%BOOK_ENTITIES; ]> Submitting Feedback and Getting Help The Apache CloudStack project has mailing lists for users and developers. These are the official channels of communication for the project and are the best way to get answers about using and contributing to CloudStack. It's a good idea to subscribe to the cloudstack-users mailing list if you've deployed or are deploying CloudStack into production, and even for test deployments. The CloudStack developer's mailing list (cloudstack-dev) is for discussions about CloudStack development, and is the best list for discussing possible bugs in CloudStack. Anyone contributing to CloudStack should be on this mailing list. You can also report bugs in CloudStack using the Apache Defect Tracking System. To posts to the lists, you'll need to be subscribed. See the CloudStack Web site for instructions. Welcome to Apache CloudStack 4.0.2 Welcome to the 4.0.2 release of Apache CloudStack, the first maintenance release from the Apache CloudStack project since its graduation from the Apache Incubator, and the second maintenance release in the 4.0.x series. This document contains information specific to this release of &PRODUCT;, including upgrade instructions from prior releases, any new features added to &PRODUCT;, API changes, and issues fixed in this release. Since this is a maintenance release, we do not include any new features or database changes unless it's unavoidable. There are no database changes in this release. For documentation beyond the Release Notes, we have three guides for 4.0.2: For a new installation, see the 4.0.2 &PRODUCT; Installation Guide. For usage and administration instructions, please see the &PRODUCT; Administrator's Guide. Developers and users who wish to work with the API will find instruction in the &PRODUCT; API Developer's Guide. If you find any errors or problems in this guide, please send an email to dev@cloudstack.apache.org, or open a Jira ticket under the Doc component. Upgrade Instructions
Upgrade from 4.0.x-incubating to 4.0.2 Perform the following to upgrade from prior versions in 4.0.x-incubating to 4.0.2. Note that some of the steps here are only required if you're using a specific hypervisor. The steps that are hypervisor-specific are called out with a note. Stop all Usage Servers if running. Run this on all Usage Server hosts. # service cloud-usage stop Stop the Management Servers. Run this on all Management Server hosts. # service cloud-management stop On the MySQL master, take a backup of the MySQL databases. We recommend performing this step even in test upgrades. If there is an issue, this will assist with debugging. In the following commands, it is assumed that you have set the root password on the database, which is a CloudStack recommended best practice. Substitute your own MySQL root password. # mysqldump -u root -pmysql_password cloud > cloudstack_backup.dmp # mysqldump -u root -pmysql_password cloud_usage > usage_backup.dmp Either build RPM/DEB packages as detailed in the Installation Guide, or use one of the community provided yum/apt repositories to gain access to the &PRODUCT; binaries. After you have configured an appropriate yum or apt repository, you may execute the one of the following commands as appropriate for your environment in order to upgrade &PRODUCT;: # yum update cloud-* # apt-get update # apt-get upgrade cloud-* You will, of course, have to agree to the changes suggested by Yum or APT. If you have more than one management server node, repeat the upgrade steps on each node. Start the first Management Server. Do not start any other Management Server nodes yet. # service cloud-management start Wait until the databases are upgraded. Ensure that the database upgrade is complete. After confirmation, start the other Management Servers one at a time by running the same command on each node. Failing to restart the Management Server indicates a problem in the upgrade. Having the Management Server restarted without any issues indicates that the upgrade is successfully completed. Start all Usage Servers (if they were running on your previous version). Perform this on each Usage Server host. # service cloud-usage start Additional steps are required for each KVM host. These steps will not affect running guests in the cloud. These steps are required only for clouds using KVM as hosts and only on the KVM hosts. Configure a yum or apt respository containing the &PRODUCT; packages as outlined in the Installation Guide. Stop the running agent. # service cloud-agent stop Update the agent software with one of the following command sets as appropriate for your environment. # yum update cloud-* # apt-get update # apt-get upgrade cloud-* Start the agent. # service cloud-agent start Edit /etc/cloud/agent/agent.properties to change the resource parameter from "com.cloud.agent.resource.computing.LibvirtComputingResource" to "com.cloud.hypervisor.kvm.resource.LibvirtComputingResource". When the Management Server is up and running, log in to the CloudStack UI and restart the virtual router for proper functioning of all the features. Log in to the CloudStack UI as administrator, and check the status of the hosts. All hosts should come to Up state (except those that you know to be offline). You may need to wait 20 or 30 minutes, depending on the number of hosts. Troubleshooting: If login fails, clear your browser cache and reload the page. Do not proceed to the next step until the hosts show in Up state.
