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1[[chapter_storage]]
2ifdef::manvolnum[]
3pvesm(1)
4========
5:pve-toplevel:
6
7NAME
8----
9
10pvesm - Proxmox VE Storage Manager
11
12
13SYNOPSIS
14--------
15
16include::pvesm.1-synopsis.adoc[]
17
18DESCRIPTION
19-----------
20endif::manvolnum[]
21ifndef::manvolnum[]
22{pve} Storage
23=============
24:pve-toplevel:
25endif::manvolnum[]
26ifdef::wiki[]
27:title: Storage
28endif::wiki[]
29
30The {pve} storage model is very flexible. Virtual machine images
31can either be stored on one or several local storages, or on shared
32storage like NFS or iSCSI (NAS, SAN). There are no limits, and you may
33configure as many storage pools as you like. You can use all
34storage technologies available for Debian Linux.
35
36One major benefit of storing VMs on shared storage is the ability to
37live-migrate running machines without any downtime, as all nodes in
38the cluster have direct access to VM disk images. There is no need to
39copy VM image data, so live migration is very fast in that case.
40
41The storage library (package `libpve-storage-perl`) uses a flexible
42plugin system to provide a common interface to all storage types. This
43can be easily adopted to include further storage types in future.
44
45
46Storage Types
47-------------
48
49There are basically two different classes of storage types:
50
51Block level storage::
52
53Allows to store large 'raw' images. It is usually not possible to store
54other files (ISO, backups, ..) on such storage types. Most modern
55block level storage implementations support snapshots and clones.
56RADOS, Sheepdog and GlusterFS are distributed systems, replicating storage
57data to different nodes.
58
59File level storage::
60
61They allow access to a full featured (POSIX) file system. They are
62more flexible, and allows you to store any content type. ZFS is
63probably the most advanced system, and it has full support for
64snapshots and clones.
65
66
67.Available storage types
68[width="100%",cols="<d,1*m,4*d",options="header"]
69|===========================================================
70|Description |PVE type |Level |Shared|Snapshots|Stable
71|ZFS (local) |zfspool |file |no |yes |yes
72|Directory |dir |file |no |no^1^ |yes
73|NFS |nfs |file |yes |no^1^ |yes
74|GlusterFS |glusterfs |file |yes |no^1^ |yes
75|LVM |lvm |block |no^2^ |no |yes
76|LVM-thin |lvmthin |block |no |yes |yes
77|iSCSI/kernel |iscsi |block |yes |no |yes
78|iSCSI/libiscsi |iscsidirect |block |yes |no |yes
79|Ceph/RBD |rbd |block |yes |yes |yes
80|Sheepdog |sheepdog |block |yes |yes |beta
81|ZFS over iSCSI |zfs |block |yes |yes |yes
82|=========================================================
83
84^1^: On file based storages, snapshots are possible with the 'qcow2' format.
85
86^2^: It is possible to use LVM on top of an iSCSI storage. That way
87you get a `shared` LVM storage.
88
89
90Thin Provisioning
91~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
92
93A number of storages, and the Qemu image format `qcow2`, support 'thin
94provisioning'. With thin provisioning activated, only the blocks that
95the guest system actually use will be written to the storage.
96
97Say for instance you create a VM with a 32GB hard disk, and after
98installing the guest system OS, the root file system of the VM contains
993 GB of data. In that case only 3GB are written to the storage, even
100if the guest VM sees a 32GB hard drive. In this way thin provisioning
101allows you to create disk images which are larger than the currently
102available storage blocks. You can create large disk images for your
103VMs, and when the need arises, add more disks to your storage without
104resizing the VMs' file systems.
105
106All storage types which have the ``Snapshots'' feature also support thin
107provisioning.
108
109CAUTION: If a storage runs full, all guests using volumes on that
110storage receive IO errors. This can cause file system inconsistencies
111and may corrupt your data. So it is advisable to avoid
112over-provisioning of your storage resources, or carefully observe
113free space to avoid such conditions.
