Use the VMware VMDK driver to enable management of the OpenStack Block Storage volumes on vCenter-managed data stores. Volumes are backed by VMDK files on data stores that use any VMware-compatible storage technology such as NFS, iSCSI, FiberChannel, and vSAN.
Warning | |
---|---|
The VMware ESX VMDK driver is deprecated as of the Icehouse release and might be removed in Juno or a subsequent release. The VMware vCenter VMDK driver continues to be fully supported. |
The VMware VMDK driver connects to vCenter, through which it can dynamically access all the data stores visible from the ESX hosts in the managed cluster.
When you create a volume, the VMDK driver creates a VMDK file on demand. The VMDK file creation completes only when the volume is subsequently attached to an instance, because the set of data stores visible to the instance determines where to place the volume.
The running vSphere VM is automatically reconfigured to attach the VMDK file as an extra disk. Once attached, you can log in to the running vSphere VM to rescan and discover this extra disk.
The recommended volume driver for OpenStack Block Storage is the VMware vCenter VMDK driver. When you configure the driver, you must match it with the appropriate OpenStack Compute driver from VMware and both drivers must point to the same server.
In the nova.conf
file, use this
option to define the Compute driver:
compute_driver=vmwareapi.VMwareVCDriver
In the cinder.conf
file, use this
option to define the volume driver:
volume_driver=cinder.volume.drivers.vmware.vmdk.VMwareVcVmdkDriver
The following table lists various options that the
drivers support for the OpenStack Block Storage
configuration (cinder.conf
):
Configuration option = Default value | Description |
---|---|
[DEFAULT] | |
vmware_api_retry_count = 10 | (IntOpt) Number of times VMware ESX/VC server API must be retried upon connection related issues. |
vmware_host_ip = None | (StrOpt) IP address for connecting to VMware ESX/VC server. |
vmware_host_password = None | (StrOpt) Password for authenticating with VMware ESX/VC server. |
vmware_host_username = None | (StrOpt) Username for authenticating with VMware ESX/VC server. |
vmware_host_version = None | (StrOpt) Optional string specifying the VMware VC server version. The driver attempts to retrieve the version from VMware VC server. Set this configuration only if you want to override the VC server version. |
vmware_image_transfer_timeout_secs = 7200 | (IntOpt) Timeout in seconds for VMDK volume transfer between Cinder and Glance. |
vmware_max_objects_retrieval = 100 | (IntOpt) Max number of objects to be retrieved per batch. Query results will be obtained in batches from the server and not in one shot. Server may still limit the count to something less than the configured value. |
vmware_task_poll_interval = 5 | (IntOpt) The interval (in seconds) for polling remote tasks invoked on VMware ESX/VC server. |
vmware_volume_folder = cinder-volumes | (StrOpt) Name for the folder in the VC datacenter that will contain cinder volumes. |
vmware_wsdl_location = None | (StrOpt) Optional VIM service WSDL Location e.g http://<server>/vimService.wsdl. Optional over-ride to default location for bug work-arounds. |
The VMware VMDK drivers support the creation of VMDK
disk files of type thin
,
thick
, or
eagerZeroedThick
. Use the
vmware:vmdk_type
extra spec key with the
appropriate value to specify the VMDK disk file type. The
following table captures the mapping between the extra
spec entry and the VMDK disk file type:
Disk file type | Extra spec key | Extra spec value |
thin | vmware:vmdk_type | thin |
thick | vmware:vmdk_type | thick |
eagerZeroedThick | vmware:vmdk_type | eagerZeroedThick |
If you do not specify a vmdk_type
extra
spec entry, the default disk file type is
thin
.
The following example shows how to create a
thick
VMDK volume by using the
appropriate vmdk_type
:
$ cinder type-create thick_volume $ cinder type-key thick_volume set vmware:vmdk_type=thick $ cinder create --volume-type thick_volume --display-name volume1 1
With the VMware VMDK drivers, you can create a volume
from another source volume or a snapshot point. The VMware
vCenter VMDK driver supports the full
and linked/fast
clone types. Use the
vmware:clone_type
extra spec key to
specify the clone type. The following table captures the
mapping for clone types:
Clone type | Extra spec key | Extra spec value |
full | vmware:clone_type | full |
linked/fast | vmware:clone_type | linked |
If you do not specify the clone type, the default is
full
.