Upgrade from 3.0.2 to 4.0.1-incubating Perform the following to upgrade from version 3.0.2 to version 4.0.2. Note that some of the steps here are only required if you're using a specific hypervisor. The steps that are hypervisor-specific are called out with a note. Ensure that you query your IP address usage records and process them or make a backup. During the upgrade you will lose the old IP address usage records. Starting in 3.0.2, the usage record format for IP addresses is the same as the rest of the usage types. Instead of a single record with the assignment and release dates, separate records are generated per aggregation period with start and end dates. After upgrading, any existing IP address usage records in the old format will no longer be available. The following upgrade instructions apply only if you're using VMware hosts. If you're not using VMware hosts, skip this step and move on to step 3: stopping all usage servers. In each zone that includes VMware hosts, you need to add a new system VM template. While running the existing 3.0.2 system, log in to the UI as root administrator. In the left navigation bar, click Templates. In Select view, click Templates. Click Register template. The Register template dialog box is displayed. In the Register template dialog box, specify the following values (do not change these): Field Value Name systemvm-vmware-4.0 Description systemvm-vmware-4.0 URL http://download.cloud.com/templates/burbank/burbank-systemvm-08012012.ova Zone Choose the zone where this hypervisor is used Hypervisor VMware Format OVA OS Type Debian GNU/Linux 5.0 (32-bit) Extractable no Password Enabled no Public no Featured no Watch the screen to be sure that the template downloads successfully and enters the READY state. Do not proceed until this is successful. Stop all Usage Servers if running. Run this on all Usage Server hosts. # service cloud-usage stop Stop the Management Servers. Run this on all Management Server hosts. # service cloud-management stop On the MySQL master, take a backup of the MySQL databases. We recommend performing this step even in test upgrades. If there is an issue, this will assist with debugging. In the following commands, it is assumed that you have set the root password on the database, which is a CloudStack recommended best practice. Substitute your own MySQL root password. # mysqldump -u root -pmysql_password cloud > cloud-backup.dmp # mysqldump -u root -pmysql_password cloud_usage > cloud-usage-backup.dmp Either build RPM/DEB packages as detailed in the Installation Guide, or use one of the community provided yum/apt repositories to gain access to the &PRODUCT; binaries. After you have configured an appropriate yum or apt repository, you may execute the one of the following commands as appropriate for your environment in order to upgrade &PRODUCT;: # yum update cloud-* # apt-get update # apt-get upgrade cloud-* You will, of course, have to agree to the changes suggested by Yum or APT. If the upgrade output includes a message similar to the following, then some custom content was found in your old components.xml, and you need to merge the two files: warning: /etc/cloud/management/components.xml created as /etc/cloud/management/components.xml.rpmnew Instructions follow in the next step. If you have made changes to your copy of /etc/cloud/management/components.xml the changes will be preserved in the upgrade. However, you need to do the following steps to place these changes in a new version of the file which is compatible with version 4.0.2. Make a backup copy of /etc/cloud/management/components.xml. For example: # mv /etc/cloud/management/components.xml /etc/cloud/management/components.xml-backup Copy /etc/cloud/management/components.xml.rpmnew to create a new /etc/cloud/management/components.xml: # cp -ap /etc/cloud/management/components.xml.rpmnew /etc/cloud/management/components.xml Merge your changes from the backup file into the new components.xml. # vi /etc/cloud/management/components.xml If you have more than one management server node, repeat the upgrade steps on each node. Start the first Management Server. Do not start any other Management Server nodes yet. # service cloud-management start Wait until the databases are upgraded. Ensure that the database upgrade is complete. After confirmation, start the other Management Servers one at a time by running the same command on each node. Failing to restart the Management Server indicates a problem in the upgrade. Having the Management Server restarted without