Difference between revisions of "Vnx-tutorial-lxc"
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== Description == | == Description == | ||
− | VNX includes several example scenarios based on the [http:// | + | VNX includes several example scenarios based on the [http://web.dit.upm.es/vnumlwiki/index.php/Tutorial VNUML tutorial scenario] but including all types of virtual machines supported by VNX (see tutorial_*.xml files in /usr/share/vnx/examples directory). |
The scenario presented here is made of 6 Ubuntu LXC virtual machines (4 hosts -h1, h2, h3 and h4- and 2 routers -r1 and r2-) connected through three virtual networks. The host participates in the scenario having a network interface in Net3. All systems use an Ubuntu server root filesystem. | The scenario presented here is made of 6 Ubuntu LXC virtual machines (4 hosts -h1, h2, h3 and h4- and 2 routers -r1 and r2-) connected through three virtual networks. The host participates in the scenario having a network interface in Net3. All systems use an Ubuntu server root filesystem. | ||
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[[File:Tutorial_ubuntu-map.png|center|thumb|600px|<div align=center> | [[File:Tutorial_ubuntu-map.png|center|thumb|600px|<div align=center> | ||
'''Figure 1: tutorial_ubuntu scenario topology'''</div>]] | '''Figure 1: tutorial_ubuntu scenario topology'''</div>]] | ||
+ | |||
+ | == Preparing the scenario == | ||
+ | |||
+ | To use this scenario, you need to download one of the VNX LXC root filesystems. For example: | ||
+ | |||
+ | cd /usr/share/vnx/filesystems | ||
+ | vnx_download_rootfs -r vnx_rootfs_lxc_ubuntu-14.04-v025.tgz -y -l | ||
+ | |||
+ | You can see the LXC rootfs available using: | ||
+ | vnx_download_rootfs -l | ||
+ | |||
+ | Beware that LXC 'light' virtual machines use the host kernel to run, so you can have problems if your host and VM images are very different. LXC support in VNX have been successfully tested only in Ubuntu 13.10 and 14.04. | ||
== Starting the scenario == | == Starting the scenario == | ||
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<exec seq="start-www" type="verbatim" ostype="system">service apache2 start</exec> | <exec seq="start-www" type="verbatim" ostype="system">service apache2 start</exec> | ||
− | Once you have started the web servers, you can connect to them from the host or from h1 by opening a web navigator and loading http://10.1.2.2. | + | Once you have started the web servers, you can connect to them from the host or from h1 by opening a web navigator and loading http://10.1.2.2. |
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== Stopping the scenario == | == Stopping the scenario == | ||
To stop the scenario preserving the changes made inside virtual machines you have to use the "-d" or "--shutdown" option: | To stop the scenario preserving the changes made inside virtual machines you have to use the "-d" or "--shutdown" option: | ||
− | sudo vnx -f | + | sudo vnx -f tutorial_lxc_ubuntu.xml -v --shutdown |
You can later restart the scenario with: | You can later restart the scenario with: | ||
sudo vnx -f tutorial_lxc_ubuntu.xml -v --start | sudo vnx -f tutorial_lxc_ubuntu.xml -v --start | ||
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== Other interesting options == | == Other interesting options == | ||
+ | |||
+ | You can see the status of the VMs of the scenario with: | ||
+ | sudo vnx -f tutorial_lxc_ubuntu.xml -v --show-status | ||
You can restart the virtual machines individually with: | You can restart the virtual machines individually with: | ||
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Name: tutorial_ubuntu | Name: tutorial_ubuntu | ||
− | Description: As simple tutorial scenario made of 6 Ubuntu virtual machines (4 hosts: h1, h2, h3 and h4; | + | Description: As simple tutorial scenario made of 6 LXC Ubuntu virtual machines (4 hosts: h1, h2, h3 and h4; |
and 2 routers: r1 and r2) connected through three virtual networks. The host participates | and 2 routers: r1 and r2) connected through three virtual networks. The host participates | ||
in the scenario having a network interface in Net3. | in the scenario having a network interface in Net3. |
Latest revision as of 14:40, 19 November 2017
VNX Tutorial (LXC version)
Contents
Description
VNX includes several example scenarios based on the VNUML tutorial scenario but including all types of virtual machines supported by VNX (see tutorial_*.xml files in /usr/share/vnx/examples directory).
The scenario presented here is made of 6 Ubuntu LXC virtual machines (4 hosts -h1, h2, h3 and h4- and 2 routers -r1 and r2-) connected through three virtual networks. The host participates in the scenario having a network interface in Net3. All systems use an Ubuntu server root filesystem.
