Hi Ryan, Please see my comments below

<< During early boot at cloud-init local time, which runs before system-wide 
networking is enabled, the Azure Datasource will
DHCP on the primary interface, consume metadata, and within that, read the 
PreprovisionedVM value and if so, goes down a path of polling
until it's time to come up.   >>

The new provisioning data for the VM will not be returned unless the VM is 
moved into the customer’s new network.
So first, we have to get the new IP-address, and only then subsequent poll will 
return the new provisioning data and cloud-init can move on.

Instead of interpreting that  [call to host has failed] indicates [VM has moved 
to the new network], we are relying on netlink to deterministically tell us 
that this switch has happened.
<< The bigger point here is that you're interested in *telling* the instance 
that it should reconfigure it's networking.  You're suggestion is to utilize 
the loss of carrier on the nic as an indication that it should and while that 
may be what needs to be done specifically on Azure, it's not a general case 
mechanism, and only works if using DHCP >>
You are correct in saying that this mechanism of host indicating to VM that 
networking needs to be reconfigured is specific to Azure’s pre-provisioning 
scenario, and may not hold in general and for other public clouds.

Thanks,
Sushant

From: Ryan Harper [mailto:ryan.har...@canonical.com]
Sent: Friday, February 9, 2018 11:43 AM
To: Tamilmani Manoharan <taman...@microsoft.com>
Cc: Sushant Sharma (AZURE) <sushant.sha...@microsoft.com>; Douglas Jordan 
<douglas.jor...@microsoft.com>; cloud-init@lists.launchpad.net; Nisheeth 
Srivastava <nisheeth.srivast...@microsoft.com>
Subject: Re: [Cloud-init] Azure Networking Support in cloud-init



On Thu, Feb 8, 2018 at 8:14 PM, Tamilmani Manoharan 
<taman...@microsoft.com<mailto:taman...@microsoft.com>> wrote:
Ryan,
The VM has to be configured with new data that should be read after network 
switch and these VM configuration happens even before system-networkd starts. 
We need some mechanism to listen on network switch events and issue dhcp. So we 
can’t rely on system-networkd on resending dhcp.

The process, as I understand based on what's been committed,  
c03bdd3d8ed762cada813c5e95a40b14d2047b57
During early boot at cloud-init local time, which runs before system-wide 
networking is enabled, the Azure Datasource will
DHCP on the primary interface, consume metadata, and within that, read the 
PreprovisionedVM value and if so, goes down a path of polling
until it's time to come up.   When system execution continues cloud-init local 
exits and has written a network configuration to DHCP on the primary
interface.  Then the networking layer is activated and system blocks until it 
has come online (which will ensure a DHCP request has been completed).
After the system network is online, cloud-init net mode runs it will refetch 
metadata due to the on-disk marker that the instance was a reprovision VM.

If I've somehow misunderstood things, please let me know, but as I understand 
things now; this scenario does not need cloud-init itself to watch
netlink layer to reissue dhcp.


From: Ryan Harper 
[mailto:ryan.har...@canonical.com<mailto:ryan.har...@canonical.com>]
Sent: Thursday, February 8, 2018 5:51 PM
To: Sushant Sharma (AZURE) 
<sushant.sha...@microsoft.com<mailto:sushant.sha...@microsoft.com>>
Cc: cloud-init@lists.launchpad.net<mailto:cloud-init@lists.launchpad.net>; 
Tamilmani Manoharan <taman...@microsoft.com<mailto:taman...@microsoft.com>>; 
Nisheeth Srivastava 
<nisheeth.srivast...@microsoft.com<mailto:nisheeth.srivast...@microsoft.com>>; 
Douglas Jordan 
<douglas.jor...@microsoft.com<mailto:douglas.jor...@microsoft.com>>

Subject: Re: [Cloud-init] Azure Networking Support in cloud-init



On Thu, Feb 8, 2018 at 7:07 PM, Sushant Sharma (AZURE) 
<sushant.sha...@microsoft.com<mailto:sushant.sha...@microsoft.com>> wrote:
Hi Ryan,
Thank you for your email. We just updated the PR with some more changes.
To answer your specific questions


  1.  The specific scenario addressed here is to start the VM and have it 
running, and once customer asks for a new VM in Azure, move the VM into 
customer’s network and apply all customer specific configurations in the VM. 
This is why the earlier PR by Douglas blocks cloud-init in Azure unless we 
learn that VM is ready to be moved into customer’s Network. This cloud-init 
block happens even before systemd-networkd starts.

