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vdiskadm (1)
  • >> vdiskadm (1) ( Solaris man: Команды и прикладные программы пользовательского уровня )
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    NAME

    vdiskadm - create and manage virtual disks
     
    

    SYNOPSIS

    vdiskadm create -s size [-t type[:opt],[opt]
        [-c comment] vdname
    

    vdiskadm destroy [-r] vdname|snapshot
    

    vdiskadm snapshot vdname@snapname
    

    vdiskadm rollback [-r] snapshot
    

    vdiskadm clone [-c comment] vdname|snapshot clone_vdname
    

    vdiskadm move vdname dir
    

    vdiskadm rename vdname|snapshot vdname|snapshot
    

    vdiskadm list [-fp]vdname
    

    vdiskadm verify vdname
    

    vdiskadm prop-get [-l] -p property vdname
    

    vdiskadm prop-set  -p property=value vdname
    

    vdiskadm prop-add  -p property=value vdname
    

    vdiskadm prop-del  -p property vdname
    

    vdiskadm help [command]
    

     

    DESCRIPTION

    The vdiskadm command manages virtual disks within dom0. In the SYNOPSIS above, vdname is the pathname of the virtual disk; it has a maximum length of MAXPATHLEN (1024 bytes).

    vdiskadm is implemented as a set of subcommands, many with their own options and operands. These subcommands are described under "Subcommands," below.

    The following subsections describe concepts related to virtual disks.  

    Snapshots

    A snapshot is a read-only copy of a virtual disk. Snapshots can be created extremely quickly and initially consume little space. As data within the active virtual disk changes, the snapshot consumes more data than would otherwise be shared with the active virtual disk.  

    Clones

    A clone is a writable copy of a virtual disk. The default type of clone is a merged (that is, coalesced) copy of the original virtual disk. An example of a merged clone occurs when a virtual disk is comprised of several snapshots; a subsequent clone operation results in a new virtual disk containing no snapshots. A clone will be of the same type as the original virtual disk (that is, vmdk:fixed). When a merged clone is created there is no linkage back to the original virtual disk or to any of its snapshots. This lack of linkage allows the merged clone to be moved to another physical machine.  

    Numeric Values

    The values of numeric properties can be specified using human-readable suffixes, such as k, KB, M, Gb, and so forth, up to Z for zettabyte). The following are all valid (and equal) specifications:

    1536M  1.5g  1.50GB
    

     

    Types of Virtual Disks

    The following types and options of virtual disks are supported:

    o vmdk:fixed
    o vmdk:sparse
    o vdi:fixed
    o vdi:sparse
    o raw:fixed

    where vmdk is the native VMware format, vdi is the native VirtualBox format and raw describes a file that looks like a raw disk. A raw disk is always in fixed format so that option can be explicitly set or implicitly understood.

    If the type is not specified, the default value is vmdk. If the option is not specified, the default value is fixed for type raw and sparse for types vmdk and vdi.  

    Native and User-defined Properties

    Properties are divided into two types, native and user defined. Native properties either export internal statistics or control vdiskadm behavior. In addition, native properties are either editable or read-only. User-defined properties are arbitrary strings that have no effect on vdiskadm behavior. You can use them to annotate virtual disks in a way that is meaningful in your environment. User-defined property names must contain a colon (:) character, to distinguish them from native properties.

    Properties are associated only with the virtual disk and not with individual snapshots.

    Every virtual disk has a set of native properties that export statistics about the virtual disk, as well as control various behaviors.

    The following are the native properties for a virtual disk:

    cdrom

    Boolean property that is true if the virtual disk is a CDROM.

    removable

    Boolean property that is true if the virtual disk is a removable media.

    readonly

    Boolean property that is true if the virtual disk is read-only. This property is read-only.

    sectors

    Numeric property containing the number of disk sectors in the given virtual disk. This property is read-only.

    name

    String property that is the name of the virtual disk. This property is read-only.

    max-size

    Numeric property containing the maximum size of the virtual disk in bytes. This property is read-only.

    effective-size

    Numeric property containing the effective size of the virtual disk, in bytes. The effective size includes the size of the data file and all snapshots. The effective size can exceed the maximum size. This property is read-only.

