This article explains how LVM snapshots work and what the advantage of read/write snapshots is.
We will go through a simple example to illustrate our explanation.
First, create a dummy device that we will initialize as a PV:
/dev/loop0 lvm2 a-- 1.00g 1.00g
We now have a 1GB LVM2 Physical Volume.
vg0 1 0 0 wz--n- 1020.00m 1020.00m
lv0 vg0 -wi-a---- 400.00m
We now have a Volume Group vg0 and a 400MB Logical Volume lv0. Let’s see what our device mapper looks like
We have a single device vg0-lv0, as expected.
Let’s take a snapshot of our Logical Volume:
lv0 vg0 owi-a-s-- 400.00m
snap1 vg0 swi-a-s-- 120.00m lv0 0.00
We’ve created a 30 extents (120MB) snapshot of lv0 called snap1.
Let’s take a look at our device mapper:
vg0-snap1-cow: 0 245760 linear 7:0 821248
vg0-lv0: 0 819200 snapshot-origin 252:2
vg0-snap1: 0 819200 snapshot 252:2 252:3 P 8
This is interesting. We’d expect to see two devices. Instead, we have four. Let’s draw the dependencies:
We can see that LVM renamed our vg0-lv0 device as vg0-lv0-real and created a new vg0-lv0 device. The user has now transparently switched to using vg0-lv0.
A new device named vg0-snap1-cow is the device of size 30 extents (120MB) that will hold the contents of the snapshot.
A new device named vg0-snap1 is the device that the user will interact with.
Reading from the original volume
The user reads from vg0-lv0. The request is forwarded and the user retrieves data from vg0-lv0-real.
Writing to the original volume
The user writes to vg0-lv0. The original data is first copied from vg0-lv0-real to vg0-snap1-cow (This is why it’s called COW, Copy On Write). Then the new data is written to vg0-lv0-real. If the user writes again to vg0-lv0, modifying data that has already been copied to vg0-snap1-cow, the data from vg0-lv0-real is simply overwritten. The data on vg0-snap1-cow remains the data that was valid at the time of the creation of the snapshot.
Reading from the snapshot
When the user reads data from vg0-snap1, a lookup is done on vg0-snap1-cow to see if that particular piece of data has been copied from vg0-lv0-real to vg0-snap1-cow. If that is the case, the value from vg0-snap1-cow is returned. Otherwise, the data from vg0-lv0-real is returned. The user effectively sees the data that was valid at the time of creation of the snapshot.
A few important things to note:
- The snapshot is empty at creation, whatever size it is. This means that the creation of a snapshot is immediate and invisible to the user.
- The snapshot will hold a copy of the original data, as the original data is modified. This means that the snapshot will grow over time. Therefore, it is not necessary to make a snapshot as big as the original volume. The snapshot should be big enough to hold the amount of data that is expected to be modified over the time of existence of the snapshot. Creating a snapshot bigger than the original volume is useless and creating a snapshot as big as the original volume will ensure that all data on the original volume can be copied over to the snapshot.
- If a snapshot is not big enough to hold all the modified data of the original volume, the snapshot is removed and suddenly disappears from the system, with all the consequences of removing a mounted device from a live system.
- A volume that has one or more snapshots will provide much less I/O performance. Remove the snapshot as soon as you’re done with it.
Writing to the snapshot
With LVM2, as opposed to LVM1, the snapshot is read-write.
When the user writes to vg0-snap1, the data on vg0-snap1-cow is modified. In reality, what happens is that the a lookup is done to see if the corresponding data on vg0-lv0-real has already been copied to vg0-snap1-cow. If not, a copy is done from vg0-lv0-real to vg0-snap1-cow and then overwritten with the data the user is trying to write to vg0-snap1. This is because the granularity of the data copy process from vg0-lv0-real to vg0-snap1-cow might be bigger than the data the user is trying to modify. Let’s imagine that data is being copied from vg0-lv0-real to vg0-snap1-cow in chunks of 8KB and the user wants to modify 1KB of data. The whole chunk is copied over to the snapshot first. Then the 1KB are modified.
A second write to the same data will result in simply overwriting data in vg0-snap1-cow.
Removing an LVM snapshot
The following command will remove the snapshot:
- This operation is very fast because LVM will simply destroy vg0-snap1-cow, vg0-lv0 and vg0-snap1, and rename vg0-lv0-real to vg0-lv0.
- All data that has eventually been written to the snapshot (through vg0-snap1) is LOST.
Merging a snapshot
The following command will merge the snapshot:
lv0: Merged: 100.0%
Merge of snapshot into logical volume lv0 has finished.
Logical volume "snap1" successfully removed
- The merge will start immediately if the filesystems in the original volume and in the snapshot are unmounted (i.e. if the volumes are not in use), otherwise the merge will start as soon as both filesystems are unmounted and one of the volumes is activated. This means that if a merge of the root filesystem is planned, it will happen after a reboot, as soon as the original volume is activated.
- This operation can take time, because data needs to be copied from the snapshot to the original volume.
- As soon as the merge begins, any read-write operation to the original volume is transparently redirected to the snapshot that is in the process of being merged. Therefore, the operation is transparent to the user who thinks he’s using the merged volume. This means that as soon as the merge begins, users interact with a volume that contains the data at the time of the creation of the snapshot (+ data that has eventually been written to the snapshot since then).
Benefits of read-write snapshots
Snapshots are of course very useful to make a consistent backup of a volume. The backup will be performed on vg0-snap1, reading data either from vg0-lv0-real or from vg0-snap1-cow if the data has been modified since the creation of the snapshot. This allows for a consistent backup of the volume at a certain point in time, without taking the volume offline.
But this can be done with read-only snapshots. So what are read-write snapshots useful for ?
Read-write snapshots (also called branching snapshots because of the fact that they create different versions of the data, a bit like a version control branch) are useful for virtualization, sandboxing and virtual hosting:
Read-write snapshots for sandboxing
Since the snapshot is read-write, you can use either the snapshot or the original volume to experiment on. Which one to choose will depend on the likeliness of having to revert. If you’re doing a system upgrade that is likely to succeed, take a snapshot and perform the upgrade on the original volume. If everything goes fine, remove the snapshot. If the upgrade fails and you need to revert, merge the snapshot.
If you’re booting a system every day at the same state (e.g. a Virtual Desktop Infrastructure situation), and you know you’re going to revert to the original state in the evening, let your user use the snapshot instead of the original volume. At the end of the day, just remove the snapshot. Every once in a while you’re going to merge because you want to keep a patch you’ve applied.
Read-write snapshots in virtualization
When using LVM volumes as storage backends for virtualization, a snapshot can be taken, effectively allowing the creation of a new VM. This VM can then evolve separately.
Read-write snapshots for virtual hosting
You can use an LVM volume to contain the image of a virtual machine. Then take a snapshot for one version of the VM, another snapshot for another modified version of the VM, etc. That way, the majority of the space of each VM instance resides in the original volume and the snapshots only contain the differences that are specific to a modified version of the VM or to an instance of the VM. This trades performance for space.
From :
http://clevernetsystems.com/lvm-snapshots-explained/