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    Unable to delete KVM snapshot

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    kvm fedora 27 snapshots error
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    • JaredBuschJ
      JaredBusch
      last edited by

      sudo virsh domblklist plex
      Target     Source
      ------------------------------------------------
      hda        -
      hdb        /kvm_store/disk_b/plex.plex_snap
      
      [jbusch@kvm ~]$ sudo virsh blockcommit plex hdb --verbose --pivot --active
      Block commit: [ 26 %]
      
      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • Emad RE
        Emad R @JaredBusch
        last edited by

        @jaredbusch said in Unable to delete KVM snapshot:

        @emad-r said in Unable to delete KVM snapshot:

        @jaredbusch

        Hi,

        What is the reasoning for doing external snapshots and going against the default (where everything is saved in one file), I use virt but I love virt-manager and with that it always does the snap internally.

        Any benefits of external aside being the ESXi way?

        Cause it seems here that what is causing the issue, and I recall somewhere I read the qcow2 expects everything to be in 1 file.

        I just read @stacksofplates basically what he says.

        because you cannot copy the file off to backup when you use the internal snapshot

        Interesting I dont take VM backup frequently, when I do I rsync the whole VM file.

        rsync --progress --inplace -h -W /var/lib/libvirt/images/VM/centos7.0-clone.qcow2 [email protected]:/var/lib/libvirt/images/VM/centos7.0-clone.qcow2

        This after the initial copy, if you are extra paranoid you can take the file everytime if you dont trust rsync algorithms.

        But it is interesting this external snapshot approach, how much are the sizes of external snapshots roughly ? I know it depends but what are we dealing with here. 100 MB ?

        stacksofplatesS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • stacksofplatesS
          stacksofplates @JaredBusch
          last edited by

          @jaredbusch said in Unable to delete KVM snapshot:

          @stacksofplates said in Unable to delete KVM snapshot:

          @dafyre said in Unable to delete KVM snapshot:

          Note, in the process below, <diskname> could be vda, sda, or hda.
          The first command tells you which to use.

          virsh domblklist plex
          virsh blockcommit plex <disk name> --verbose --pivot --active
          

          Once the blockcommit command finishes, shutdown plex, and rename the plex_snap disk image.

          Start Plex back up and make sure your updates and such are still installed. If all is well, then delete the plex_snap disk image.

          You shouldn’t have to shutdown the image unless it’s just for the updates. The pivot option points the guest back to the original backing store.

          But I still need to delete the backup file manually from disk?

          Yes

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • stacksofplatesS
            stacksofplates @JaredBusch
            last edited by

            @jaredbusch said in Unable to delete KVM snapshot:

            @emad-r said in Unable to delete KVM snapshot:

            @jaredbusch

            Hi,

            What is the reasoning for doing external snapshots and going against the default (where everything is saved in one file), I use virt but I love virt-manager and with that it always does the snap internally.

            Any benefits of external aside being the ESXi way?

            Cause it seems here that what is causing the issue, and I recall somewhere I read the qcow2 expects everything to be in 1 file.

            I just read @stacksofplates basically what he says.

            because you cannot copy the file off to backup when you use the internal snapshot

            Allocate on Write snapshots are also much faster. It’s the way @scale does their snapshots. You can have thousands before you get a performance hit vs only a few with COW.

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • stacksofplatesS
              stacksofplates @Emad R
              last edited by

              @emad-r said in Unable to delete KVM snapshot:

              @jaredbusch said in Unable to delete KVM snapshot:

              @emad-r said in Unable to delete KVM snapshot:

              @jaredbusch

              Hi,

              What is the reasoning for doing external snapshots and going against the default (where everything is saved in one file), I use virt but I love virt-manager and with that it always does the snap internally.

              Any benefits of external aside being the ESXi way?

              Cause it seems here that what is causing the issue, and I recall somewhere I read the qcow2 expects everything to be in 1 file.

              I just read @stacksofplates basically what he says.

              because you cannot copy the file off to backup when you use the internal snapshot

              Interesting I dont take VM backup frequently, when I do I rsync the whole VM file.

              rsync --progress --inplace -h -W /var/lib/libvirt/images/VM/centos7.0-clone.qcow2 [email protected]:/var/lib/libvirt/images/VM/centos7.0-clone.qcow2

              This after the initial copy, if you are extra paranoid you can take the file everytime if you dont trust rsync algorithms.

