Ceph
PLEASE NOTE: This document applies to v1.7 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.Advanced Configuration
These examples show how to perform advanced configuration tasks on your Rook storage cluster.
- Prerequisites
- Using alternate namespaces
- Deploying a second cluster
- Use custom Ceph user and secret for mounting
- Log Collection
- OSD Information
- Separate Storage Groups
- Configuring Pools
- Custom ceph.conf Settings
- OSD CRUSH Settings
- OSD Dedicated Network
- Phantom OSD Removal
- Change Failure Domain
- Auto Expansion of OSDs
Prerequisites
Most of the examples make use of the ceph
client command. A quick way to use
the Ceph client suite is from a Rook Toolbox container.
The Kubernetes based examples assume Rook OSD pods are in the rook-ceph
namespace.
If you run them in a different namespace, modify kubectl -n rook-ceph [...]
to fit
your situation.
Using alternate namespaces
If you wish to deploy the Rook Operator and/or Ceph clusters to namespaces other than the default
rook-ceph
, the manifests are commented to allow for easy sed
replacements. Change
ROOK_CLUSTER_NAMESPACE
to tailor the manifests for additional Ceph clusters. You can choose
to also change ROOK_OPERATOR_NAMESPACE
to create a new Rook Operator for each Ceph cluster (don’t
forget to set ROOK_CURRENT_NAMESPACE_ONLY
), or you can leave it at the same value for every
Ceph cluster if you only wish to have one Operator manage all Ceph clusters.
This will help you manage namespaces more easily, but you should still make sure the resources are configured to your liking.
cd cluster/examples/kubernetes/ceph
export ROOK_OPERATOR_NAMESPACE="rook-ceph"
export ROOK_CLUSTER_NAMESPACE="rook-ceph"
sed -i.bak \
-e "s/\(.*\):.*# namespace:operator/\1: $ROOK_OPERATOR_NAMESPACE # namespace:operator/g" \
-e "s/\(.*\):.*# namespace:cluster/\1: $ROOK_CLUSTER_NAMESPACE # namespace:cluster/g" \
-e "s/\(.*serviceaccount\):.*:\(.*\) # serviceaccount:namespace:operator/\1:$ROOK_OPERATOR_NAMESPACE:\2 # serviceaccount:namespace:operator/g" \
-e "s/\(.*serviceaccount\):.*:\(.*\) # serviceaccount:namespace:cluster/\1:$ROOK_CLUSTER_NAMESPACE:\2 # serviceaccount:namespace:cluster/g" \
-e "s/\(.*\): [-_A-Za-z0-9]*\.\(.*\) # driver:namespace:operator/\1: $ROOK_OPERATOR_NAMESPACE.\2 # driver:namespace:operator/g" \
-e "s/\(.*\): [-_A-Za-z0-9]*\.\(.*\) # driver:namespace:cluster/\1: $ROOK_CLUSTER_NAMESPACE.\2 # driver:namespace:cluster/g" \
common.yaml operator.yaml cluster.yaml # add other files or change these as desired for your config
# You need to use `apply` for all Ceph clusters after the first if you have only one Operator
kubectl apply -f common.yaml -f operator.yaml -f cluster.yaml # add other files as desired for yourconfig
Deploying a second cluster
If you wish to create a new CephCluster in a different namespace than rook-ceph
while using a single operator to manage both clusters execute the following:
cd cluster/examples/kubernetes/ceph
NAMESPACE=rook-ceph-secondary envsubst < common-second-cluster.yaml | kubectl create -f -
This will create all the necessary RBACs as well as the new namespace. The script assumes that common.yaml
was already created.
When you create the second CephCluster CR, use the same NAMESPACE
and the operator will configure the second cluster.
Use custom Ceph user and secret for mounting
NOTE: For extensive info about creating Ceph users, consult the Ceph documentation: https://docs.ceph.com/en/latest/rados/operations/user-management/#add-a-user.
Using a custom Ceph user and secret can be done for filesystem and block storage.
Create a custom user in Ceph with read-write access in the /bar
directory on CephFS:
$ ceph auth get-or-create-key client.user1 mon 'allow r' osd 'allow rw tag cephfs data=YOUR_FS_DATA_POOL' mds 'allow r, allow rw path=/bar'
The command will return a Ceph secret key, this key should be added as a secret in Kubernetes like this:
$ kubectl create secret generic ceph-user1-secret --from-literal=key=YOUR_CEPH_KEY
NOTE: This secret with the same name must be created in each namespace where the StorageClass will be used.
In addition to this Secret you must create a RoleBinding to allow the Rook Ceph agent to get the secret from each namespace. The RoleBinding is optional if you are using a ClusterRoleBinding for the Rook Ceph agent secret access. A ClusterRole which contains the permissions which are needed and used for the Bindings are shown as an example after the next step.
On a StorageClass parameters
and/or flexvolume Volume entry options
set the following options:
mountUser: user1
mountSecret: ceph-user1-secret
If you want the Rook Ceph agent to require a mountUser
and mountSecret
to be set in StorageClasses using Rook, you must set the environment variable AGENT_MOUNT_SECURITY_MODE
to Restricted
on the Rook Ceph operator Deployment.
For more information on using the Ceph feature to limit access to CephFS paths, see Ceph Documentation - Path Restriction.
ClusterRole
NOTE: When you are using the Helm chart to install the Rook Ceph operator and have set
mountSecurityMode
to e.g.,Restricted
, then the below ClusterRole has already been created for you.
