qemu-command-line> -incoming file:///saved_images/VM.STATE          
cont                                                                 

more exec: options

  • To be supported directly by Migration Protocols, but until then...
  • Save VM state into a compressed file
   * Save                                                          
stop                                                               
migrate_set_speed 4095m                                            
migrate "exec:gzip -c > STATEFILE.gz"                              
   * Load
gzip -c -d STATEFILE.gz | <qemu-command-line> -incoming stdio
  • Save VM State into an encrypted file (assumes KEY has already been generated)
   * Save                                                                     
stop                                                                          
migrate_set_speed 4095m                                                       
migrate "exec:gpg -q -e -r KEY -o STATFILE.gpg"
  • Load VM state from an encrypted file
gpg -q -d -r KEY STATEFILE.gpg | <qemu-command-line> -incoming stdio
  • Send encrypted VM state from host A to host B (Note: ssh is probably better, this is just for show)
   * on host A
migrate "exec:gpg -q -e -r KEY | nc B 4444"
   * on host B
nc -l 4444 | gpg -q -d -r KEY | <qemu-command-line> -incoming stdio

Algorithm (the short version)

1. Setup
  * Start guest on destination, connect, enable dirty page logging and more
2. Transfer Memory
  * Guest continues to run
  * Bandwidth limitation (controlled by the user)
  * First transfer the whole memory
  * Iteratively transfer all dirty pages (pages that were written to by the guest).
3. Stop the guest
  * And sync VM image(s) (guest's hard drives).
4. Transfer State
  * As fast as possible (no bandwidth limitation)
  * All VM devices' state and dirty pages yet to be transferred
5. Continue the guest
  * On destination upon success
     * Broadcast "I'm over here" Ethernet packet to announce new location of NIC(s).
  * On source upon failure (with one exception).


Instructions for kvm-13 and below: MigrationQemu0.8.2.