Ceph
PLEASE NOTE: This document applies to v1.2 version and not to the latest stable release v1.8
Documentation for other releases can be found by using the version selector in the top right of any doc page.Ceph Storage Quickstart
This guide will walk you through the basic setup of a Ceph cluster and enable you to consume block, object, and file storage from other pods running in your cluster.
Minimum Version
Kubernetes v1.11 or higher is supported by Rook.
Prerequisites
To make sure you have a Kubernetes cluster that is ready for Rook
, you can follow these instructions.
If you are using dataDirHostPath
to persist rook data on kubernetes hosts, make sure your host has at least 5GB of space available on the specified path.
TL;DR
If you’re feeling lucky, a simple Rook cluster can be created with the following kubectl commands and example yaml files. For the more detailed install, skip to the next section to deploy the Rook operator.
git clone --single-branch --branch release-1.2 https://github.com/rook/rook.git
cd cluster/examples/kubernetes/ceph
kubectl create -f common.yaml
kubectl create -f operator.yaml
kubectl create -f cluster-test.yaml
After the cluster is running, you can create block, object, or file storage to be consumed by other applications in your cluster.
Production Environments
For production environments it is required to have local storage devices attached to your nodes.
In this walkthrough, the requirement of local storage devices is relaxed so you can get a cluster up and running
as a “test” environment to experiment with Rook. A Ceph filestore OSD will be created in a directory
instead
of requiring a device. For production environments, you will want to follow the example in cluster.yaml
instead of
cluster-test.yaml
in order to configure the devices instead of test directories. See the Ceph examples for more details.
Deploy the Rook Operator
The first step is to deploy the Rook operator. Check that you are using the example yaml files that correspond to your release of Rook. For more options, see the examples documentation.
cd cluster/examples/kubernetes/ceph
kubectl create -f common.yaml
kubectl create -f operator.yaml
## verify the rook-ceph-operator is in the `Running` state before proceeding
kubectl -n rook-ceph get pod
You can also deploy the operator with the Rook Helm Chart.
Create a Rook Ceph Cluster
Now that the Rook operator is running we can create the Ceph cluster. For the cluster to survive reboots,
make sure you set the dataDirHostPath
property that is valid for your hosts. For more settings, see the documentation on configuring the cluster.
Save the cluster spec as cluster-test.yaml
:
apiVersion: ceph.rook.io/v1
kind: CephCluster
metadata:
name: rook-ceph
namespace: rook-ceph
spec:
cephVersion:
# For the latest ceph images, see https://hub.docker.com/r/ceph/ceph/tags
image: ceph/ceph:v14.2.7
dataDirHostPath: /var/lib/rook
mon:
count: 3
dashboard:
enabled: true
storage:
useAllNodes: true
useAllDevices: false
# Important: Directories should only be used in pre-production environments
directories:
- path: /var/lib/rook
Create the cluster:
kubectl create -f cluster-test.yaml
Use kubectl
to list pods in the rook-ceph
namespace. You should be able to see the following pods once they are all running.
The number of osd pods will depend on the number of nodes in the cluster and the number of devices and directories configured.
If you did not modify the cluster-test.yaml
above, it is expected that one OSD will be created per node.
The rook-ceph-agent
and rook-discover
pods are also optional depending on your settings.
$ kubectl -n rook-ceph get pod
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
rook-ceph-agent-4zkg8 1/1 Running 0 140s
rook-ceph-mgr-a-d9dcf5748-5s9ft 1/1 Running 0 77s
rook-ceph-mon-a-7d8f675889-nw5pl 1/1 Running 0 105s
rook-ceph-mon-b-856fdd5cb9-5h2qk 1/1 Running 0 94s
rook-ceph-mon-c-57545897fc-j576h 1/1 Running 0 85s
rook-ceph-operator-6c49994c4f-9csfz 1/1 Running 0 141s
rook-ceph-osd-0-7cbbbf749f-j8fsd 1/1 Running 0 23s
rook-ceph-osd-1-7f67f9646d-44p7v 1/1 Running 0 24s
rook-ceph-osd-2-6cd4b776ff-v4d68 1/1 Running 0 25s
rook-ceph-osd-prepare-node1-vx2rz 0/2 Completed 0 60s
rook-ceph-osd-prepare-node2-ab3fd 0/2 Completed 0 60s
rook-ceph-osd-prepare-node3-w4xyz 0/2 Completed 0 60s
rook-discover-dhkb8 1/1 Running 0 140s
To verify that the cluster is in a healthy state, connect to the Rook toolbox and run the
ceph status
command.
- All mons should be in quorum
- A mgr should be active
- At least one OSD should be active
- If the health is not
HEALTH_OK
, the warnings or errors should be investigated
$ ceph status
cluster:
id: a0452c76-30d9-4c1a-a948-5d8405f19a7c
health: HEALTH_OK
services:
mon: 3 daemons, quorum a,b,c (age 3m)
mgr: a(active, since 2m)
osd: 3 osds: 3 up (since 1m), 3 in (since 1m)
...
If the cluster is not healthy, please refer to the Ceph common issues for more details and potential solutions.
Storage
For a walkthrough of the three types of storage exposed by Rook, see the guides for:
- Block: Create block storage to be consumed by a pod
- Object: Create an object store that is accessible inside or outside the Kubernetes cluster
- Shared Filesystem: Create a filesystem to be shared across multiple pods
Ceph Dashboard
Ceph has a dashboard in which you can view the status of your cluster. Please see the dashboard guide for more details.
Tools
We have created a toolbox container that contains the full suite of Ceph clients for debugging and troubleshooting your Rook cluster. Please see the toolbox readme for setup and usage information. Also see our advanced configuration document for helpful maintenance and tuning examples.
Monitoring
Each Rook cluster has some built in metrics collectors/exporters for monitoring with Prometheus. To learn how to set up monitoring for your Rook cluster, you can follow the steps in the monitoring guide.
Teardown
When you are done with the test cluster, see these instructions to clean up the cluster.