any issues indicates that the upgrade is successfully completed. Start all Usage Servers (if they were running on your previous version). Perform this on each Usage Server host. # service cloud-usage start Additional steps are required for each KVM host. These steps will not affect running guests in the cloud. These steps are required only for clouds using KVM as hosts and only on the KVM hosts. Configure a yum or apt respository containing the &PRODUCT; packages as outlined in the Installation Guide. Stop the running agent. # service cloud-agent stop Update the agent software with one of the following command sets as appropriate for your environment. # yum update cloud-* # apt-get update # apt-get upgrade cloud-* Start the agent. # service cloud-agent start Edit /etc/cloud/agent/agent.properties to change the resource parameter from "com.cloud.agent.resource.computing.LibvirtComputingResource" to "com.cloud.hypervisor.kvm.resource.LibvirtComputingResource". Start the cloud agent and cloud management services. When the Management Server is up and running, log in to the CloudStack UI and restart the virtual router for proper functioning of all the features. Log in to the CloudStack UI as administrator, and check the status of the hosts. All hosts should come to Up state (except those that you know to be offline). You may need to wait 20 or 30 minutes, depending on the number of hosts. Troubleshooting: If login fails, clear your browser cache and reload the page. Do not proceed to the next step until the hosts show in Up state. If you are upgrading from 3.0.2, perform the following: Ensure that the admin port is set to 8096 by using the "integration.api.port" global parameter. This port is used by the cloud-sysvmadm script at the end of the upgrade procedure. For information about how to set this parameter, see "Setting Global Configuration Parameters" in the Installation Guide. Restart the Management Server. If you don't want the admin port to remain open, you can set it to null after the upgrade is done and restart the management server. Run the cloud-sysvmadm script to stop, then start, all Secondary Storage VMs, Console Proxy VMs, and virtual routers. Run the script once on each management server. Substitute your own IP address of the MySQL instance, the MySQL user to connect as, and the password to use for that user. In addition to those parameters, provide the -c and -r arguments. For example: # nohup cloud-sysvmadm -d 192.168.1.5 -u cloud -p password -c -r > sysvm.log 2>&1 & # tail -f sysvm.log This might take up to an hour or more to run, depending on the number of accounts in the system. If needed, upgrade all Citrix XenServer hypervisor hosts in your cloud to a version supported by &PRODUCT; 4.0.2. The supported versions are XenServer 5.6 SP2 and 6.0.2. Instructions for upgrade can be found in the &PRODUCT; 4.0.2 Installation Guide. Now apply the XenServer hotfix XS602E003 (and any other needed hotfixes) to XenServer v6.0.2 hypervisor hosts. Disconnect the XenServer cluster from CloudStack. In the left navigation bar of the CloudStack UI, select Infrastructure. Under Clusters, click View All. Select the XenServer cluster and click Actions - Unmanage. This may fail if there are hosts not in one of the states Up, Down, Disconnected, or Alert. You may need to fix that before unmanaging this cluster. Wait until the status of the cluster has reached Unmanaged. Use the CloudStack UI to check on the status. When the cluster is in the unmanaged state, there is no connection to the hosts in the cluster. To clean up the VLAN, log in to one XenServer host and run: /opt/xensource/bin/cloud-clean-vlan.sh Now prepare the upgrade by running the following on one XenServer host: /opt/xensource/bin/cloud-prepare-upgrade.sh If you see a message like "can't eject CD", log in to the VM and unmount the CD, then run this script again. Upload the hotfix to the XenServer hosts. Always start with the Xen pool master, then the slaves. Using your favorite file copy utility (e.g. WinSCP), copy the hotfixes to the host. Place them in a temporary folder such as /tmp. On the Xen pool master, upload the hotfix with this command: xe patch-upload file-name=XS602E003.xsupdate Make a note of the output from this command, which is a UUID for the hotfix file. You'll need it in another step later. (Optional) If you are applying other hotfixes as well, you can repeat the commands in this section with the appropriate hotfix number. For example, XS602E004.xsupdate. Manually live migrate all VMs on