This PR adds the capability in CloudStack to convert VMware Instances disk(s) to KVM using virt-v2v and import them as CloudStack instances. It enables CloudStack operators to import VMware instances from vSphere into a KVM cluster managed by CloudStack. vSphere/VMware setup might be managed by CloudStack or be a standalone setup.
CloudStack will let the administrator select a VM from an existing VMware vCenter in the CloudStack environment or external vCenter requesting vCenter IP, Datacenter name and credentials.
The migrated VM will be imported as a KVM instance
The migration is done through virt-v2v: https://access.redhat.com/articles/1351473, https://www.ovirt.org/develop/release-management/features/virt/virt-v2v-integration.html
The migration process timeout can be set by the setting convert.instance.process.timeout
Before attempting the virt-v2v migration, CloudStack will create a clone of the source VM on VMware. The clone VM will be removed after the registration process finishes.
CloudStack will delegate the migration action to a KVM host and the host will attempt to migrate the VM invoking virt-v2v. In case the guest OS is not supported then CloudStack will handle the error operation as a failure
The migration process using virt-v2v may not be a fast process
CloudStack will not perform any check about the guest OS compatibility for the virt-v2v library as indicated on: https://access.redhat.com/articles/1351473.
* Guest OS mapping improvements
- Checks the OS mapping name in hypervisor (VMware, XenServer)
- Displays guest OS mappings in UI
* Added API getHypervisorGuestOsNames to list the guest OS names in the hypervisor, and code improvements
* Some static analysis fixes
* Removed commented code in listview
* Guest OS list
* UI changes for adding guest os and mappings
* Added guest os mappings in guest os form
* Added new filter to guest os mapping
* Name and description changes
* VMWare Host and cluster MO unit tests
* CheckGuestOsMapping command and answer unit tests
* GetHypervisorGuestOsNames command and answer unit tests
* VmwareResource unitests
* GuestOsMapper unittests
* icon changes
* Addressed review comments
* Renaming fixes
* Removed comments
* marvin tests for guest os operations
* Added marvin tests for OS mappings
* Document links and UI improvements
* Added deduplication for the list guest OS API
* Fixed linter failure
* Few bug fixes and UI changes
* Few improvements
* Addressed code smells
* Fixed UI issues after rebase
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Co-authored-by: Suresh Kumar Anaparti <sureshkumar.anaparti@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Harikrishna Patnala <harikrishna.patnala@gmail.com>
* vmware, network: add maclearning option
Adds option for specifying MAC Learning property for network offering (useful for VMware Distributed Virtual Portgroup). Added global config - network.mac.learning for the default value.
MAC Learning is supported for DV portgroups for VMware Distributed vSwitches v6.6.0+ and vSphere 6.7+
Signed-off-by: Abhishek Kumar <abhishek.mrt22@gmail.com>
* fix warning msg
Signed-off-by: Abhishek Kumar <abhishek.mrt22@gmail.com>
This PR fixes a small bug when explicitly setting VM hardware versions lower than version 10.
Vmware expects the hardware version in format: vmx-DD where DD is a two-digit representation of the virtual hardware version. For hardware version lower than 10, CloudStack was not using to digits for the hardware version number, which ended up on an error while creating worker VMs. (vmx-8 for example instead of vmx-08)
Set the VM hardware version on new VM deployments as set by the administrator on vCenter at cluster or datacenter level by the 'Edit Default VM Compatibility' action.
On VM deployments:
- Check cluster level VM hardware version If it is set, then is used as the new VM hardware version
- If cluster level VM hardware version not set, check the datacenter VM hardware version. If it is set, then it is used as the new VM hardware version.
- If both cluster or datacenter VM hardware version not set, then VM hardware version not set for the new VM
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>