27 XenStore: Configuration Database Shared between Domains #
This section introduces basic information about XenStore, its role in the Xen environment, the directory structure of files used by XenStore, and the description of XenStore's commands.
27.1 Introduction #
XenStore is a database of configuration and status information
shared between VM Guests and the management tools running in
Dom0. VM Guests and the management tools read and write to
XenStore to convey configuration information, status updates, and
state changes. The XenStore database is managed by Dom0 and
supports simple operations such as reading and writing a key.
VM Guests and management tools can be notified of any changes in
XenStore by watching entries of interest. Note that the
xenstored
daemon is managed by the
xencommons
service.
XenStore is located on Dom0 in a single database file
/var/lib/xenstored/tdb
(tdb
represents tree database).
27.2 File System Interface #
XenStore database content is represented by a virtual file system
similar to /proc
(for more information on
/proc
, see Section 2.6, “The /proc
File System”). The
tree has three main paths: /vm
,
/local/domain
, and /tool
.
/vm
- stores information about the VM Guest configuration./local/domain
- stores information about VM Guest on the local node./tool
- stores general information about various tools.
Each VM Guest has two different ID numbers. The universal unique identifier (UUID) remains the same even if the VM Guest is migrated to another machine. The domain identifier (DOMID) is an identification number that represents a particular running instance. It typically changes when the VM Guest is migrated to another machine.
27.2.1 XenStore Commands #
The file system structure of the XenStore database can be operated with the following commands:
xenstore-ls
Displays the full dump of the XenStore database.
xenstore-read
path_to_xenstore_entry
Displays the value of the specified XenStore entry.
xenstore-exists
xenstore_path
Reports whether the specified XenStore path exists.
xenstore-list
xenstore_path
Displays all the children entries of the specified XenStore path.
xenstore-write
path_to_xenstore_entry
Updates the value of the specified XenStore entry.
xenstore-rm
xenstore_path
Removes the specified XenStore entry or directory.
xenstore-chmod
xenstore_path
mode
Updates the read/write permission on the specified XenStore path.
xenstore-control
Sends a command to the
xenstored
back-end, such as triggering an integrity check.
27.2.2 /vm
#
The /vm
path is indexed by the UUID of each
VM Guest, and stores configuration information such as the number of
virtual CPUs and the amount of allocated memory. There is a
/vm/<uuid>
directory for each
VM Guest. To list the directory content, use
xenstore-list
.
>
sudo
xenstore-list /vm 00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000 9b30841b-43bc-2af9-2ed3-5a649f466d79-1
The first line of the output belongs to Dom0, and the second one to a running VM Guest. The following command lists all the entries related to the VM Guest:
>
sudo
xenstore-list /vm/9b30841b-43bc-2af9-2ed3-5a649f466d79-1 image rtc device pool_name shadow_memory uuid on_reboot start_time on_poweroff bootloader_args on_crash vcpus vcpu_avail bootloader name
To read a value of an entry, for example the number of virtual CPUs
dedicated to the VM Guest, use xenstore-read
:
>
sudo
xenstore-read /vm/9b30841b-43bc-2af9-2ed3-5a649f466d79-1/vcpus 1
A list of selected /vm/<uuid>
entries
follows:
uuid
UUID of the VM Guest. It does not change during the migration process.
on_reboot
Specifies whether to destroy or restart the VM Guest in response to a reboot request.
on_poweroff
Specifies whether to destroy or restart the VM Guest in response to a halt request.
on_crash
Specifies whether to destroy or restart the VM Guest in response to a crash.
vcpus
Number of virtual CPUs allocated to the VM Guest.
vcpu_avail
Bitmask of active virtual CPUs for the VM Guest. The bitmask has several bits equal to the value of
vcpus
, with a bit set for each online virtual CPU.name
The name of the VM Guest.
Regular VM Guests (not Dom0) use the
/vm/<uuid>/image
path:
>
sudo
xenstore-list /vm/9b30841b-43bc-2af9-2ed3-5a649f466d79-1/image ostype kernel cmdline ramdisk dmargs device-model display
An explanation of the used entries follows:
ostype
The OS type of the VM Guest.
kernel
The path on Dom0 to the kernel for the VM Guest.
cmdline
The kernel command line for the VM Guest used when booting.
ramdisk
The path on Dom0 to the RAM disk for the VM Guest.
dmargs
Shows arguments passed to the QEMU process. If you look at the QEMU process with
ps
, you should see the same arguments as in/vm/<uuid>/image/dmargs
.
27.2.3 /local/domain/<domid>
#
This path is indexed by the running domain (VM Guest) ID, and contains information about the running VM Guest. Remember that the domain ID changes during VM Guest migration. The following entries are available:
vm
The path of the
/vm
directory for this VM Guest.on_reboot, on_poweroff, on_crash, name
See identical options in Section 27.2.2, “
/vm
”domid
Domain identifier for the VM Guest.
cpu
The current CPU to which the VM Guest is pinned.
cpu_weight
The weight assigned to the VM Guest for scheduling purposes. Higher weights use the physical CPUs more often.
Apart from the individual entries described above, there are also
several subdirectories under
/local/domain/<domid>
, containing specific
entries. To see all entries available, refer to
XenStore
Reference.
/local/domain/<domid>/memory
Contains memory information.
/local/domain/<domid>/memory/target
contains target memory size for the VM Guest (in kilobytes)./local/domain/<domid>/console
Contains information about a console used by the VM Guest.
/local/domain/<domid>/backend
Contains information about all back-end devices used by the VM Guest. The path has subdirectories of its own.
/local/domain/<domid>/device
Contains information about the front-end devices for the VM Guest.
/local/domain/<domid>/device-misc
Contains miscellaneous information about devices.
/local/domain/<domid>/store
Contains information about the VM Guest's store.