The following example shows linked cloning from another source volume:
$ cinder type-create fast_clone $ cinder type-key fast_clone set vmware:clone_type=linked $ cinder create --volume-type fast_clone --source-volid 25743b9d-3605-462b-b9eb-71459fe2bb35 --display-name volume1 1
Note | |
---|---|
The VMware ESX VMDK driver ignores the extra spec
entry and always creates a |
This section describes how to configure back-end data
stores using storage policies. In vCenter, you can create
one or more storage policies and expose them as a Block
Storage volume-type to a vmdk volume. The storage policies
are exposed to the vmdk driver through the extra spec
property with the
vmware:storage_profile
key.
For example, assume a storage policy in vCenter named
gold_policy.
and a Block Storage
volume type named vol1
with the extra
spec key vmware:storage_profile
set to
the value gold_policy
. Any Block
Storage volume creation that uses the
vol1
volume type places the volume
only in data stores that match the
gold_policy
storage policy.
The Block Storage back-end configuration for vSphere
data stores is automatically determined based on the
vCenter configuration. If you configure a connection to
connect to vCenter version 5.5 or later in the
cinder.conf
file, the use of
storage policies to configure back-end data stores is
automatically supported.
Note | |
---|---|
You must configure any data stores that you configure for the Block Storage service for the Compute service. |
Procedure 1.6. To configure back-end data stores by using storage policies
In vCenter, tag the data stores to be used for the back end.
OpenStack also supports policies that are created by using vendor-specific capabilities; for example vSAN-specific storage policies.
Note The tag value serves as the policy. For details, see the section called “Storage policy-based configuration in vCenter”.
Set the extra spec key
vmware:storage_profile
in the desired Block Storage volume types to the policy name that you created in the previous step.Optionally, for the
vmware_host_version
parameter, enter the version number of your vSphere platform. For example,5.5
.This setting overrides the default location for the corresponding WSDL file. Among other scenarios, you can use this setting to prevent WSDL error messages during the development phase or to work with a newer version of vCenter.
Complete the other vCenter configuration parameters as appropriate.
Note | |
---|---|
The following considerations apply to configuring SPBM for the Block Storage service:
|
The VMware vCenter and ESX VMDK drivers support these operations:
Create volume
Create volume from another source volume. (Supported only if source volume is not attached to an instance.)
Create volume from snapshot
Create volume from glance image
Attach volume (When a volume is attached to an instance, a reconfigure operation is performed on the instance to add the volume's VMDK to it. The user must manually rescan and mount the device from within the guest operating system.)
Detach volume
Create snapshot (Allowed only if volume is not attached to an instance.)
Delete snapshot (Allowed only if volume is not attached to an instance.)
Upload as image to glance (Allowed only if volume is not attached to an instance.)
Note | |
---|---|
Although the VMware ESX VMDK driver supports these operations, it has not been extensively tested. |
You can configure Storage Policy-Based Management (SPBM) profiles for vCenter data stores supporting the Compute, Image Service, and Block Storage components of an OpenStack implementation.
In a vSphere OpenStack deployment, SPBM enables you to delegate several data stores for storage, which reduces the risk of running out of storage space. The policy logic selects the data store based on accessibility and available storage space.
Determine the data stores to be used by the SPBM policy.
Determine the tag that identifies the data stores in the OpenStack component configuration.
Create separate policies or sets of data stores for separate OpenStack components.
Procedure 1.7. To create storage policies in vCenter
In vCenter, create the tag that identifies the data stores:
From the Home screen, click
.Specify a name for the tag.
Specify a tag category. For example,
spbm-cinder
.
Apply the tag to the data stores to be used by the SPBM policy.
Note For details about creating tags in vSphere, see the vSphere documentation.
In vCenter, create a tag-based storage policy that uses one or more tags to identify a set of data stores.
Note You use this tag name and category when you configure the
*.conf
file for the OpenStack component. For details about creating tags in vSphere, see the vSphere documentation.
If storage policy is enabled, the driver initially selects all the data stores that match the associated storage policy.
If two or more data stores match the storage policy, the driver chooses a data store that is connected to the maximum number of hosts.
In case of ties, the driver chooses the data store with
lowest space utilization, where space utilization is
defined by the
(1-freespace/totalspace)
metric.
These actions reduce the number of volume migrations while attaching the volume to instances.
The volume must be migrated if the ESX host for the instance cannot access the data store that contains the volume.