              But it is interesting this external snapshot approach, how much are the sizes of external snapshots roughly ? I know it depends but what are we dealing with here. 100 MB ?

              You have to shut the VM off to just rsync the drive. This way you can leave the VM on.

              You don’t copy the external snapshot. You take a snapshot and copy the backing store. Then blockcommit (merge) the snapshot back into the original image.

              Emad RE 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • Emad RE
                Emad R @stacksofplates
                last edited by

                @stacksofplates said in Unable to delete KVM snapshot:

                @emad-r said in Unable to delete KVM snapshot:

                @jaredbusch said in Unable to delete KVM snapshot:

                @emad-r said in Unable to delete KVM snapshot:

                @jaredbusch

                Hi,

                What is the reasoning for doing external snapshots and going against the default (where everything is saved in one file), I use virt but I love virt-manager and with that it always does the snap internally.

                Any benefits of external aside being the ESXi way?

                Cause it seems here that what is causing the issue, and I recall somewhere I read the qcow2 expects everything to be in 1 file.

                I just read @stacksofplates basically what he says.

                because you cannot copy the file off to backup when you use the internal snapshot

                Interesting I dont take VM backup frequently, when I do I rsync the whole VM file.

                rsync --progress --inplace -h -W /var/lib/libvirt/images/VM/centos7.0-clone.qcow2 [email protected]:/var/lib/libvirt/images/VM/centos7.0-clone.qcow2

                This after the initial copy, if you are extra paranoid you can take the file everytime if you dont trust rsync algorithms.

                But it is interesting this external snapshot approach, how much are the sizes of external snapshots roughly ? I know it depends but what are we dealing with here. 100 MB ?

                You have to shut the VM off to just rsync the drive. This way you can leave the VM on.

                You don’t copy the external snapshot. You take a snapshot and copy the backing store. Then blockcommit (merge) the snapshot back into the original image.

                No need if you freeze the filesystem first then rsync. but for this I recommend taking each time the whole file with rsync

                stacksofplatesS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • dafyreD
                  dafyre @stacksofplates
                  last edited by

                  @stacksofplates said in Unable to delete KVM snapshot:

                  @dafyre said in Unable to delete KVM snapshot:

                  Note, in the process below, <diskname> could be vda, sda, or hda.
                  The first command tells you which to use.

                  virsh domblklist plex
                  virsh blockcommit plex <disk name> --verbose --pivot --active
                  

                  Once the blockcommit command finishes, shutdown plex, and rename the plex_snap disk image.

                  Start Plex back up and make sure your updates and such are still installed. If all is well, then delete the plex_snap disk image.

                  You shouldn’t have to shutdown the image unless it’s just for the updates. The pivot option points the guest back to the original backing store.

                  I do this because I've deleted the snapshot file after running blockcommit and had issues, so now I do that as a just in case measure. If it was something in production, I'd just leave the old snapshot file until the next maintenance window.

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • stacksofplatesS
                    stacksofplates @Emad R
                    last edited by

                    @emad-r said in Unable to delete KVM snapshot:

                    @stacksofplates said in Unable to delete KVM snapshot:

                    @emad-r said in Unable to delete KVM snapshot:

                    @jaredbusch said in Unable to delete KVM snapshot:

                    @emad-r said in Unable to delete KVM snapshot:

                    @jaredbusch

                    Hi,

                    What is the reasoning for doing external snapshots and going against the default (where everything is saved in one file), I use virt but I love virt-manager and with that it always does the snap internally.

                    Any benefits of external aside being the ESXi way?

                    Cause it seems here that what is causing the issue, and I recall somewhere I read the qcow2 expects everything to be in 1 file.

                    I just read @stacksofplates basically what he says.

                    because you cannot copy the file off to backup when you use the internal snapshot

                    Interesting I dont take VM backup frequently, when I do I rsync the whole VM file.

                    rsync --progress --inplace -h -W /var/lib/libvirt/images/VM/centos7.0-clone.qcow2 [email protected]:/var/lib/libvirt/images/VM/centos7.0-clone.qcow2

                    This after the initial copy, if you are extra paranoid you can take the file everytime if you dont trust rsync algorithms.

