There are four processes that make up the Cinder service:
cinder-api is an WSGI application that accepts and validates REST
(JSON or XML) requests from clients and routes them to other Cinder
processes as appropriate over AMQP.
cinder-scheduler determines which backend should serve as the
destination for a volume creation or movement request. It maintains
non-persistent state for backends (e.g. available capacity,
capabilities, and supported extra specs) that can be leveraged when
making placement decisions. The algorithm utilized by the scheduler
can be changed through Cinder configuration.
cinder-volume accepts requests from other Cinder processes and
serves as the operational container for Cinder drivers. This process
is multi-threaded and typically has one thread of execution per
Cinder backend as defined in the Cinder configuration file.
cinder-backup handles the interaction with potential backup
targets (e.g. a file store exported via NFS or an OpenStack Object
Storage Service (Swift)) when a client requests a volume backup or
restore operation.
Figure 4.2. Cinder Processes Concept Diagram¶
The following section walks through the steps that occur when a user requests the creation of a new volume from Cinder.
Figure 4.3. Cinder Workflow - Volume Creation¶
Client issues request to create volume through invoking REST API
(client may use python-cinderclient CLI utility).
cinder-api process validates request, user credentials; once
validated, puts message onto AMQP queue for processing.
cinder-volume process takes message off of queue, sends message
to cinder-scheduler to determine which backend to provision volume
into.
cinder-scheduler process takes message off of queue, generates
candidate list based on current state and requested volume criteria
(size, availability zone, volume type (including extra specs)).
cinder-volume process reads response message from
cinder-scheduler from queue; iterates through candidate list by
invoking backend driver methods until successful.
NetApp Cinder driver creates requested volume through interactions with storage subsystem (dependent on configuration and protocol).
cinder-volume process collects volume metadata and connection
information and posts response message to AMQP queue.
cinder-api process reads response message from queue and responds
to client.
Client receives information including status of creation request, volume UUID, etc.
The following section walks through the steps that occur when a user requests that a Cinder volume be attached to a Nova compute instance.
Figure 4.4. Cinder & Nova Workflow - Volume Attach¶
Client issues request to attach volume through invoking Nova REST API
(client may use python-novaclient CLI utility).
nova-api process validates request, user credentials; once
validated, invokes Cinder API to get connection information for
specified volume.
cinder-api process validates request, user credentials; once
validated, posts message to volume manager over AMQP.
cinder-volume reads message from queue, invokes Cinder driver
corresponding to volume to be attached.
NetApp Cinder driver prepares Cinder volume in preparation for attachment (specific steps dependent on storage protocol used).
cinder-volume process posts response information to
cinder-api process via AMQP queue.
cinder-api process reads response message from cinder-volume
from queue; passes connection information in RESTful response to Nova
caller.
Nova creates the connection to the storage with the returned information from Cinder.
Nova passes the volume device/file to the hypervisor, who then attaches the volume device/file to the guest VM as an actual or virtualized block device (dependent on storage protocol).
The following section walks through the steps that occur when a user requests that a Cinder volume be backed up.
Figure 4.5. Cinder Backup Workflow¶
Client issues request to backup a Cinder volume by invoking REST API
(client may use python-cinderclient CLI utility).
cinder-api process validates request, user credentials; once
validated, posts message to backup manager over AMQP.
cinder-backup reads message from queue, creates a database record
for the backup and fetches information from the database for the
volume to be backed up.
cinder-backup invokes the backup_volume method of the Cinder
volume driver corresponding to volume to be backed up, passing the
backup record and the connection for the backup service to be used
(NFS, Swift, etc.)
The appropriate Cinder volume driver attaches to the source Cinder volume.
The volume driver invokes the backup method for the configured
backup service, handing off the volume attachment.
The backup service transfers the Cinder volume’s data and metadata to the backup repository.
The backup service updates the database with the completed record for
this backup and posts response information to cinder-api process
via AMQP queue.
cinder-api process reads response message from queue and passes
results in RESTful response to the client.
The following section walks through the steps that occur when a user requests that a Cinder backup be restored.
Figure 4.6. Cinder Restore Workflow¶
Client issues request to restore a Cinder volume by invoking REST API
(client may use python-cinderclient CLI utility).
cinder-api process validates request, user credentials; once
validated, posts message to backup manager over AMQP.
cinder-backup reads message from queue, fetches the database
record for the backup and a new or preexisting volume database
record, depending on whether a preexisting volume was requested or
not.
cinder-backup invokes the backup_restore method of the Cinder
volume driver corresponding to volume to be backed up, passing the
backup record and the connection for the backup service to be used
(NFS, Swift, etc.)
The appropriate Cinder volume driver attaches to the destination Cinder volume.
The volume driver invokes the restore method for the configured
backup service, handing off the volume attachment.
The backup service locates the backup metadata and data for the Cinder volume in the backup repository and uses these to restore the destination Cinder volume to a state matching the source volume for the original backup operation at the time of that operation.
The backup service posts response information to cinder-api
process via AMQP queue.
cinder-api process reads response message from cinder-backup
from queue and passes results in RESTful response to the client.
This document is licensed under Apache 2.0 license.