server: Capacity check should take vms in Migrating state into calculation#3727
Conversation
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@blueorangutan package |
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@DaanHoogland a Jenkins job has been kicked to build packages. I'll keep you posted as I make progress. |
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Packaging result: ✔centos6 ✔centos7 ✔debian. JID-641 |
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@blueorangutan test |
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@DaanHoogland a Trillian-Jenkins test job (centos7 mgmt + kvm-centos7) has been kicked to run smoke tests |
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Trillian test result (tid-807)
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thanks @DaanHoogland @rhtyd @svenvogel can you please review ? we need one more approvals |
…ation (apache#3727) When we calculate a resource consumption of a host, we need to take the vms in following states into calculation: Running, Starting, Stopping, Migrating (to the host), and vms are Migrating from the host. Because, when stop a vm, the resource on host will be released when vm is stopped. When migrate a vm, the resource on destination host will be increased before migration starts, and resource on source host will be decreased after migraiton succeeds. In cloudstack, there is a task named CapacityChecked which run every 5 minutes (capacity.check.period =300000 ms by default). It recalculates capacity of all hosts. However, it takes only vms in Running and Starting into consideration. We have faced some issues in host maintenance due to it. Steps to reproduce the issue (1) migrate N vms from host A to host B, cpu/ram resource increases before the migration. (2) capacity check recalculate the capacity of hosts. used capacity of Host B will be reset to original value (not including the vms in Migrating). (3) migrate some more vms from other host to host B, the migrations are allowed by cloudstack (because used capacity is incorrect). If the actual used memory exceed the physical memory on the host, there might be some critical issues (for example, libvirt dies)
Description
When we calculate a resource consumption of a host, we need to take the vms in following states into calculation: Running, Starting, Stopping, Migrating (to the host), and vms are Migrating from the host. Because, when stop a vm, the resource on host will be released when vm is stopped. When migrate a vm, the resource on destination host will be increased before migration starts, and resource on source host will be decreased after migraiton succeeds.
In cloudstack, there is a task named CapacityChecked which run every 5 minutes (capacity.check.period =300000 ms by default). It recalculates capacity of all hosts. However, it takes only vms in Running and Starting into consideration. We have faced some issues in host maintenance due to it.
Steps to reproduce the issue
(1) migrate N vms from host A to host B, cpu/ram resource increases before the migration.
(2) capacity check recalculate the capacity of hosts. used capacity of Host B will be reset to original value (not including the vms in Migrating).
(3) migrate some more vms from other host to host B, the migrations are allowed by cloudstack (because used capacity is incorrect). If the actual used memory exceed the physical memory on the host, there might be some critical issues (for example, libvirt dies)
Types of changes
Screenshots (if appropriate):
How Has This Been Tested?