114
115
116Storage Configuration
117---------------------
118
119All {pve} related storage configuration is stored within a single text
120file at `/etc/pve/storage.cfg`. As this file is within `/etc/pve/`, it
121gets automatically distributed to all cluster nodes. So all nodes
122share the same storage configuration.
123
124Sharing storage configuration make perfect sense for shared storage,
125because the same ``shared'' storage is accessible from all nodes. But is
126also useful for local storage types. In this case such local storage
127is available on all nodes, but it is physically different and can have
128totally different content.
129
130
131Storage Pools
132~~~~~~~~~~~~~
133
134Each storage pool has a `<type>`, and is uniquely identified by its
135`<STORAGE_ID>`. A pool configuration looks like this:
136
137----
138<type>: <STORAGE_ID>
139 <property> <value>
140 <property> <value>
141 ...
142----
143
144The `<type>: <STORAGE_ID>` line starts the pool definition, which is then
145followed by a list of properties. Most properties have values, but some of
146them come with reasonable default. In that case you can omit the value.
147
148To be more specific, take a look at the default storage configuration
149after installation. It contains one special local storage pool named
150`local`, which refers to the directory `/var/lib/vz` and is always
151available. The {pve} installer creates additional storage entries
152depending on the storage type chosen at installation time.
153
154.Default storage configuration (`/etc/pve/storage.cfg`)
155----
156dir: local
157 path /var/lib/vz
158 content iso,vztmpl,backup
159
160# default image store on LVM based installation
161lvmthin: local-lvm
162 thinpool data
163 vgname pve
164 content rootdir,images
165
166# default image store on ZFS based installation
167zfspool: local-zfs
168 pool rpool/data
169 sparse
170 content images,rootdir
171----
172
173
174Common Storage Properties
175~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
176
177A few storage properties are common among different storage types.
178
179nodes::
180
181List of cluster node names where this storage is
182usable/accessible. One can use this property to restrict storage
183access to a limited set of nodes.
184
185content::
186
187A storage can support several content types, for example virtual disk
188images, cdrom iso images, container templates or container root
189directories. Not all storage types support all content types. One can set
190this property to select for what this storage is used for.
191
192images:::
193
194KVM-Qemu VM images.
195
196rootdir:::
197
198Allow to store container data.
199
200vztmpl:::
201
202Container templates.
203
204backup:::
205
206Backup files (`vzdump`).
207
208iso:::
209
210ISO images
211
212shared::
213
214Mark storage as shared.
215
216disable::
217
218You can use this flag to disable the storage completely.
219
220maxfiles::
221
222Maximum number of backup files per VM. Use `0` for unlimited.
223
224format::
225
226Default image format (`raw|qcow2|vmdk`)
227
228
229WARNING: It is not advisable to use the same storage pool on different
230{pve} clusters. Some storage operation need exclusive access to the
231storage, so proper locking is required. While this is implemented
232within a cluster, it does not work between different clusters.
233
234
235Volumes
236-------
237
238We use a special notation to address storage data. When you allocate
239data from a storage pool, it returns such a volume identifier. A volume
240is identified by the `<STORAGE_ID>`, followed by a storage type
241dependent volume name, separated by colon. A valid `<VOLUME_ID>` looks
242like:
243
244 local:230/example-image.raw
245
246 local:iso/debian-501-amd64-netinst.iso
247
248 local:vztmpl/debian-5.0-joomla_1.5.9-1_i386.tar.gz
249
250 iscsi-storage:0.0.2.scsi-14f504e46494c4500494b5042546d2d646744372d31616d61
251
252To get the file system path for a `<VOLUME_ID>` use:
253
254 pvesm path <VOLUME_ID>
255
256
257Volume Ownership
258~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
259
260There exists an ownership relation for `image` type volumes. Each such
261volume is owned by a VM or Container. For example volume
262`local:230/example-image.raw` is owned by VM 230. Most storage
263backends encodes this ownership information into the volume name.
264
265When you remove a VM or Container, the system also removes all
266associated volumes which are owned by that VM or Container.