Preparing the scenario
To use this scenario, you need to download one of the VNX LXC root filesystems. For example:
cd /usr/share/vnx/filesystems vnx_download_rootfs -r vnx_rootfs_lxc_ubuntu-14.04-v025.tgz -y -l
You can see the LXC rootfs available using:
vnx_download_rootfs -l
Beware that LXC 'light' virtual machines use the host kernel to run, so you can have problems if your host and VM images are very different. LXC support in VNX have been successfully tested only in Ubuntu 13.10 and 14.04.
Starting the scenario
Start the scenario with:
cd /usr/share/vnx/examples/ sudo vnx -f tutorial_lxc_ubuntu.xml -v --create
You will see the six textual consoles of the virtual machine consoles opening.
If you close the console of a VM (for example h4), you can reopen it with:
sudo vnx -f tutorial_lxc_ubuntu.xml -v --console -M h4
LXC allows to open multiple textual consoles of each VM. Repeat the command to open new ones.
You can also open the consoles manually with the commands shown at the end of vnx execution:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Scenario "tutorial_lxc_ubuntu" started VM_NAME | TYPE | CONSOLE ACCESS COMMAND ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- h1 | lxc | con0: 'lxc-console -n h1' | | con1: 'lxc-console -n h1' ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- h2 | lxc | con0: 'lxc-console -n h2' | | con1: 'lxc-console -n h2' ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- r1 | lxc | con0: 'lxc-console -n r1' | | con1: 'lxc-console -n r1' ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- r2 | lxc | con0: 'lxc-console -n r2' | | con1: 'lxc-console -n r2' ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- h3 | lxc | con0: 'lxc-console -n h3' | | con1: 'lxc-console -n h3' ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- h4 | lxc | con0: 'lxc-console -n h4' | | con1: 'lxc-console -n h4' -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
You can show the previous table at any time with:
sudo vnx -f tutorial_lxc_ubuntu.xml -v --console-info
See VNX Console Management for more details about consoles.
Executing commands
You can start the web servers in h3 and h4 with:
sudo vnx -f tutorial_lxc_ubuntu.xml -v -x start-www -M h3,h4
This command will execute on h3 and h4 the commands defined by means of <exec> and <filetree> tags and marked with seq="start-www".
For example, for h3 virtual machine:
<filetree seq="start-www" root="/var/www">conf/tutorial_ubuntu/h3</filetree> <exec seq="start-www" type="verbatim" ostype="system">chmod 644 /var/www/*</exec> <exec seq="start-www" type="verbatim" ostype="system">service apache2 start</exec>
Once you have started the web servers, you can connect to them from the host or from h1 by opening a web navigator and loading http://10.1.2.2.
Stopping the scenario
To stop the scenario preserving the changes made inside virtual machines you have to use the "-d" or "--shutdown" option:
sudo vnx -f tutorial_lxc_ubuntu.xml -v --shutdown
You can later restart the scenario with:
sudo vnx -f tutorial_lxc_ubuntu.xml -v --start
To stop the scenario discarding all the changes made in the virtual machines use the "-P" or "--destroy" option:
sudo vnx -f tutorial_lxc_ubuntu.xml -v --destroy
Other interesting options
You can see the status of the VMs of the scenario with:
sudo vnx -f tutorial_lxc_ubuntu.xml -v --show-status
You can restart the virtual machines individually with:
sudo vnx -f tutorial_lxc_ubuntu.xml -v --shutdown -M h1 sudo vnx -f tutorial_lxc_ubuntu.xml -v --start -M h1
You can suspend to memory and restore a virtual machine with:
sudo vnx -f tutorial_lxc_ubuntu.xml -v --suspend -M h1 sudo vnx -f tutorial_lxc_ubuntu.xml -v --resume -M h1
You can see a graphical map of the virtual scenario using the --show-map option:
sudo vnx -f tutorial_lxc_ubuntu.xml -v --show-map
tutorial_lxc_ubuntu.xml scenario