In this scenario which is before "networking" there's no need to "bounce" 
networking, rather once the VM is "released", it will issue a DHCP at network 
configuration time.  This works on Xenial (ifupdown based) as well as Artful 
and newer (systemd-networkd).


  1.
  2.  The goal of this PR is to learn whenever the switch to customer’s network 
has happened, and issue a dchp-request upon this event to learn new IP address. 
The IP address may or may not change. Can you help us understand why removing 
and adding nic may be needed in this scenario?
Right now, on the linux side, I'm not aware of any distro which contains a 
networking configuration daemon which watches for carrier/no-carrier changes 
and subsequently issues a DHCP release and DHCP renew.  The exceptions to this 
are systemd-networkd behavior; though it does depend on how long
the link goes away for w.r.t whether it would issue a new DHCP lease.  The 
bigger point here is that you're interested in *telling* the instance that it 
should reconfigure it's networking.  You're suggestion is to utilize the loss 
of carrier on the nic as an indication that it should and while that may be 
what needs to
be done specifically on Azure, it's not a general case mechanism, and only 
works if using DHCP.

As a stepping stone toward a real cloud to instance communication mechanism, 
hotplug can work more genericially on Linux as an indication that the instance 
network configuration needs to change (and possibly restarted) which could 
result in a DHCP release and renew.


  1.

Regarding the newer scenarios, I think it is great that you have shared the 
document where we can add the description and discuss solutions. Let’s do that 
separately in parallel to this PR.
At the moment, we will appreciate if you and others can take a look at this PR 
and provide feedback so that it can be accepted.

For the previous proposed which included spawning a python process to watch the 
netlink socket; I'm not comfortable with such an approach, for many of the 
reasons Robert already indicated in his
review of the initial PR. I'll follow-up directly in the PR with more specific 
concerns.

Ryan


Thanks,
Sushant

From: Ryan Harper 
[mailto:ryan.har...@canonical.com<mailto:ryan.har...@canonical.com>]
Sent: Friday, January 26, 2018 8:16 AM
To: Sushant Sharma (AZURE) 
<sushant.sha...@microsoft.com<mailto:sushant.sha...@microsoft.com>>
Cc: cloud-init@lists.launchpad.net<mailto:cloud-init@lists.launchpad.net>; 
Tamilmani Manoharan <taman...@microsoft.com<mailto:taman...@microsoft.com>>; 
Nisheeth Srivastava 
<nisheeth.srivast...@microsoft.com<mailto:nisheeth.srivast...@microsoft.com>>
Subject: Re: [Cloud-init] Azure Networking Support in cloud-init



On Tue, Jan 9, 2018 at 5:31 PM, Sushant Sharma (AZURE) 
<sushant.sha...@microsoft.com<mailto:sushant.sha...@microsoft.com>> wrote:
Hi cloud-init members,

We would like to discuss with you our proposal to add a network module in 
cloud-init to support various networking scenarios in Azure.
To begin with, we would like to support move of a virtual machine (VM) from one 
network to another in Azure.
As such, it will listen for media disconnect/connect (via netlink) and issues a 
re-DHCP when required (this design is based on how azure moves VM from one 
network to another).

Thanks for starting the discussion here.  For this use-case, are you migrating
the entire VM or are we changing an existing nic from one subnet to another?
Since the link goes down (stopping traffic), is it possible to remove the nic
and re-add it instead?

