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1ifdef::manvolnum[]
2pvesr(1)
3========
4:pve-toplevel:
5
6NAME
7----
8
9pvesr - Proxmox VE Storage Replication
10
11SYNOPSIS
12--------
13
14include::pvesr.1-synopsis.adoc[]
15
16DESCRIPTION
17-----------
18endif::manvolnum[]
19
20ifndef::manvolnum[]
21Storage Replication
22===================
23:pve-toplevel:
24endif::manvolnum[]
25
26The `pvesr` command line tool manages the {PVE} storage replication
27framework. Storage replication brings redundancy for guests using
28local storage and reduces migration time.
29
30It replicates guest volumes to another node so that all data is available
31without using shared storage. Replication uses snapshots to minimize traffic
32sent over the network. Therefore, new data is sent only incrementally after
33an initial full sync. In the case of a node failure, your guest data is
34still available on the replicated node.
35
36The replication will be done automatically in configurable intervals.
37The minimum replication interval is one minute and the maximal interval is
38once a week. The format used to specify those intervals is a subset of
39`systemd` calendar events, see
40xref:pvesr_schedule_time_format[Schedule Format] section:
41
42Every guest can be replicated to multiple target nodes, but a guest cannot
43get replicated twice to the same target node.
44
45Each replications bandwidth can be limited, to avoid overloading a storage
46or server.
47
48Virtual guest with active replication cannot currently use online migration.
49Offline migration is supported in general. If you migrate to a node where
50the guests data is already replicated only the changes since the last
51synchronisation (so called `delta`) must be sent, this reduces the required
52time significantly. In this case the replication direction will also switch
53nodes automatically after the migration finished.
54
55For example: VM100 is currently on `nodeA` and gets replicated to `nodeB`.
56You migrate it to `nodeB`, so now it gets automatically replicated back from
57`nodeB` to `nodeA`.
58
59If you migrate to a node where the guest is not replicated, the whole disk
60data must send over. After the migration the replication job continues to
61replicate this guest to the configured nodes.
62
63[IMPORTANT]
64====
65High-Availability is allowed in combination with storage replication, but it
66has the following implications:
67
68* redistributing services after a more preferred node comes online will lead
69 to errors.
70
71* recovery works, but there may be some data loss between the last synced
72 time and the time a node failed.
73====
74
75Supported Storage Types
76-----------------------
77
78.Storage Types
79[width="100%",options="header"]
80|============================================
81|Description |PVE type |Snapshots|Stable
82|ZFS (local) |zfspool |yes |yes
83|============================================
84
85[[pvesr_schedule_time_format]]
86Schedule Format
87---------------
88
89{pve} has a very flexible replication scheduler. It is based on the systemd
90time calendar event format.footnote:[see `man 7 sytemd.time` for more information]
91Calendar events may be used to refer to one or more points in time in a
92single expression.
93
94Such a calendar event uses the following format:
95
96----
97[day(s)] [[start-time(s)][/repetition-time(s)]]
98----
99
100This allows you to configure a set of days on which the job should run.
101You can also set one or more start times, it tells the replication scheduler
102the moments in time when a job should start.
103With this information we could create a job which runs every workday at 10
104PM: `'mon,tue,wed,thu,fri 22'` which could be abbreviated to: `'mon..fri
10522'`, most reasonable schedules can be written quite intuitive this way.
106
107NOTE: Hours are set in 24h format.
108
109To allow easier and shorter configuration one or more repetition times can
110be set. They indicate that on the start-time(s) itself and the start-time(s)
111plus all multiples of the repetition value replications will be done. If
112you want to start replication at 8 AM and repeat it every 15 minutes you
113would use: `'8:00/15'`
114
115Here you see also that if no hour separation (`:`) is used the value gets
116interpreted as minute. If such a separation is used the value on the left
117denotes the hour(s) and the value on the right denotes the minute(s).
118Further, you can use `*` to match all possible values.
119
120To get additional ideas look at
121xref:pvesr_schedule_format_examples[more Examples below].
122
123Detailed Specification
124~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
125
126days:: Days are specified with an abbreviated English version: `sun, mon,
127tue, wed, thu, fri and sat`. You may use multiple days as a comma-separated
128list. A range of days can also be set by specifying the start and end day
129separated by ``..'', for example `mon..fri`. Those formats can be also
130mixed. If omitted `'*'` is assumed.
131
132time-format:: A time format consists of hours and minutes interval lists.
133Hours and minutes are separated by `':'`. Both, hour and minute, can be list
134and ranges of values, using the same format as days.
135First come hours then minutes, hours can be omitted if not needed, in this
136case `'*'` is assumed for the value of hours.
137The valid range for values is `0-23` for hours and `0-59` for minutes.