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <!-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ VNX Sample scenarios ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Name: tutorial_ubuntu Description: As simple tutorial scenario made of 6 LXC Ubuntu virtual machines (4 hosts: h1, h2, h3 and h4; and 2 routers: r1 and r2) connected through three virtual networks. The host participates in the scenario having a network interface in Net3. This file is part of the Virtual Networks over LinuX (VNX) Project distribution. (www: http://www.dit.upm.es/vnx - e-mail: vnx@dit.upm.es) Departamento de Ingenieria de Sistemas Telematicos (DIT) Universidad Politecnica de Madrid SPAIN --> <vnx xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:noNamespaceSchemaLocation="/usr/share/xml/vnx/vnx-2.00.xsd"> <global> <version>2.0</version> <scenario_name>tutorial_lxc_ubuntu</scenario_name> <automac/> <vm_mgmt type="none" /> <!--vm_mgmt type="private" network="10.250.0.0" mask="24" offset="200"> <host_mapping /> </vm_mgmt--> <vm_defaults> <console id="0" display="no"/> <console id="1" display="yes"/> </vm_defaults> <cmd-seq seq="ls12">ls1,ls2</cmd-seq> <cmd-seq seq="ls123">ls12,ls3</cmd-seq> <cmd-seq seq="ls1234">ls123,ls4</cmd-seq> <help> <seq_help seq='start-www'>Start apache2 web server</seq_help> <seq_help seq='stop-www'>Stop apache2 web server</seq_help> </help> </global> <net name="Net0" mode="virtual_bridge" /> <net name="Net1" mode="virtual_bridge" /> <net name="Net2" mode="virtual_bridge" /> <net name="Net3" mode="virtual_bridge" /> <vm name="h1" type="lxc"> <filesystem type="cow">/usr/share/vnx/filesystems/rootfs_lxc</filesystem> <if id="1" net="Net0"> <ipv4>10.1.0.2/24</ipv4> </if> <route type="ipv4" gw="10.1.0.1">default</route> </vm> <vm name="h2" type="lxc"> <filesystem type="cow">/usr/share/vnx/filesystems/rootfs_lxc</filesystem> <if id="1" net="Net0"> <ipv4>10.1.0.3/24</ipv4> </if> <route type="ipv4" gw="10.1.0.1">default</route> <exec seq="ls1" type="verbatim">ls -al /tmp</exec> <exec seq="ls2" type="verbatim">ls -al /root</exec> <exec seq="ls3" type="verbatim">ls -al /usr</exec> <exec seq="ls4" type="verbatim">ls -al /bin</exec> </vm> <vm name="r1" type="lxc"> <filesystem type="cow">/usr/share/vnx/filesystems/rootfs_lxc</filesystem> <if id="1" net="Net0"> <ipv4>10.1.0.1/24</ipv4> </if> <if id="2" net="Net1"> <ipv4>10.1.1.1/24</ipv4> </if> <if id="3" net="Net3"> <ipv4>10.1.3.1/24</ipv4> </if> <route type="ipv4" gw="10.1.1.2">10.1.2.0/24</route> <forwarding type="ip" /> </vm> <vm name="r2" type="lxc"> <filesystem type="cow">/usr/share/vnx/filesystems/rootfs_lxc</filesystem> <if id="1" net="Net1" name="s1/0"> <ipv4>10.1.1.2/24</ipv4> </if> <if id="2" net="Net2" name="e0/0"> <ipv4>10.1.2.1/24</ipv4> </if> <route type="ipv4" gw="10.1.1.1">default</route> <forwarding type="ip" /> </vm> <vm name="h3" type="lxc"> <filesystem type="cow">/usr/share/vnx/filesystems/rootfs_lxc</filesystem> <if id="1" net="Net2"> <ipv4>10.1.2.2/24</ipv4> </if> <route type="ipv4" gw="10.1.2.1">default</route> <!-- Copy the files under conf/tutorial_ubuntu/h3 to vm /var/www directory --> <filetree seq="start-www" root="/var/www/">conf/tutorial_ubuntu/h3</filetree> <!-- Start/stop apache www server --> <exec seq="start-www" type="verbatim" ostype="system">chmod 644 /var/www/*</exec> <exec seq="start-www" type="verbatim" ostype="system">service apache2 start</exec> <exec seq="stop-www" type="verbatim" ostype="system">service apache2 stop</exec> </vm> <vm name="h4" type="lxc"> <filesystem type="cow">/usr/share/vnx/filesystems/rootfs_lxc</filesystem> <if id="1" net="Net2"> <ipv4>10.1.2.3/24</ipv4> </if> <route type="ipv4" gw="10.1.2.1">default</route> <!-- Copy the files under conf/tutorial_ubuntu/h4 to vm /var/www directory --> <filetree seq="start-www" root="/var/www/">conf/tutorial_ubuntu/h4</filetree> <!-- Start/stop apache www server --> <exec seq="start-www" type="verbatim" ostype="system">chmod 644 /var/www/*</exec> <exec seq="start-www" type="verbatim" ostype="system">service apache2 start</exec> <exec seq="stop-www" type="verbatim" ostype="system">service apache2 stop</exec> </vm> <host> <hostif net="Net3"> <ipv4>10.1.3.2/24</ipv4> </hostif> <route type="ipv4" gw="10.1.3.1">10.1.0.0/16</route> </host> </vnx>