this host to another host. First, get a list of the VMs on this host: # xe vm-list Then use this command to migrate each VM. Replace the example host name and VM name with your own: # xe vm-migrate live=true host=host-name vm=VM-name Troubleshooting If you see a message like "You attempted an operation on a VM which requires PV drivers to be installed but the drivers were not detected," run: /opt/xensource/bin/make_migratable.sh b6cf79c8-02ee-050b-922f-49583d9f1a14. Apply the hotfix. First, get the UUID of this host: # xe host-list Then use the following command to apply the hotfix. Replace the example host UUID with the current host ID, and replace the hotfix UUID with the output from the patch-upload command you ran on this machine earlier. You can also get the hotfix UUID by running xe patch-list. xe patch-apply host-uuid=host-uuid uuid=hotfix-uuid Copy the following files from the CloudStack Management Server to the host. Copy from here... ...to here /usr/lib64/cloud/common/scripts/vm/hypervisor/xenserver/xenserver60/NFSSR.py /opt/xensource/sm/NFSSR.py /usr/lib64/cloud/common/scripts/vm/hypervisor/xenserver/setupxenserver.sh /opt/xensource/bin/setupxenserver.sh /usr/lib64/cloud/common/scripts/vm/hypervisor/xenserver/make_migratable.sh /opt/xensource/bin/make_migratable.sh (Only for hotfixes XS602E005 and XS602E007) You need to apply a new Cloud Support Pack. Download the CSP software onto the XenServer host from one of the following links: For hotfix XS602E005: http://coltrane.eng.hq.xensource.com/release/XenServer-6.x/XS-6.0.2/hotfixes/XS602E005/56710/xe-phase-2/xenserver-cloud-supp.tgz For hotfix XS602E007: http://coltrane.eng.hq.xensource.com/release/XenServer-6.x/XS-6.0.2/hotfixes/XS602E007/57824/xe-phase-2/xenserver-cloud-supp.tgz Extract the file: # tar xf xenserver-cloud-supp.tgz Run the following script: # xe-install-supplemental-pack xenserver-cloud-supp.iso If the XenServer host is part of a zone that uses basic networking, disable Open vSwitch (OVS): # xe-switch-network-backend bridge Reboot this XenServer host. Run the following: /opt/xensource/bin/setupxenserver.sh If the message "mv: cannot stat `/etc/cron.daily/logrotate': No such file or directory" appears, you can safely ignore it. Run the following: for pbd in `xe pbd-list currently-attached=false| grep ^uuid | awk '{print $NF}'`; do xe pbd-plug uuid=$pbd ; On each slave host in the Xen pool, repeat these steps, starting from "manually live migrate VMs." Troubleshooting Tip If passwords which you know to be valid appear not to work after upgrade, or other UI issues are seen, try clearing your browser cache and reloading the UI page.
Upgrade from 2.2.14 to 4.0.2 Ensure that you query your IPaddress usage records and process them; for example, issue invoices for any usage that you have not yet billed users for. Starting in 3.0.2, the usage record format for IP addresses is the same as the rest of the usage types. Instead of a single record with the assignment and release dates, separate records are generated per aggregation period with start and end dates. After upgrading to 4.0.2, any existing IP address usage records in the old format will no longer be available. If you are using version 2.2.0 - 2.2.13, first upgrade to 2.2.14 by using the instructions in the 2.2.14 Release Notes. KVM Hosts If KVM hypervisor is used in your cloud, be sure you completed the step to insert a valid username and password into the host_details table on each KVM node as described in the 2.2.14 Release Notes. This step is critical, as the database will be encrypted after the upgrade to 4.0.2. While running the 2.2.14 system, log in to the UI as root administrator. Using the UI, add a new System VM template for each hypervisor type that is used in your cloud. In each zone, add a system VM template for each hypervisor used in that zone In the left navigation bar, click Templates. In Select view, click Templates. Click Register template. The Register template dialog box is displayed. In the Register template dialog box, specify the following values depending on the hypervisor type (do not change these): Hypervisor Description XenServer Name: systemvm-xenserver-3.0.0 Description: systemvm-xenserver-3.0.0 URL: http://download.cloud.com/templates/acton/acton-systemvm-02062012.vhd.bz2 Zone: Choose the zone where this hypervisor is used Hypervisor: XenServer Format: VHD OS Type: Debian GNU/Linux 5.0 (32-bit) Extractable: no Password Enabled: no Public: no Featured: no KVM Name: systemvm-kvm-3.0.0 Description: systemvm-kvm-3.0.0 