    creation-time

    String property containing the date and time that the virtual disk was created. This property is read-only.

    creation-time-epoch

    Numeric property describing the creation-time property in seconds since the epoch (seconds since 00:00:00 UTC, Jan. 1, 1970). This property is read-only.

    modification-time

    String property containing the date and time of last modification to virtual disk. This property is read-only.

    modification-time-epoch

    Numeric property describing the modification-time property in seconds since the epoch (seconds since 00:00:00 UTC, Jan. 1, 1970). This property is read-only.

    description

    String property that contains the comment given when the virtual disk was created or cloned. This property is read-only.

    type

    String property that contains the type of virtual disk: vmdk, vdi, or raw. This property is read-only.

    sparse

    Boolean property that is true if the virtual disk is in sparse format. This property is read-only.

    owner

    String property that contains the user name of the owner of the virtual disk. This property is editable.

     

    SUB-COMMANDS

    The vdiskadm subcommands and their arguments are described in the following subsections.  

    vdiskadm create

    vdiskadm create -s size [-t type[:opt],[opt]]
        [-c comment] vdname
    

    Creates a new virtual disk of the specified size and at the location specified by vdname. If vdname includes a path to the virtual disk, the directories that follow from that path will be created during creation of the virtual disk. This subcommand has the options listed below.

    -t type[:opt],[opt]]

    Specifies the type of virtual disk to be created. The default type is vmdk. For vmdk and vdi types the default option is sparse. For type raw the default option is fixed.

    -c comment

    Comment that can be attached to virtual disk.

     

    vdiskadm destroy

    vdiskadm destroy [-r] vdname|snapshot
    

    Destroys the specified virtual disk or snapshot. By default, the destroy operation fails if the specified virtual disk contains snapshots. This subcommand has the option listed below.

    -r

    Recursively destroys the virtual disk, including all snapshots associated with the virtual disk.

     

    vdiskadm snapshot

    vdiskadm snapshot vdname@snapname
    

    Creates a snapshot of the virtual disk with the specified snapname. This subcommand has no options.  

    vdiskadm rollback

    vdiskadm rollback [-r] snapshot
    

    Roll back the virtual disk to a previous snapshot. When a virtual disk is rolled back, all data that has changed since the snapshot is discarded, and the virtual disk reverts to the state at the time of the snapshot. By default, the command refuses to roll back to a snapshot other than the most recent one. In order to roll back further, all intermediate snapshots must be destroyed by specifying the -r option. This subcommand has the option listed below.

    -r

    Recursively destroy any snapshots more recent than the one specified.

     

    vdiskadm clone

    vdiskadm [-c comment] vdname|snapshot clone_vdname
    

    Creates a clone of the specified snapshot or virtual disk. The clone is created with the type and option and the size of the virtual disk being cloned. If clone_vdname includes a path the directories that flow from that path will be created during creation of the cloned virtual disk. By default, a merged clone image is created. This subcommand has the option listed below.

    -c comment

    Comment that can be attached to cloned virtual disk.

     

    vdiskadm move

    vdiskadm move vdname dir
    

    Moves a specified virtual disk into the specified directory. The virtual disk maintains the same name. The new directory must exist. This subcommand has no options.  

    vdiskadm rename

    vdiskadm rename vdname|snapshot vdname|snapshot
    

    Renames a virtual disk or snapshot. This subcommand has no options.  

    vdiskadm list

    vdiskadm list [-fp]vdname
    

    Lists a specified virtual disk and its snapshots. This subcommand has the options listed below.

    -f

    Gives a list of all files associated with the virtual disk. This list includes the store file and the extents.

    -p

    Lists the files in an easily parsable format, prefixing the files with a label of file:, snapshot:, or store.

     

    vdiskadm verify

    vdiskadm verify vdname
    

    Returns an error if the virtual disk cannot be recognized or opened by Solaris xVM. This subcommand has no options.  

    vdiskadm prop-get

    vdiskadm prop-get [-l] -p property vdname
    

    Returns the value of the property for the specified virtual disk. A property value of all displays all native and user-defined properties for the virtual disk. This subcommand has the options listed below.

