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# On the source machine, edit the guest so that it has some small amount of memory (say, 512MB).
# On the source machine, edit the guest so that it has some small amount of memory (say, 512MB).
# On the source machine, start the guest.
# On the source machine, start the guest.
# Once the guest has fully booted, find out the IP address of the guest (by logging into the guest and running ifconfig, or whatever is equivalent in the guest OS of your choice).  From the source machine, start a ping to the guest:<br><code>ping <guest-IP</code><br>
# Once the guest has fully booted, find out the IP address of the guest (by logging into the guest and running ifconfig, or whatever is equivalent in the guest OS of your choice).  From the source machine, start a ping to the guest:<br><br><code>$ ping <guest-IP</code><br><br>
# Now execute:<br><code>virsh migrate --live <guestname> qemu+ssh://<destination host>/system
# Now execute:<br><br><code>$ virsh migrate --live <guestname> qemu+ssh://<destination host>/system<br><br>
# Shutdown the guest on the destination machine.  Once it's successfully shut down, edit the guest on the source machine and give it random, differing amounts of memory: 1024MB, 2111MB, etc.  Then repeat the test for these differing amounts of memory.
# Shutdown the guest on the destination machine.  Once it's successfully shut down, edit the guest on the source machine and give it random, differing amounts of memory: 1024MB, 2111MB, etc.  Then repeat the test for these differing amounts of memory.
# Repeat the entire test for as many different guest OS's as are relevant.  We would at least like to see the following guests:
# Repeat the entire test for as many different guest OS's as are relevant.  We would at least like to see the following guests:

Revision as of 14:10, 15 September 2009

Description

This test case checks that basic live migration using libvirt between two Fedora 12 hosts works correctly.


How to test

  1. On the source machine, edit the guest so that it has some small amount of memory (say, 512MB).
  2. On the source machine, start the guest.
  3. Once the guest has fully booted, find out the IP address of the guest (by logging into the guest and running ifconfig, or whatever is equivalent in the guest OS of your choice). From the source machine, start a ping to the guest:

    $ ping <guest-IP

  4. Now execute:

    $ virsh migrate --live <guestname> qemu+ssh://<destination host>/system

  5. Shutdown the guest on the destination machine. Once it's successfully shut down, edit the guest on the source machine and give it random, differing amounts of memory: 1024MB, 2111MB, etc. Then repeat the test for these differing amounts of memory.
  6. Repeat the entire test for as many different guest OS's as are relevant. We would at least like to see the following guests:
    1. Fedora 12
    2. Fedora 11
    3. RHEL-4
    4. RHEL-5
    5. Windows XP
    6. Windows Vista
    7. SUSE

Expected Results

  1. After executing the virsh migrate command, the guest should migrate over to the destination machine, and not be running anymore on the source machine. Use virsh list on both machines to verify this. Additionally, the ping that was started in step 3 should continue uninterrupted.