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    Thin provisioning in XS7

    IT Discussion
    xenserver xenserver 7 thin provisioning storage virtualization
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    • BRRABillB
      BRRABill
      last edited by

      I really think that is what has thrown me for a loop.

      @scottalanmiller has been working with my on LVM, and then I try to figure it out the XS inplmentation of it and it is very confusing. (To me.)

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • scottalanmillerS
        scottalanmiller
        last edited by

        @BRRABill provided a link to this command that allows for thin provisioning...

        xe sr-create host-uuid=$host_uuid content-type=user name-label="SR name" shared=false device-config:device=/dev/sdX type=ext
        
        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
        • BRRABillB
          BRRABill
          last edited by

          Here's a link to the whole article.

          http://techblog.danielpellarini.com/sysadmin/how-to-enable-thin-provisioning-on-xenserver/

          F 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • F
            Francesco Provino @BRRABill
            last edited by

            @BRRABill said in Thin provisioning in XS7:

            Here's a link to the whole article.

            http://techblog.danielpellarini.com/sysadmin/how-to-enable-thin-provisioning-on-xenserver/

            So, nothing has changed in XS7 about thin provisioning… sadly, a plain KVM or XEN (so, the full Linux storage backend) is way ahead in flexibility, with thin-lvm, external and internal qcow (or raw) snapshot, etc.

            scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • scottalanmillerS
              scottalanmiller @Francesco Provino
              last edited by

              @Francesco-Provino said in Thin provisioning in XS7:

              @BRRABill said in Thin provisioning in XS7:

              Here's a link to the whole article.

              http://techblog.danielpellarini.com/sysadmin/how-to-enable-thin-provisioning-on-xenserver/

              So, nothing has changed in XS7 about thin provisioning… sadly, a plain KVM or XEN (so, the full Linux storage backend) is way ahead in flexibility, with thin-lvm, external and internal qcow (or raw) snapshot, etc.

              Yes, and will likely always remain so. Xen has always been vastly more powerful and flexible than XenServer, but lacks the distro model. XenServer is about making it packaged and easy.

              F 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • F
                Francesco Provino @scottalanmiller
                last edited by

                @scottalanmiller said in Thin provisioning in XS7:

                @Francesco-Provino said in Thin provisioning in XS7:

                @BRRABill said in Thin provisioning in XS7:

                Here's a link to the whole article.

                http://techblog.danielpellarini.com/sysadmin/how-to-enable-thin-provisioning-on-xenserver/

                So, nothing has changed in XS7 about thin provisioning… sadly, a plain KVM or XEN (so, the full Linux storage backend) is way ahead in flexibility, with thin-lvm, external and internal qcow (or raw) snapshot, etc.

                Yes, and will likely always remain so. Xen has always been vastly more powerful and flexible than XenServer, but lacks the distro model. XenServer is about making it packaged and easy.

                Uhm, I haven't found XS7 any easier than a plain linux distro until now, Its only big advantage is the great API that provide a nice and encapsulated method to backup VMs. But IMHO is both harder and less powerful than libvirt (with both Xen and KVM).

                scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • scottalanmillerS
                  scottalanmiller @Francesco Provino
                  last edited by

                  @Francesco-Provino said in Thin provisioning in XS7:

                  @scottalanmiller said in Thin provisioning in XS7:

                  @Francesco-Provino said in Thin provisioning in XS7:

                  @BRRABill said in Thin provisioning in XS7:

                  Here's a link to the whole article.

                  http://techblog.danielpellarini.com/sysadmin/how-to-enable-thin-provisioning-on-xenserver/

                  So, nothing has changed in XS7 about thin provisioning… sadly, a plain KVM or XEN (so, the full Linux storage backend) is way ahead in flexibility, with thin-lvm, external and internal qcow (or raw) snapshot, etc.

                  Yes, and will likely always remain so. Xen has always been vastly more powerful and flexible than XenServer, but lacks the distro model. XenServer is about making it packaged and easy.

                  Uhm, I haven't found XS7 any easier than a plain linux distro until now, Its only big advantage is the great API that provide a nice and encapsulated method to backup VMs. But IMHO is both harder and less powerful than libvirt (with both Xen and KVM).

                  have you played with XenOrchestra?

                  F 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • F
                    Francesco Provino @scottalanmiller
                    last edited by

                    @scottalanmiller said in Thin provisioning in XS7:

                    @Francesco-Provino said in Thin provisioning in XS7:

                    @scottalanmiller said in Thin provisioning in XS7:

                    @Francesco-Provino said in Thin provisioning in XS7:

                    @BRRABill said in Thin provisioning in XS7:

                    Here's a link to the whole article.

                    http://techblog.danielpellarini.com/sysadmin/how-to-enable-thin-provisioning-on-xenserver/

                    So, nothing has changed in XS7 about thin provisioning… sadly, a plain KVM or XEN (so, the full Linux storage backend) is way ahead in flexibility, with thin-lvm, external and internal qcow (or raw) snapshot, etc.