Operating system behavior around link state change varies depending on the
network service managing things.  In Ubuntu where ifupdown and isc-dhcp-client
are utilized, as you know, netlink changes are not handled.  Under Ubuntu Artful
and Bionic which utilize systemd-networkd, link state changes are watched; if
the device loses carrier then when it is restored networkd will reacquire a 
lease in that
case.

Over time, we plan to support more advance networking scenarios in Azure. 
Please let us know your thoughts before we work on adding the module.

I'm very much interested in enumerating additional scenarios.  Some user-stories
which I think need to be address:

1. add additional network device and configure
2. remove network device (and update configuration)
3. add additional ip addresses to one or more network devices
4. remove ip address from one or more network devices
5. modify the configuration of an existing network device (changes outside
   of 3 and 4)

Cases 1 and 2 are generally covered by a udev hook handler.  3 and 4 can be
partially addressed by updating cloud-init to read network config metadata and
renderer a complete network configuration and may be combined with 1 and 2.

What's not easily covered by a udev hook is the case where users modify existing
network configuration without adding or removing devices.  To handle this sort
of scenario a cloud will need to provide some notification mechanism to which
cloud-init can react.  This may be something simple like a websocket cloud-init
can select() on, or some other hypervisor event injection.  This area is not
well defined and will certainly vary from provider to provider which will
require some time to form a general solution.

I'd like to continue the discussion in a shared document:

https://hackmd.io/MzCsBYBMEMHYCMC0AOS4BmjwAYCM3F54A2JGZAY3gCYBTaSYa2IA?both<https://na01.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fhackmd.io%2FMzCsBYBMEMHYCMC0AOS4BmjwAYCM3F54A2JGZAY3gCYBTaSYa2IA%3Fboth&data=02%7C01%7CSushant.Sharma%40microsoft.com%7C17acfcd577e8446cde6d08d564d80c0f%7Cee3303d7fb734b0c8589bcd847f1c277%7C1%7C1%7C636525801436863680&sdata=AVN8VPHOOLds01uguh5GNklo4pBz%2FpXABX44cLe8OLI%3D&reserved=0>



Thanks,
Sushant


--
Mailing list: 
https://launchpad.net/~cloud-init<https://na01.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https:%2F%2Flaunchpad.net%2F~cloud-init&data=02%7C01%7CSushant.Sharma%40microsoft.com%7C17acfcd577e8446cde6d08d564d80c0f%7Cee3303d7fb734b0c8589bcd847f1c277%7C1%7C1%7C636525801436863680&sdata=0Ieqm%2FzkdIdB5Gz5mu3C0xN5m7nSVUDyVhBaSmDZVN4%3D&reserved=0>
Post to     : 
cloud-init@lists.launchpad.net<mailto:cloud-init@lists.launchpad.net>
Unsubscribe : 
https://launchpad.net/~cloud-init<https://na01.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https:%2F%2Flaunchpad.net%2F~cloud-init&data=02%7C01%7CSushant.Sharma%40microsoft.com%7C17acfcd577e8446cde6d08d564d80c0f%7Cee3303d7fb734b0c8589bcd847f1c277%7C1%7C1%7C636525801436863680&sdata=0Ieqm%2FzkdIdB5Gz5mu3C0xN5m7nSVUDyVhBaSmDZVN4%3D&reserved=0>
More help   : 
https://help.launchpad.net/ListHelp<https://na01.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fhelp.launchpad.net%2FListHelp&data=02%7C01%7CSushant.Sharma%40microsoft.com%7C17acfcd577e8446cde6d08d564d80c0f%7Cee3303d7fb734b0c8589bcd847f1c277%7C1%7C1%7C636525801436863680&sdata=DyQQKKEVimW0VwODAnV731mjOZ50VX7oEH5piU12qb8%3D&reserved=0>



-- 
Mailing list: https://launchpad.net/~cloud-init
Post to     : cloud-init@lists.launchpad.net
Unsubscribe : https://launchpad.net/~cloud-init
More help   : https://help.launchpad.net/ListHelp

Reply via email to