Fixes#6701
When volume migration is initiated by system, account check is not needed.
Introduces a new global setting - allow.diskoffering.change.during.scale.vm. This determines whether to allow or disallow disk offering change for root volume during scaling of a stopped or running VM.
Signed-off-by: Abhishek Kumar <abhishek.mrt22@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Rohit Yadav <rohit.yadav@shapeblue.com>
Co-authored-by: Harikrishna Patnala <harikrishna.patnala@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Rohit Yadav <rohityadav89@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Daniel Augusto Veronezi Salvador <38945620+GutoVeronezi@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Abhishek Kumar <abhishek.mrt22@gmail.com>
This PR introduces new granularity levels to configure VM dynamic scalability. Previously VM is configured to be dynamically scalable based on the template and global setting. Now we bringing this option to configure at service offering and VM level also.
VM can dynamically scale only when all flags are ON at VM level, template, service offering and global setting. If any of the flags is set to false then VM cannot be scalable. This result will be persisted in DB for each VM and will be honoured for that VM till it is updated.
We are introducing 'dynamicscalingallowed' parameter with permitted values of true or false for deployVM API and createServiceOffering API.
Following are the API parameter changes:
createServiceOffering API:
dynamicscalingenabled: an optional parameter of type Boolean with default value “true”.
deployVirtualMachine API:
dynamicscalingenabled: an optional parameter of type Boolean with default value “true”.
Following are the UI changes:
Service offering creation has ON/OFF switch for dynamic scaling enabled with default value true
Root cause:
Even though dynamic scaling job is handled in vmworkjob queue which ensures serilizing multiple jobs but the database updating and generating usage events are out of the job queue.
Solution:
Moved all updations into the job queue
Firstly I have tested all the scenarios to check if nothing is broken:
Scaling on a running VM with normal compute offering
Scaling on a stopped VM with normal compute offering
Scaling on a running VM with custom compute offering
Scaling on stopped VM with custom compute offering
Scaling on stopped/running VM between custom compute offering and normal compute offering and combinations among these. Checked if the custom parameters have been populated or deleted accordingly based on the offering to which the VM is scaled
Since this is a corner scenario I could not test the exact point where two usage events are recorded at the same time for two different API calls on same VM.
* marvin: check resource count of more types
* New feature: add flag resource.count.running.vms.only to count resource consumption of only running vms
Stopped VMs do not use CPU/RAM actually.
A new global configuration resource.count.running.vms.only is added to determine whether resource (cpu/memory) of only running vms (including Starting/Stopping) will be taken into calculation of resource consumption.
* Add integration test for resource count of only running vms
Problem: In Vmware, appliances that have options that are required to be answered before deployments are configurable through vSphere vCenter user interface but it is not possible from the CloudStack user interface.
Root cause: CloudStack does not handle vApp configuration options during deployments if the appliance contains configurable options. These configurations are mandatory for VM deployment from the appliance on Vmware vSphere vCenter. As shown in the image below, Vmware detects there are mandatory configurations that the administrator must set before deploy the VM from the appliance (in red on the image below):
Solution:
On template registration, after it is downloaded to secondary storage, the OVF file is examined and OVF properties are extracted from the file when available.
OVF properties extracted from templates after being downloaded to secondary storage are stored on the new table 'template_ovf_properties'.
A new optional section is added to the VM deployment wizard in the UI:
If the selected template does not contain OVF properties, then the optional section is not displayed on the wizard.
If the selected template contains OVF properties, then the optional new section is displayed. Each OVF property is displayed and the user must complete every property before proceeding to the next section.
If any configuration property is empty, then a dialog is displayed indicating that there are empty properties which must be set before proceeding
image
The specific OVF properties set on deployment are stored on the 'user_vm_details' table with the prefix: 'ovfproperties-'.
The VM is configured with the vApp configuration section containing the values that the user provided on the wizard.
Currently an admin can choose which host a VM is to be started on.
They should be able to 'override' the allocation algorthm to a greater
or lesser extent at will, and be able to choose the pod, cluster or host
that they wish a new VM to be deployed in.
DeployVirtualMachine API has been extended with additional, optional
parameters podid and clusterid that will be passed to and used in the
deployment planner, when selecting a viable host. If the user supplies
a pod, a suitable host in the given pod will be selected. If the user
supplies a cluster, a suitable host in the given cluster will be selected.
Based on the parameter supplied and on passing validation, the VM will
then be deployed on the selected host, cluster or pod.
Remove maven standard module (which only a few were using) and get ride of maven customization for the projects structure.
- moved all directories to src/main/java, src/main/resources, src/main/scripts, src/test/java, src/test/resources
- grep scan to search for src/com and src/org left over
- grep for <project>/scripts to fix pom.xml configuration
- remove custom <build> configuration in pom.xml
Signed-off-by: Marc-Aurèle Brothier <m@brothier.org>