The default metadata driver for Glance uses SQLAlchemy, which implies there
exists a backend database which must be managed. The glance-manage
binary
provides a set of commands for making this easier.
The commands should be executed as a subcommand of ‘db’:
glance-manage db <cmd> <args>
Note
In the Ocata release (14.0.0), the database migration engine was changed
from SQLAlchemy Migrate to Alembic. This necessitated some changes in
the glance-manage
tool. While the user interface has been kept as
similar as possible, the glance-manage
tool included with the Ocata and
more recent releases is incompatible with the “legacy” tool. If you are
consulting these documents for information about the glance-manage
tool
in the Newton or earlier releases, please see the
Legacy Database Management page.
The migration scripts are stored in the directory:
glance/db/sqlalchemy/alembic_migrations/versions
As mentioned above, these scripts utilize the Alembic migration engine, which
was first introduced in the Ocata release. All database migrations up through
the Liberty release are consolidated into one Alembic migration script named
liberty_initial
. Mitaka migrations are retained, but have been rewritten
for Alembic and named using the new naming convention.
A fresh Glance installation will apply the following migrations:
liberty-initial
mitaka01
mitaka02
ocata01
Note
The “old-style” migration scripts have been retained in their current directory in the Ocata release so that interested operators can correlate them with the new migrations. This directory will be removed in future releases.
In particular, the “old-style” script for the Ocata migration, 045_add_visibility.py is retained for operators who are conversant in SQLAlchemy Migrate and are interested in comparing it with a “new-style” Alembic migration script. The Alembic script, which is the one actually used to do the upgrade to Ocata, is ocata01_add_visibility_remove_is_public.py.
glance-manage db sync [VERSION]
Place an existing database under migration control and upgrade it to the specified VERSION or to the latest migration level if VERSION is not specified.
Note
Prior to Ocata release the database version was a numeric value. For
example: for the Newton release, the latest migration level was 44
.
Starting with Ocata, database version is a revision name corresponding to
the latest migration included in the release. For the Ocata release, there
is only one database migration and it is identified by revision
ocata01
. So, the database version for Ocata release is ocata01
.
This naming convention will change slightly with the introduction of zero-downtime upgrades, which is EXPERIMENTAL in Ocata, but is projected to be the official upgrade method beginning with the Pike release. See Zero-Downtime Database Upgrades below for more information.
glance-manage db version
This will print the current migration level of a Glance database.
glance-manage db upgrade [VERSION]
This will take an existing database and upgrade it to the specified VERSION.
Upgrades involve complex operations and can fail. Before attempting any upgrade, you should make a full database backup of your production data. As of Kilo, database downgrades are not supported, and the only method available to get back to a prior database version is to restore from backup [1].
[1]: http://docs.openstack.org/ops-guide/ops-upgrades.html#perform-a-backup
Warning
This feature is EXPERIMENTAL in the Ocata release. We encourage operators to try it out, but its use in production environments is currently NOT SUPPORTED.
A zero-downtime database upgrade enables true rolling upgrades of the Glance nodes in your cloud’s control plane. At the appropriate point in the upgrade, you can have a mixed deployment of release n (for example, Ocata) and release n-1 (for example, Newton) Glance nodes, take the n-1 release nodes out of rotation, allow them to drain, and then take them out of service permanently, leaving all Glance nodes in your cloud at release n.
That’s a rough sketch of how a rolling upgrade would work. For full details, see Rolling Upgrades.
Note
Downgrading a database is not supported. See Downgrading an Existing Database for more information.
For Glance, a zero-downtime database upgrade has three phases:
The above phases are abbreviated as an E-M-C database upgrade.
In order to perform zero-downtime upgrades, the version identifier of a database becomes more complicated since it must reflect knowledge of what point in the E-M-C cycle the upgrade has reached. To make this evident, the identifier explicitly contains ‘expand’ or ‘contract’ as part of its name.
Thus the ocata01
migration (that is, the migration that’s currently used in
the fully supported upgrade path) has two identifiers associated with it for
zero-downtime upgrades: ocata_expand01
and ocata_contract01
.
During the upgrade process, the database is initially marked with
ocata_expand01
. Eventually, after completing the full upgrade process, the
database will be marked with ocata_contract01
. So, instead of one database
version, an operator will see a composite database version that will have both
expand and contract versions. A database will be considered at Ocata version
only when both expand and contract revisions are at the latest revisions. For
a successful Ocata zero-downtime upgrade, for example, the database will be
marked with both ocata_expand01
, ocata_contract01
.
In the case in which there are multiple changes in a cycle, the database version record would go through the following progression:
stage | database identifier | comment |
---|---|---|
E | bexar_expand01 |
upgrade begins |
E | bexar_expand02 |
|
E | bexar_expand03 |
|
M | bexar_expand03 |
bexar_migrate01 occurs |
M | bexar_expand03 |
bexar_migrate02 occurs |
M | bexar_expand03 |
bexar_migrate03 occurs |
C | bexar_expand03, bexar_contract01 |
|
C | bexar_expand03, bexar_contract02 |
|
C | bexar_expand03, bexar_contract03 |
upgrade completed |
In order to enable the E-M-C database upgrade cycle, and to enable Glance
rolling upgrades, the glance-manage
tool has been augmented to include the
following operations.
glance-manage db expand
This will run the expansion phase of a rolling upgrade process. Database expansion should be run as the first step in the rolling upgrade process before any new services are started.
glance-manage db migrate
This will run the data migrate phase of a rolling upgrade process. Database migration should be run after database expansion but before any new services are started.
glance-manage db contract
This will run the contraction phase of a rolling upgrade process. Database contraction should be run as the last step of the rolling upgrade process after all old services are upgraded to new ones.
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