                    Yes, and will likely always remain so. Xen has always been vastly more powerful and flexible than XenServer, but lacks the distro model. XenServer is about making it packaged and easy.

                    Uhm, I haven't found XS7 any easier than a plain linux distro until now, Its only big advantage is the great API that provide a nice and encapsulated method to backup VMs. But IMHO is both harder and less powerful than libvirt (with both Xen and KVM).

                    have you played with XenOrchestra?

                    Not yet, but in truth I really prefer a solid CLI and documentation to another fancy GUI…

                    DustinB3403D scottalanmillerS 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • DustinB3403D
                      DustinB3403 @Francesco Provino
                      last edited by

                      @Francesco-Provino said in Thin provisioning in XS7:

                      @scottalanmiller said in Thin provisioning in XS7:

                      @Francesco-Provino said in Thin provisioning in XS7:

                      @scottalanmiller said in Thin provisioning in XS7:

                      @Francesco-Provino said in Thin provisioning in XS7:

                      @BRRABill said in Thin provisioning in XS7:

                      Here's a link to the whole article.

                      http://techblog.danielpellarini.com/sysadmin/how-to-enable-thin-provisioning-on-xenserver/

                      So, nothing has changed in XS7 about thin provisioning… sadly, a plain KVM or XEN (so, the full Linux storage backend) is way ahead in flexibility, with thin-lvm, external and internal qcow (or raw) snapshot, etc.

                      Yes, and will likely always remain so. Xen has always been vastly more powerful and flexible than XenServer, but lacks the distro model. XenServer is about making it packaged and easy.

                      Uhm, I haven't found XS7 any easier than a plain linux distro until now, Its only big advantage is the great API that provide a nice and encapsulated method to backup VMs. But IMHO is both harder and less powerful than libvirt (with both Xen and KVM).

                      have you played with XenOrchestra?

                      Not yet, but in truth I really prefer a solid CLI and documentation to another fancy GUI…

                      XO isn't just a gui, it's a single pane of glass for everything XS.

                      Backup, VM management and Host control.

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • scottalanmillerS
                        scottalanmiller @Francesco Provino
                        last edited by

                        @Francesco-Provino said in Thin provisioning in XS7:

                        @scottalanmiller said in Thin provisioning in XS7:

                        @Francesco-Provino said in Thin provisioning in XS7:

                        @scottalanmiller said in Thin provisioning in XS7:

                        @Francesco-Provino said in Thin provisioning in XS7:

                        @BRRABill said in Thin provisioning in XS7:

                        Here's a link to the whole article.

                        http://techblog.danielpellarini.com/sysadmin/how-to-enable-thin-provisioning-on-xenserver/

                        So, nothing has changed in XS7 about thin provisioning… sadly, a plain KVM or XEN (so, the full Linux storage backend) is way ahead in flexibility, with thin-lvm, external and internal qcow (or raw) snapshot, etc.

                        Yes, and will likely always remain so. Xen has always been vastly more powerful and flexible than XenServer, but lacks the distro model. XenServer is about making it packaged and easy.

                        Uhm, I haven't found XS7 any easier than a plain linux distro until now, Its only big advantage is the great API that provide a nice and encapsulated method to backup VMs. But IMHO is both harder and less powerful than libvirt (with both Xen and KVM).

                        have you played with XenOrchestra?

                        Not yet, but in truth I really prefer a solid CLI and documentation to another fancy GUI…

                        Solid CLI is good, but if you are using CLI, XenServer is the wrong product for you. XenServer's purpose is the XAPI and the only good XAPI implementation is XenOrchestra.

                        Nothing wrong with the all CLI approach, but XenServer really has no value in that case. Xen will kick its butt.

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                        • F
                          Francesco Provino
                          last edited by

                          Ok, using the ext type of storage the thin provisioning works without an issue; thanks to everybody for the answers!

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                          • scottalanmillerS
                            scottalanmiller
                            last edited by

                            And if you look, that EXT3 type is on LVM. Hence the weird confusion 🙂

                            BRRABillB 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • BRRABillB
                              BRRABill @scottalanmiller
                              last edited by

                              @scottalanmiller said in Thin provisioning in XS7:

                              And if you look, that EXT3 type is on LVM. Hence the weird confusion 🙂

                              Yeah that, as I said, is what got me.

                              So, if you pick EXT is enables thin provisioning by default?

                              scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • scottalanmillerS
                                scottalanmiller @BRRABill
                                last edited by

                                @BRRABill said in Thin provisioning in XS7:

                                @scottalanmiller said in Thin provisioning in XS7:

                                And if you look, that EXT3 type is on LVM. Hence the weird confusion 🙂

                                Yeah that, as I said, is what got me.

                                So, if you pick EXT is enables thin provisioning by default?
                                Yes. Because thin provisioning is not actually the option. It's actually just raw LVM vs file based. Files are thin provisioned. LVM raw is not. File based is being called ext3 here.

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