URL: http://download.cloud.com/templates/acton/acton-systemvm-02062012.qcow2.bz2 Zone: Choose the zone where this hypervisor is used Hypervisor: KVM Format: QCOW2 OS Type: Debian GNU/Linux 5.0 (32-bit) Extractable: no Password Enabled: no Public: no Featured: no VMware Name: systemvm-vmware-3.0.0 Description: systemvm-vmware-3.0.0 URL: http://download.cloud.com/templates/burbank/burbank-systemvm-08012012.ova Zone: Choose the zone where this hypervisor is used Hypervisor: VMware Format: OVA OS Type: Debian GNU/Linux 5.0 (32-bit) Extractable: no Password Enabled: no Public: no Featured: no Watch the screen to be sure that the template downloads successfully and enters the READY state. Do not proceed until this is successful WARNING: If you use more than one type of hypervisor in your cloud, be sure you have repeated these steps to download the system VM template for each hypervisor type. Otherwise, the upgrade will fail. Stop all Usage Servers if running. Run this on all Usage Server hosts. # service cloud-usage stop Stop the Management Servers. Run this on all Management Server hosts. # service cloud-management stop On the MySQL master, take a backup of the MySQL databases. We recommend performing this step even in test upgrades. If there is an issue, this will assist with debugging. In the following commands, it is assumed that you have set the root password on the database, which is a CloudStack recommended best practice. Substitute your own MySQL root password. # mysqldump -u root -pmysql_password cloud > cloud-backup.dmp # mysqldump -u root -pmysql_password cloud_usage > cloud-usage-backup.dmp Either build RPM/DEB packages as detailed in the Installation Guide, or use one of the community provided yum/apt repositories to gain access to the &PRODUCT; binaries. After you have configured an appropriate yum or apt repository, you may execute the one of the following commands as appropriate for your environment in order to upgrade &PRODUCT;: # yum update cloud-* # apt-get update # apt-get upgrade cloud-* You will, of course, have to agree to the changes suggested by Yum or APT. If you have made changes to your existing copy of the file components.xml in your previous-version CloudStack installation, the changes will be preserved in the upgrade. However, you need to do the following steps to place these changes in a new version of the file which is compatible with version 4.0.2. How will you know whether you need to do this? If the upgrade output in the previous step included a message like the following, then some custom content was found in your old components.xml, and you need to merge the two files: warning: /etc/cloud/management/components.xml created as /etc/cloud/management/components.xml.rpmnew Make a backup copy of your /etc/cloud/management/components.xml file. For example: # mv /etc/cloud/management/components.xml /etc/cloud/management/components.xml-backup Copy /etc/cloud/management/components.xml.rpmnew to create a new /etc/cloud/management/components.xml: # cp -ap /etc/cloud/management/components.xml.rpmnew /etc/cloud/management/components.xml Merge your changes from the backup file into the new components.xml file. # vi /etc/cloud/management/components.xml If you have made changes to your existing copy of the /etc/cloud/management/db.properties file in your previous-version CloudStack installation, the changes will be preserved in the upgrade. However, you need to do the following steps to place these changes in a new version of the file which is compatible with version 4.0.2. Make a backup copy of your file /etc/cloud/management/db.properties. For example: # mv /etc/cloud/management/db.properties /etc/cloud/management/db.properties-backup Copy /etc/cloud/management/db.properties.rpmnew to create a new /etc/cloud/management/db.properties: # cp -ap /etc/cloud/management/db.properties.rpmnew etc/cloud/management/db.properties Merge your changes from the backup file into the new db.properties file. # vi /etc/cloud/management/db.properties On the management server node, run the following command. It is recommended that you use the command-line flags to provide your own encryption keys. See Password and Key Encryption in the Installation Guide. # cloud-setup-encryption -e encryption_type -m management_server_key -k database_key When used without arguments, as in the following example, the default encryption type and keys will be used: (Optional) For encryption_type, use file or web to indicate the technique used to pass in the database encryption password. Default: file. (Optional) For management_server_key, substitute the default key that is used to encrypt confidential parameters in the properties file. Default: password. It is highly recommended that you replace this with a more secure value (Optional) For database_key, substitute the default key that is used to encrypt confidential parameters in the CloudStack database. Default: password. It is highly recommended that you replace this with a more secure value. Repeat steps 10 - 14 on every management server node. If you provided your own encryption key in step 14, use the same key on all other management servers. Start the first Management Server. Do not start any other Management Server nodes yet. # service cloud-management start Wait until the databases are upgraded. Ensure that the database upgrade is complete. You should see a message like "Complete! Done." After confirmation, start the other Management Servers one at a time by running the same command on each node. Start all Usage Servers (if they were running on your previous version). Perform this on each Usage Server host. # service cloud-usage start (KVM only) Additional steps are required for each KVM host. These steps will not affect running guests in the cloud. These steps are required only for clouds using KVM as hosts and only on the KVM hosts. Configure your CloudStack package repositories as outlined in the Installation Guide Stop the running agent. # service cloud-agent stop Update the agent software with one of the following command sets as appropriate. # yum update cloud-* # apt-get update # apt-get upgrade cloud-* Start the agent. # service cloud-agent start Copy the contents of the agent.properties file to the new agent.properties file by using the following command sed -i 's/com.cloud.agent.resource.computing.LibvirtComputingResource/com.cloud.hypervisor.kvm.resource.LibvirtComputingResource/g' /etc/cloud/agent/agent.properties Start the cloud agent and cloud management services. When the Management Server is up and running, log in to the CloudStack UI and restart the virtual router for proper functioning of all the features. Log in to the CloudStack UI as admin, and check the status of the hosts. All hosts should come to Up state (except those that you know to be offline). You may need to wait 20 or 30 minutes, depending on the number of hosts. Do not proceed to the next step until the hosts show in the Up state. If the hosts do not come to the Up state, contact support. Run the following script to stop, then start, all Secondary Storage VMs, Console Proxy VMs, and virtual routers. Run the command once on one management server. Substitute your own IP address of the MySQL instance, the MySQL user to connect as, and the password to use for that user. In addition to those parameters, provide the "-c" and "-r" arguments. For example: # nohup cloud-sysvmadm -d 192.168.1.5 -u cloud -p password -c -r > sysvm.log 2>&1 & # tail -f sysvm.log This might take up to an hour or more to run, depending on the number of accounts in the system. After the script terminates, check the log to verify correct execution: # tail -f sysvm.log The content should be like the following: Stopping and starting 1 secondary storage vm(s)... Done stopping and starting secondary storage vm(s) Stopping and starting 1 console proxy vm(s)... Done stopping and starting console proxy vm(s). Stopping and starting 4 running routing vm(s)... Done restarting router(s). If you would like additional confirmation that the new system VM templates were correctly applied when these system VMs were rebooted, SSH into the System VM and check the version. Use one of the following techniques, depending on the hypervisor. XenServer or KVM: SSH in by using the link local IP address of the system VM. For example, in the command below, substitute your own path to the private key used to log in to the system VM and your own link local IP. Run the following commands on the XenServer or KVM host on which the system VM is present: # ssh -i private-key-path link-local-ip -p 3922 # cat /etc/cloudstack-release The output should be like the following: Cloudstack Release 4.0.2 Mon Oct 9 15:10:04 PST 2012 ESXi SSH in using the private IP address of the system VM. For example, in the command below, substitute your own path to the private key used to log in to the system VM and your own private IP. Run the following commands on the Management Server: # ssh -i private-key-path private-ip -p 3922 # cat /etc/cloudstack-release The output should be like the