    -l

    Gives additional property information, such as the writeable status of property.

    -p property

    Specifies the property being queried and displays the value of the property. For the property all, the name of the property, a colon, and a space are displayed before the value of the property.

     

    vdiskadm prop-set

    vdiskadm prop-set -p property=value vdname
    

    Sets the value of the specified property for the specified virtual disk. property can be a native or a user-defined property, but must be writable. Can be used to change the value of a property added with the prop-add subcommand. This subcommand has the option listed below.

    -p property=value

    Specifies the property being set.

     

    vdiskadm prop-add

    vdiskadm -p property=value vdname
    

    Adds the user-defined property with the specified value to the specified virtual disk. Returns an error if the property already exists. The user-defined property name must contain a colon character (:). This subcommand has the option listed below.

    -p property=value

    Specifies the property being added.

     

    vdiskadm prop-del

    vdiskadm prop-del -p property vdname
    

    Deletes a user-defined property from the specified virtual disk. This subcommand has the option listed below.

    -p property

    Specifies the property being deleted.

     

    vdiskadm help

    vdiskadm help [command]
    

    Displays a general or command-specific help message. This subcommand has only the command name optional argument.  

    EXAMPLES

    Example 1 Creating a vmdk Sparse File

    The following command creates a virtual disk named disk1 of size 8 GB in the directory /guests/disks.

    # vdiskadm create -s 8g -t vmdk:sparse /guests/disks/disk1
    

    Example 2 Creating a Snapshot

    The following command creates a snapshot of the virtual disk located at /guests/disks/disk1. The snapshot is named install.

    # vdiskadm snapshot /guests/disks/disk1@install
    

    Example 3 Creating and Destroying Snapshots

    The following commands create two snapshots, named install and bfu, of the virtual disk located at /guests/disks/disk1. The third command destroys the newly created snapshot install.

    # vdiskadm snapshot /guests/disks/disk1@install
    # vdiskadm snapshot /guests/disks/disk1@bfu
    # vdiskadm destroy /guests/disks/disk1@install
    

    Example 4 Rolling Back a Virtual Disk

    The following command reverts the contents of the virtual disk to the snapshot named install, deleting all intermediate snapshots.

    # vdiskadm rollback -r /guests/disks/disk1@install
    

    Example 5 Listing a Virtual Disk and Snapshots

    The following command lists all of the images associated with the virtual disk /guests/disks/disk1.

    # vdiskadm list /guests/disks/disk1
    disk1@install
    disk1@bfu
    disk1
    

    Example 6 Creating a Clone

    The following command creates a new virtual disk that is a coalesced copy of the virtual disk /guests/disks/disk1. The clone is created in the same format (that is, vmdk:sparse) as the original virtual disk.

    # vdiskadm clone /guests/disks/disk1 /guests/clone/clone_disk1
    

    Example 7 Adding a User-defined Property

    The following command adds a user-defined property to the virtual disk and assigns it the specified value. This property name was chosen to represent the source and requirements of this virtual disk data using the required colon to delineate the fields.

    # vdiskadm prop-add -p com.sun:required-nic=2 /guests/disks/disk1
    

     

    ATTRIBUTES

    See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:

    ATTRIBUTE TYPEATTRIBUTE VALUE

    AvailabilitySUNWvdisk

    Interface Stability

     

    SEE ALSO

    virsh(1M), virt-install(1M), attributes(5), xVM(5)


     

    Index

    NAME
    SYNOPSIS
    DESCRIPTION
    Snapshots
    Clones
    Numeric Values
    Types of Virtual Disks
    Native and User-defined Properties
    SUB-COMMANDS
    vdiskadm create
    vdiskadm destroy
    vdiskadm snapshot
    vdiskadm rollback
    vdiskadm clone
    vdiskadm move
    vdiskadm rename
    vdiskadm list
    vdiskadm verify
    vdiskadm prop-get
    vdiskadm prop-set
    vdiskadm prop-add
    vdiskadm prop-del
    vdiskadm help
    EXAMPLES
    ATTRIBUTES
    SEE ALSO


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