                    But it is interesting this external snapshot approach, how much are the sizes of external snapshots roughly ? I know it depends but what are we dealing with here. 100 MB ?

                    You have to shut the VM off to just rsync the drive. This way you can leave the VM on.

                    You don’t copy the external snapshot. You take a snapshot and copy the backing store. Then blockcommit (merge) the snapshot back into the original image.

                    No need if you freeze the filesystem first then rsync. but for this I recommend taking each time the whole file with rsync

                    Uh there’s no difference. If you freeze the system it can’t be used. This is to run on live systems so they remain running the whole time.

                    JaredBuschJ Emad RE 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 1
                    • JaredBuschJ
                      JaredBusch @stacksofplates
                      last edited by

                      @stacksofplates said in Unable to delete KVM snapshot:

                      @emad-r said in Unable to delete KVM snapshot:

                      @stacksofplates said in Unable to delete KVM snapshot:

                      @emad-r said in Unable to delete KVM snapshot:

                      @jaredbusch said in Unable to delete KVM snapshot:

                      @emad-r said in Unable to delete KVM snapshot:

                      @jaredbusch

                      Hi,

                      What is the reasoning for doing external snapshots and going against the default (where everything is saved in one file), I use virt but I love virt-manager and with that it always does the snap internally.

                      Any benefits of external aside being the ESXi way?

                      Cause it seems here that what is causing the issue, and I recall somewhere I read the qcow2 expects everything to be in 1 file.

                      I just read @stacksofplates basically what he says.

                      because you cannot copy the file off to backup when you use the internal snapshot

                      Interesting I dont take VM backup frequently, when I do I rsync the whole VM file.

                      rsync --progress --inplace -h -W /var/lib/libvirt/images/VM/centos7.0-clone.qcow2 [email protected]:/var/lib/libvirt/images/VM/centos7.0-clone.qcow2

                      This after the initial copy, if you are extra paranoid you can take the file everytime if you dont trust rsync algorithms.

                      But it is interesting this external snapshot approach, how much are the sizes of external snapshots roughly ? I know it depends but what are we dealing with here. 100 MB ?

                      You have to shut the VM off to just rsync the drive. This way you can leave the VM on.

                      You don’t copy the external snapshot. You take a snapshot and copy the backing store. Then blockcommit (merge) the snapshot back into the original image.

                      No need if you freeze the filesystem first then rsync. but for this I recommend taking each time the whole file with rsync

                      Uh there’s no difference. If you freeze the system it can’t be used. This is to run on live systems so they remain running the whole time.

                      I guess I need to look into your backup script thing one of these days.

                      The systems I want to backup are not stateful, like yours, but it will give me a starting point.

                      stacksofplatesS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • stacksofplatesS
                        stacksofplates @JaredBusch
                        last edited by

                        @jaredbusch said in Unable to delete KVM snapshot:

                        @stacksofplates said in Unable to delete KVM snapshot:

                        @emad-r said in Unable to delete KVM snapshot:

                        @stacksofplates said in Unable to delete KVM snapshot:

                        @emad-r said in Unable to delete KVM snapshot:

                        @jaredbusch said in Unable to delete KVM snapshot:

                        @emad-r said in Unable to delete KVM snapshot:

                        @jaredbusch

                        Hi,

                        What is the reasoning for doing external snapshots and going against the default (where everything is saved in one file), I use virt but I love virt-manager and with that it always does the snap internally.

                        Any benefits of external aside being the ESXi way?

                        Cause it seems here that what is causing the issue, and I recall somewhere I read the qcow2 expects everything to be in 1 file.

                        I just read @stacksofplates basically what he says.

                        because you cannot copy the file off to backup when you use the internal snapshot

                        Interesting I dont take VM backup frequently, when I do I rsync the whole VM file.

                        rsync --progress --inplace -h -W /var/lib/libvirt/images/VM/centos7.0-clone.qcow2 [email protected]:/var/lib/libvirt/images/VM/centos7.0-clone.qcow2

                        This after the initial copy, if you are extra paranoid you can take the file everytime if you dont trust rsync algorithms.

