[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [Xen-users] Stable VBD Types
> > I'm currently using snapshotting for backup purposes, snapshotting > around 20 LVs every 20 minutes and mounting them in dom0. > > I haven't had any problems with this except that with 256M RAM my > dom0 ran out of kernel memory and an lvcreate operation deadlocked. > I reported this to the LVM list and was told it was because I had > too little RAM. After upgrading dom0 to 512M I have had no such > problems, although I still am not sure exactly how much RAM each > snapshot will need. > > Today I saw a question on the linux-lvm list asking if snapshots > were considered stable in LVM2 now. Maybe following that thread > would be more helpful than my anecdotes. Thanks. Although this is relevent to what I'm wanting to do, what I meant to say was using lvm snapshots as a way to reduce common files from repeating on disk. I quote the LVM-HowTo as it explains it a little better. "It is also useful for creating volumes for use with Xen. You can create a disk image, then snapshot it and modify the snapshot for a particular domU instance. You can then create another snapshot of the original volume, and modify that one for a different domU instance. Since the only storage used by a snapshot is blocks that were changed on the origin or the snapshot, the majority of the volume is shared by the domU's." > > How do you mean? If you start domains that you don't need then the > RAM is tied up in those domains. If you wanted some other domain to > increase its RAM then it may be a laborious process taking a bit of > RAM from multiple other domains first. Also the idle processes in > all those domains would take a small amount of CPU away. Those are > about the only problems I can see with running domains you don't > immediately need. I mean't as in create them when they are needed, rather than start them sorry. Thanks -- Regards, [GDPR REDACTED] --------------------------- [GDPR REDACTED] mail@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Attachment:
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