267
268
269Using the Command Line Interface
270--------------------------------
271
272It is recommended to familiarize yourself with the concept behind storage
273pools and volume identifiers, but in real life, you are not forced to do any
274of those low level operations on the command line. Normally,
275allocation and removal of volumes is done by the VM and Container
276management tools.
277
278Nevertheless, there is a command line tool called `pvesm` (``{pve}
279Storage Manager''), which is able to perform common storage management
280tasks.
281
282
283Examples
284~~~~~~~~
285
286Add storage pools
287
288 pvesm add <TYPE> <STORAGE_ID> <OPTIONS>
289 pvesm add dir <STORAGE_ID> --path <PATH>
290 pvesm add nfs <STORAGE_ID> --path <PATH> --server <SERVER> --export <EXPORT>
291 pvesm add lvm <STORAGE_ID> --vgname <VGNAME>
292 pvesm add iscsi <STORAGE_ID> --portal <HOST[:PORT]> --target <TARGET>
293
294Disable storage pools
295
296 pvesm set <STORAGE_ID> --disable 1
297
298Enable storage pools
299
300 pvesm set <STORAGE_ID> --disable 0
301
302Change/set storage options
303
304 pvesm set <STORAGE_ID> <OPTIONS>
305 pvesm set <STORAGE_ID> --shared 1
306 pvesm set local --format qcow2
307 pvesm set <STORAGE_ID> --content iso
308
309Remove storage pools. This does not delete any data, and does not
310disconnect or unmount anything. It just removes the storage
311configuration.
312
313 pvesm remove <STORAGE_ID>
314
315Allocate volumes
316
317 pvesm alloc <STORAGE_ID> <VMID> <name> <size> [--format <raw|qcow2>]
318
319Allocate a 4G volume in local storage. The name is auto-generated if
320you pass an empty string as `<name>`
321
322 pvesm alloc local <VMID> '' 4G
323
324Free volumes
325
326 pvesm free <VOLUME_ID>
327
328WARNING: This really destroys all volume data.
329
330List storage status
331
332 pvesm status
333
334List storage contents
335
336 pvesm list <STORAGE_ID> [--vmid <VMID>]
337
338List volumes allocated by VMID
339
340 pvesm list <STORAGE_ID> --vmid <VMID>
341
342List iso images
343
344 pvesm list <STORAGE_ID> --iso
345
346List container templates
347
348 pvesm list <STORAGE_ID> --vztmpl
349
350Show file system path for a volume
351
352 pvesm path <VOLUME_ID>
353
354ifdef::wiki[]
355
356See Also
357--------
358
359* link:/wiki/Storage:_Directory[Storage: Directory]
360
361* link:/wiki/Storage:_GlusterFS[Storage: GlusterFS]
362
363* link:/wiki/Storage:_User_Mode_iSCSI[Storage: User Mode iSCSI]
364
365* link:/wiki/Storage:_iSCSI[Storage: iSCSI]
366
367* link:/wiki/Storage:_LVM[Storage: LVM]
368
369* link:/wiki/Storage:_LVM_Thin[Storage: LVM Thin]
370
371* link:/wiki/Storage:_NFS[Storage: NFS]
372
373* link:/wiki/Storage:_RBD[Storage: RBD]
374
375* link:/wiki/Storage:_ZFS[Storage: ZFS]
376
377* link:/wiki/Storage:_ZFS_over_iSCSI[Storage: ZFS over iSCSI]
378
379endif::wiki[]
380
381ifndef::wiki[]
382
383// backend documentation
384
385include::pve-storage-dir.adoc[]
386
387include::pve-storage-nfs.adoc[]
388
389include::pve-storage-glusterfs.adoc[]
390
391include::pve-storage-zfspool.adoc[]
392
393include::pve-storage-lvm.adoc[]
394
395include::pve-storage-lvmthin.adoc[]
396
397include::pve-storage-iscsi.adoc[]
398
399include::pve-storage-iscsidirect.adoc[]
400
401include::pve-storage-rbd.adoc[]
402
403
404
405ifdef::manvolnum[]
406include::pve-copyright.adoc[]
407endif::manvolnum[]
408
409endif::wiki[]
410