following: Cloudstack Release 4.0.2 Mon Oct 9 15:10:04 PST 2012 If needed, upgrade all Citrix XenServer hypervisor hosts in your cloud to a version supported by CloudStack 4.0.2. The supported versions are XenServer 5.6 SP2 and 6.0.2. Instructions for upgrade can be found in the CloudStack 4.0.2 Installation Guide. Apply the XenServer hotfix XS602E003 (and any other needed hotfixes) to XenServer v6.0.2 hypervisor hosts. Disconnect the XenServer cluster from CloudStack. In the left navigation bar of the CloudStack UI, select Infrastructure. Under Clusters, click View All. Select the XenServer cluster and click Actions - Unmanage. This may fail if there are hosts not in one of the states Up, Down, Disconnected, or Alert. You may need to fix that before unmanaging this cluster. Wait until the status of the cluster has reached Unmanaged. Use the CloudStack UI to check on the status. When the cluster is in the unmanaged state, there is no connection to the hosts in the cluster. To clean up the VLAN, log in to one XenServer host and run: /opt/xensource/bin/cloud-clean-vlan.sh Prepare the upgrade by running the following on one XenServer host: /opt/xensource/bin/cloud-prepare-upgrade.sh If you see a message like "can't eject CD", log in to the VM and umount the CD, then run this script again. Upload the hotfix to the XenServer hosts. Always start with the Xen pool master, then the slaves. Using your favorite file copy utility (e.g. WinSCP), copy the hotfixes to the host. Place them in a temporary folder such as /root or /tmp. On the Xen pool master, upload the hotfix with this command: xe patch-upload file-name=XS602E003.xsupdate Make a note of the output from this command, which is a UUID for the hotfix file. You'll need it in another step later. (Optional) If you are applying other hotfixes as well, you can repeat the commands in this section with the appropriate hotfix number. For example, XS602E004.xsupdate. Manually live migrate all VMs on this host to another host. First, get a list of the VMs on this host: # xe vm-list Then use this command to migrate each VM. Replace the example host name and VM name with your own: # xe vm-migrate live=true host=host-name vm=VM-name Troubleshooting If you see a message like "You attempted an operation on a VM which requires PV drivers to be installed but the drivers were not detected," run: /opt/xensource/bin/make_migratable.sh b6cf79c8-02ee-050b-922f-49583d9f1a14. Apply the hotfix. First, get the UUID of this host: # xe host-list Then use the following command to apply the hotfix. Replace the example host UUID with the current host ID, and replace the hotfix UUID with the output from the patch-upload command you ran on this machine earlier. You can also get the hotfix UUID by running xe patch-list. xe patch-apply host-uuid=host-uuid uuid=hotfix-uuid Copy the following files from the CloudStack Management Server to the host. Copy from here... ...to here /usr/lib64/cloud/common/scripts/vm/hypervisor/xenserver/xenserver60/NFSSR.py /opt/xensource/sm/NFSSR.py /usr/lib64/cloud/common/scripts/vm/hypervisor/xenserver/setupxenserver.sh /opt/xensource/bin/setupxenserver.sh /usr/lib64/cloud/common/scripts/vm/hypervisor/xenserver/make_migratable.sh /opt/xensource/bin/make_migratable.sh (Only for hotfixes XS602E005 and XS602E007) You need to apply a new Cloud Support Pack. Download the CSP software onto the XenServer host from one of the following links: For hotfix XS602E005: http://coltrane.eng.hq.xensource.com/release/XenServer-6.x/XS-6.0.2/hotfixes/XS602E005/56710/xe-phase-2/xenserver-cloud-supp.tgz For hotfix XS602E007: http://coltrane.eng.hq.xensource.com/release/XenServer-6.x/XS-6.0.2/hotfixes/XS602E007/57824/xe-phase-2/xenserver-cloud-supp.tgz Extract the file: # tar xf xenserver-cloud-supp.tgz Run the following script: # xe-install-supplemental-pack xenserver-cloud-supp.iso If the XenServer host is part of a zone that uses basic networking, disable Open vSwitch (OVS): # xe-switch-network-backend bridge Reboot this XenServer host. Run the following: /opt/xensource/bin/setupxenserver.sh If the message "mv: cannot stat `/etc/cron.daily/logrotate': No such file or directory" appears, you can safely ignore it. Run the following: for pbd in `xe pbd-list currently-attached=false| grep ^uuid | awk '{print $NF}'`; do xe pbd-plug uuid=$pbd ; On each slave host in the Xen pool, repeat these steps, starting from "manually live migrate VMs."
Version 4.0.2
What’s New in 4.0.2 Apache CloudStack 4.0.2 is a maintenance release and includes no new features.