                        But it is interesting this external snapshot approach, how much are the sizes of external snapshots roughly ? I know it depends but what are we dealing with here. 100 MB ?

                        You have to shut the VM off to just rsync the drive. This way you can leave the VM on.

                        You don’t copy the external snapshot. You take a snapshot and copy the backing store. Then blockcommit (merge) the snapshot back into the original image.

                        No need if you freeze the filesystem first then rsync. but for this I recommend taking each time the whole file with rsync

                        Uh there’s no difference. If you freeze the system it can’t be used. This is to run on live systems so they remain running the whole time.

                        I guess I need to look into your backup script thing one of these days.

                        The systems I want to backup are not stateful, like yours, but it will give me a starting point.

                        It's pretty much what you did here with some other crap, like an interactive part. I should probably add more logic to it, it was just a quick thing I put together. I also mostly just backed up the data volumes. The OS 99% of the time is a separate disk from the data so I just back up the data.

                        JaredBuschJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                        • JaredBuschJ
                          JaredBusch @stacksofplates
                          last edited by JaredBusch

                          @stacksofplates said in Unable to delete KVM snapshot:

                          @jaredbusch said in Unable to delete KVM snapshot:

                          @stacksofplates said in Unable to delete KVM snapshot:

                          @emad-r said in Unable to delete KVM snapshot:

                          @stacksofplates said in Unable to delete KVM snapshot:

                          @emad-r said in Unable to delete KVM snapshot:

                          @jaredbusch said in Unable to delete KVM snapshot:

                          @emad-r said in Unable to delete KVM snapshot:

                          @jaredbusch

                          Hi,

                          What is the reasoning for doing external snapshots and going against the default (where everything is saved in one file), I use virt but I love virt-manager and with that it always does the snap internally.

                          Any benefits of external aside being the ESXi way?

                          Cause it seems here that what is causing the issue, and I recall somewhere I read the qcow2 expects everything to be in 1 file.

                          I just read @stacksofplates basically what he says.

                          because you cannot copy the file off to backup when you use the internal snapshot

                          Interesting I dont take VM backup frequently, when I do I rsync the whole VM file.

                          rsync --progress --inplace -h -W /var/lib/libvirt/images/VM/centos7.0-clone.qcow2 [email protected]:/var/lib/libvirt/images/VM/centos7.0-clone.qcow2

                          This after the initial copy, if you are extra paranoid you can take the file everytime if you dont trust rsync algorithms.

                          But it is interesting this external snapshot approach, how much are the sizes of external snapshots roughly ? I know it depends but what are we dealing with here. 100 MB ?

                          You have to shut the VM off to just rsync the drive. This way you can leave the VM on.

                          You don’t copy the external snapshot. You take a snapshot and copy the backing store. Then blockcommit (merge) the snapshot back into the original image.

                          No need if you freeze the filesystem first then rsync. but for this I recommend taking each time the whole file with rsync

                          Uh there’s no difference. If you freeze the system it can’t be used. This is to run on live systems so they remain running the whole time.

                          I guess I need to look into your backup script thing one of these days.

                          The systems I want to backup are not stateful, like yours, but it will give me a starting point.

                          It's pretty much what you did here with some other crap, like an interactive part. I should probably add more logic to it, it was just a quick thing I put together. I also mostly just backed up the data volumes. The OS 99% of the time is a separate disk from the data so I just back up the data.

                          Well, I also need a NAS to store things on until I can upload them too so I should work on that...

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • Emad RE
                            Emad R @stacksofplates
                            last edited by

                            @stacksofplates said in Unable to delete KVM snapshot:

                            Uh there’s no difference. If you freeze the system it can’t be used. This is to run on live systems so they remain running the whole time.

                            What no coffee break for servers !!!

                            scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • scottalanmillerS
                              scottalanmiller @Emad R
                              last edited by

                              @emad-r said in Unable to delete KVM snapshot:

                              @stacksofplates said in Unable to delete KVM snapshot:

                              Uh there’s no difference. If you freeze the system it can’t be used. This is to run on live systems so they remain running the whole time.

                              What no coffee break for servers !!!

                              They definitely get a break if you pour coffee on them.

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 4
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