Ceph

    PLEASE NOTE: This document applies to v1.3 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 NFS Gateway CRD

    Overview

    Rook allows exporting NFS shares of the filesystem or object store through the CephNFS custom resource definition. This will spin up a cluster of NFS Ganesha servers that coordinate with one another via shared RADOS objects. The servers will be configured for NFSv4.1+ access, as serving earlier protocols can inhibit responsiveness after a server restart.

    Samples

    The following sample will create a two-node active-active cluster of NFS Ganesha gateways. A CephFS named myfs is used, and the recovery objects are stored in a RADOS pool named myfs-data0 with a RADOS namespace of nfs-ns.

    This example requires the filesystem to first be configured by the Filesystem.

    NOTE: For an RGW object store, a data pool of my-store.rgw.buckets.data can be used after configuring the Object Store.

    apiVersion: ceph.rook.io/v1
    kind: CephNFS
    metadata:
      name: my-nfs
      namespace: rook-ceph
    spec:
      rados:
        # RADOS pool where NFS client recovery data is stored.
        pool: myfs-data0
        # RADOS namespace where NFS client recovery data is stored in the pool.
        namespace: nfs-ns
      # Settings for the NFS server
      server:
        # the number of active NFS servers
        active: 2
        # A key/value list of annotations
        annotations:
        #  key: value
        # where to run the NFS server
        placement:
        #  nodeAffinity:
        #    requiredDuringSchedulingIgnoredDuringExecution:
        #      nodeSelectorTerms:
        #      - matchExpressions:
        #        - key: role
        #          operator: In
        #          values:
        #          - mds-node
        #  tolerations:
        #  - key: mds-node
        #    operator: Exists
        #  podAffinity:
        #  podAntiAffinity:
        #  topologySpreadConstraints:
    
        # The requests and limits set here allow the ganesha pod(s) to use half of one CPU core and 1 gigabyte of memory
        resources:
        #  limits:
        #    cpu: "500m"
        #    memory: "1024Mi"
        #  requests:
        #    cpu: "500m"
        #    memory: "1024Mi"
        # the priority class to set to influence the scheduler's pod preemption
        priorityClassName:
    

    NFS Settings

    RADOS Settings

    • pool: The pool where ganesha recovery backend and supplemental configuration objects will be stored
    • namespace: The namespace in pool where ganesha recovery backend and supplemental configuration objects will be stored

    EXPORT Block Configuration

    Each daemon will have a stock configuration with no exports defined, and that includes a RADOS object via:

    %url  rados://<pool>/<namespace>/conf-<nodeid>
    

    The pool and namespace are configured via the spec’s RADOS block. The nodeid is a value automatically assigned internally by rook. Nodeids start with “a” and go through “z”, at which point they become two letters (“aa” to “az”).

    When a server is started, it will create the included object if it does not already exist. It is possible to prepopulate the included objects prior to starting the server. The format for these objects is documented in the NFS Ganesha project.

    Scaling the active server count

    It is possible to scale the size of the cluster up or down by modifying the spec.server.active field. Scaling the cluster size up can be done at will. Once the new server comes up, clients can be assigned to it immediately.

    The CRD always eliminates the highest index servers first, in reverse order from how they were started. Scaling down the cluster requires that clients be migrated from servers that will be eliminated to others. That process is currently a manual one and should be performed before reducing the size of the cluster.