Issues Fixed in 4.0.2 The following issues have been fixed in 4.0.2: Defect Description CLOUDSTACK-359 PropagateResourceEventCommand failes in cluster configuration. CLOUDSTACK-524 http proxy used by ssvm NOT working. CLOUDSTACK-574 Document &PRODUCT; Ceph RDB Setup. CLOUDSTACK-1106 Missing documentation for cloud-setup-databases CLOUDSTACK-1112 Errors in the 'Prepare the System VM Template' CLOUDSTACK-1341 URL for the KEYS file is wrong in the Installation Guide CLOUDSTACK-1419 Apache-fy and apply trademark logos in the UI CLOUDSTACK-354 Display of storage statistics is wrong. CLOUDSTACK-397 Install Guide: Section 11.1 (Guest Traffic): Diagram is the wrong diagram CLOUDSTACK-398 Install Guide: Section 11.17.3 (Using VPN with Mac OSX): Not complete? CLOUDSTACK-462 A few corrections to make to the 4.0.0 installation guide CLOUDSTACK-587 MEMORY_CONSTRAINT_VIOLATIONMemory limits must satisfy: CLOUDSTACK-803 HA gets triggered even when the host investigator is unable to determine the state of the host CLOUDSTACK-810 Make DirectAgent thread pool size configurable CLOUDSTACK-988 HV version must be updated in hypervisor_version column of host table CLOUDSTACK-990 Documentation issue with libvirtd.conf tcp_port configuration CLOUDSTACK-1088 EnableStaticNat error will clear the data in database CLOUDSTACK-1110 Documentation missing "Management Server Load Balancing" CLOUDSTACK-1137 Force reconnect of a disconnected state complains about the state of the host. CLOUDSTACK-1150 Documentation for libvirt on Ubuntu 12.04 CLOUDSTACK-1151 vmware systemVm template upgrade is missing in 4.0 upgrade CLOUDSTACK-1211 Network operations are Blocked for the Read-only file system of Virtual Router CLOUDSTACK-1265 logrotate dnsmasq configuration is wrong CLOUDSTACK-1298 typo in deb package setup CLOUDSTACK-1299 Errors in 4.5.5 section of installation guide CLOUDSTACK-1300 section in wrong order in installation guide CLOUDSTACK-1420 Ensure trademarks are properly attributed in publican brand. CLOUDSTACK-1629 Need to move location or conflict with antlr CLOUDSTACK-1642 Add support CentOS 6.4 CLOUDSTACK-1648 Unable to add KVM host CLOUDSTACK-1652 /etc/hosts error in virtual router when deploy instance with the name same to previous instances CLOUDSTACK-1666 KVM VPC NetworkUsage doesnot work CLOUDSTACK-1668 IP conflict in VPC tier CLOUDSTACK-1761 Available local storage disk capacity incorrectly reported in KVM to manager. CLOUDSTACK-1845 KVM - storage migration often fails CLOUDSTACK-1846 KVM - storage pools can silently fail to be unregistered, leading to failure to register later CLOUDSTACK-2003 Deleting domain while deleted account is cleaning up leaves VMs expunging forever due to 'Failed to update resource count'
Known Issues in 4.0.2 Issue ID Description CLOUDSTACK-301 Nexus 1000v DVS integration is not functional This source code release includes some partial functionality to support the Cisco Nexus 1000v Distributed Virtual Switch within a VMware hypervisor environment. The functionality is not complete at this time. CLOUDSTACK-368 OVM - cannot create guest VM This source code release has regressed from the CloudStack 2.2.x code and is unable to support Oracle VM (OVM). CLOUDSTACK-279 Deleting a project fails when executed by the regular user. This works as expected for root/domain admin. To workaround, perform either of the following: Use the account cleanup thread which will eventually complete the project deletion. Execute the call as the root/domain admin on behalf of the regular user.
API Changes from 4.0.1-incubating to 4.0.2
New API Commands in 4.0.2 &PRODUCT; 4.0.2 is a maintenance release, and thus there are no new API commands.
Changed API Commands in 4.0.1-incubating &PRODUCT; 4.0.2 is a maintenance release, and there are no changed API commands.