On 10/02/2013 09:56 AM, Roland Giesler wrote: > Firstly I'd like to learn where a snapshot is stored once it has been > made. That depends - did you create an external or an internal snapshot? 'virsh snapshot-info Windows Windows' will help. > I understand that the principle is that when changes occur in > the VM, the difference is written to the snapshot, thus recording the > differences between the date/time of the snapshot and the current > value of the VM. Is that a correct assessment of the process? Sort of. The differences aren't recorded in the snapshot, so much as it records the contents at the point in time it was taken, and running the VM now tracks the differences compared to when the snapshot was taken. That is, the snapshot is not being modified, but the current state. > > If that is indeed so, can I take regular snapshots and back then up > onto external storage to provide a sort of system restore point at > certain times in the past? Yes, that is one use for snapshots (done better with external snapshots, because qemu 1.6 lacks the ability to let you view the contents of internal snapshots while the domain is running - patches have been proposed for qemu 1.7 to start addressing that, but then libvirt would also have to be taught to take advantage of the new qemu feature). But be aware that external snapshots are still not fully implemented in libvirt - while you can create them, we do not yet have decent support in place for libvirt-only revert or delete of a snapshot. See this wiki page for more than you ever wanted to know about management of external snapshots (and update it, if you'd like): http://wiki.libvirt.org/page/I_created_an_external_snapshot%2C_but_libvirt_won%27t_let_me_delete_or_revert_to_it > > I have scanned the server hard disks for the snapshot images after > running "sudo virsh snapshot-create Windows /etc/libvirt/snapshot.xml" > and the system reports a snapshot was taken, yet I cannot find any > file that contains the snapshot. > > $ sudo virsh snapshot-list Windows > Name Creation Time State > ------------------------------------------------------------ > Windows 2013-10-02 12:41:06 +0200 running Then you probably took an internal snapshot, which means that the very qcow2 file that is hosting the disk image is also holding the snapshot. 'qemu-img info /path/to/qcow2' would confirm this. > > What will happen to the snapshot if the host server is restarted? It will still be there, ready for you if you ever want to revert to it. -- Eric Blake eblake redhat com +1-919-301-3266 Libvirt virtualization library http://libvirt.org
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