138
139[[pvesr_schedule_format_examples]]
140Examples:
141~~~~~~~~~
142
143.Schedule Examples
144[width="100%",options="header"]
145|==============================================================================
146|Schedule String |Alternative |Meaning
147|mon,tue,wed,thu,fri |mon..fri |All working days at 0:00
148|sat,sun |sat..sun |Only on weekend at 0:00
149|mon,wed,fri |-- |Only on Monday, Wednesday and Friday at 0:00
150|12:05 |12:05 |All weekdays at 12:05 PM
151|*/5 |0/5 |Every day all five minutes
152|mon..wed 30/10 |mon,tue,wed 30/10 |Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday 30, 40 and 50 minutes after every full hour
153|mon..fri 8..17,22:0/15 |-- |All working days every 15 minutes between 8 AM and 5 PM plus at 10 PM
154|fri 12..13:5/20 |fri 12,13:5/20 |Friday at 12:05, 12:25, 12:45, 13:05, 13:25 and 13:45
155|12..22:5/2 |12:5/2 |Every day starting at 12:05 until 22:05 all 2 hours
156|* |*/1 |Every minute (minimum interval)
157|==============================================================================
158
159Error Handling
160--------------
161
162If a replication job encounters problems it will be placed in error state.
163In this state the configured replication intervals get suspended
164temporarily. Then we retry the failed replication in a 30 minute interval,
165once this succeeds the original schedule gets activated again.
166
167Possible issues
168~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
169
170This represents only the most common issues possible, depending on your
171setup there may be also another cause.
172
173* Network is not working.
174
175* No free space left on the replication target storage.
176
177* Storage with same storage ID available on target node
178
179NOTE: You can always use the replication log to get hints about a problems
180cause.
181
182Migrating a guest in case of Error
183~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
184// FIXME: move this to better fitting chapter (sysadmin ?) and only link to
185// it here
186
187In the case of a grave error a virtual guest may get stuck on a failed
188node. You then need to move it manually to a working node again.
189
190Example
191~~~~~~~
192
193Lets assume that you have two guests (VM 100 and CT 200) running on node A
194and replicate to node B.
195Node A failed and can not get back online. Now you have to migrate the guest
196to Node B manually.
197
198- connect to node B over ssh or open its shell via the WebUI
199
200- check if that the cluster is quorate
201+
202----
203# pvecm status
204----
205
206- If you have no quorum we strongly advise to fix this first and make the
207 node operable again. Only if this is not possible at the moment you may
208 use the following command to enforce quorum on the current node:
209+
210----
211# pvecm expected 1
212----
213
214WARNING: If expected votes are set avoid changes which affect the cluster
215(for example adding/removing nodes, storages, virtual guests) at all costs.
216Only use it to get vital guests up and running again or to resolve to quorum
217issue itself.
218
219- move both guest configuration files form the origin node A to node B:
220+
221----
222# mv /etc/pve/node/A/qemu-server/100.conf /etc/pve/node/B/qemu-server/100.conf
223# mv /etc/pve/node/A/lxc/200.conf /etc/pve/node/B/lxc/200.conf
224----
225
226- Now you can start the guests again:
227+
228----
229# qm start 100
230# pct start 200
231----
232
233Remember to replace the VMIDs and node names with your respective values.
234
235Managing Jobs
236-------------
237
238You can use the web GUI to create, modify and remove replication jobs
239easily. Additionally the command line interface (CLI) tool `pvesr` can be
240used to do this.
241
242You can find the replication panel on all levels (datacenter, node, virtual
243guest) in the web GUI. They differ in what jobs get shown: all, only node
244specific or only guest specific jobs.
245
246// TODO insert auto generated images of add web UI dialog
247
248Once adding a new job you need to specify the virtual guest (if not already
249selected) and the target node. The replication
250xref:pvesr_schedule_time_format[schedule] can be set if the default of `all
25115 minutes` is not desired. You may also impose rate limiting on a
252replication job, this can help to keep the storage load acceptable.
253
254A replication job is identified by an cluster-wide unique ID. This ID is
255composed of the VMID in addition to an job number.
256This ID must only be specified manually if the CLI tool is used.
257
258
259Command Line Interface Examples
260-------------------------------
261
262Create a replication job which will run all 5 min with limited bandwidth of
26310 mbps (megabytes per second) for the guest with guest ID 100.
264
265----
266# pvesr create-local-job 100-0 pve1 --schedule "*/5" --rate 10
267----
268
269Disable an active job with ID `100-0`
270
271----
272# pvesr disable 100-0
273----
274
275Enable a deactivated job with ID `100-0`
276
277----
278# pvesr enable 100-0
279----
280
281Change the schedule interval of the job with ID `100-0` to once a hour
282
283----
284# pvesr update 100-0 --schedule '*/00'
285----
286
287ifdef::manvolnum[]
288include::pve-copyright.adoc[]
289endif::manvolnum[]