[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] [Xen-users] Backing up "live" Xen systems?
I've been testing Xen for a few weeks now and am just about to put it into production use. (I wrote some scripts to create Debian images easily; the tools are included in Debian Sid as "xen-tools".) The only thing troubling me at the moment is backing up the virtual instances. I'm looking to run about four virtual systems upon a host. If the physical host dies then I'm going to be in trouble without backups! I realise I can setup traditional backups within the virtual instances using rsync, scp, or a backup agent. But I'm curious about backing up images live. (Primarily to avoid having to setup near identical scripts upon each instance and make sure they work correctly.) It strikes me that the live-migration support does a lot of the things that a backup of a live system should do - literally sending the contents of the systems image + memory to a new host. Would it be possible to write a simple "fake" migration server to receive the image, write it to disk, and then "abort" gracefully? That would allow a live system to be backed up without taking it offline. Any thoughts, or suggestions, appreciated. Steve -- Debian GNU/Linux System Administration http://www.debian-administration.org/ _______________________________________________ Xen-users mailing list Xen-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.xensource.com/xen-users
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