This ClusterRole is needed no matter if you want to use a RoleBinding per namespace or a ClusterRoleBinding.
apiVersion: rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1
kind: ClusterRole
metadata:
name: rook-ceph-agent-mount
labels:
operator: rook
storage-backend: ceph
rules:
- apiGroups:
- ""
resources:
- secrets
verbs:
- get
RoleBinding
NOTE: You either need a RoleBinding in each namespace in which a mount secret resides in or create a ClusterRoleBinding with which the Rook Ceph agent has access to Kubernetes secrets in all namespaces.
Create the RoleBinding shown here in each namespace the Rook Ceph agent should read secrets for mounting.
The RoleBinding subjects
’ namespace
must be the one the Rook Ceph agent runs in (default rook-ceph
for version 1.0 and newer. The default namespace in
previous versions was rook-ceph-system
).
Replace namespace: name-of-namespace-with-mountsecret
according to the name of all namespaces a mountSecret
can be in.
kind: RoleBinding
apiVersion: rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1
metadata:
name: rook-ceph-agent-mount
namespace: name-of-namespace-with-mountsecret
labels:
operator: rook
storage-backend: ceph
roleRef:
apiGroup: rbac.authorization.k8s.io
kind: ClusterRole
name: rook-ceph-agent-mount
subjects:
- kind: ServiceAccount
name: rook-ceph-system
namespace: rook-ceph
ClusterRoleBinding
This ClusterRoleBinding only needs to be created once, as it covers the whole cluster.
kind: ClusterRoleBinding
apiVersion: rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1
metadata:
name: rook-ceph-agent-mount
labels:
operator: rook
storage-backend: ceph
roleRef:
apiGroup: rbac.authorization.k8s.io
kind: ClusterRole
name: rook-ceph-agent-mount
subjects:
- kind: ServiceAccount
name: rook-ceph-system
namespace: rook-ceph
Log Collection
All Rook logs can be collected in a Kubernetes environment with the following command:
for p in $(kubectl -n rook-ceph get pods -o jsonpath='{.items[*].metadata.name}')
do
for c in $(kubectl -n rook-ceph get pod ${p} -o jsonpath='{.spec.containers[*].name}')
do
echo "BEGIN logs from pod: ${p} ${c}"
kubectl -n rook-ceph logs -c ${c} ${p}
echo "END logs from pod: ${p} ${c}"
done
done
This gets the logs for every container in every Rook pod and then compresses them into a .gz
archive
for easy sharing. Note that instead of gzip
, you could instead pipe to less
or to a single text file.
OSD Information
Keeping track of OSDs and their underlying storage devices can be difficult. The following scripts will clear things up quickly.
Kubernetes
# Get OSD Pods
# This uses the example/default cluster name "rook"
OSD_PODS=$(kubectl get pods --all-namespaces -l \
app=rook-ceph-osd,rook_cluster=rook-ceph -o jsonpath='{.items[*].metadata.name}')
# Find node and drive associations from OSD pods
for pod in $(echo ${OSD_PODS})
do
echo "Pod: ${pod}"
echo "Node: $(kubectl -n rook-ceph get pod ${pod} -o jsonpath='{.spec.nodeName}')"
kubectl -n rook-ceph exec ${pod} -- sh -c '\
for i in /var/lib/ceph/osd/ceph-*; do
[ -f ${i}/ready ] || continue
echo -ne "-$(basename ${i}) "
echo $(lsblk -n -o NAME,SIZE ${i}/block 2> /dev/null || \
findmnt -n -v -o SOURCE,SIZE -T ${i}) $(cat ${i}/type)
done | sort -V
echo'
done
The output should look something like this.
Pod: osd-m2fz2 Node: node1.zbrbdl -osd0 sda3 557.3G bluestore -osd1 sdf3 110.2G bluestore -osd2 sdd3 277.8G bluestore -osd3 sdb3 557.3G bluestore -osd4 sde3 464.2G bluestore -osd5 sdc3 557.3G bluestore Pod: osd-nxxnq Node: node3.zbrbdl -osd6 sda3 110.7G bluestore -osd17 sdd3 1.8T bluestore -osd18 sdb3 231.8G bluestore -osd19 sdc3 231.8G bluestore Pod: osd-tww1h Node: node2.zbrbdl -osd7 sdc3 464.2G bluestore -osd8 sdj3 557.3G bluestore -osd9 sdf3 66.7G bluestore -osd10 sdd3 464.2G bluestore -osd11 sdb3 147.4G bluestore -osd12 sdi3 557.3G bluestore -osd13 sdk3 557.3G bluestore -osd14 sde3 66.7G bluestore -osd15 sda3 110.2G bluestore -osd16 sdh3 135.1G bluestore
Separate Storage Groups
DEPRECATED: Instead of manually needing to set this, the
deviceClass
property can be used on Pool structures inCephBlockPool
,CephFilesystem
andCephObjectStore
CRD objects.
By default Rook/Ceph puts all storage under one replication rule in the CRUSH Map which provides the maximum amount of storage capacity for a cluster. If you would like to use different storage endpoints for different purposes, you’ll have to create separate storage groups.
In the following example we will separate SSD drives from spindle-based drives, a common practice for those looking to target certain workloads onto faster (database) or slower (file archive) storage.
Configuring Pools
Placement Group Sizing
NOTE: Since Ceph Nautilus (v14.x), you can use the Ceph MGR
pg_autoscaler
module to auto scale the PGs as needed. If you want to enable this feature, please refer to Default PG and PGP counts.
The general rules for deciding how many PGs your pool(s) should contain is:
- Less than 5 OSDs set pg_num to 128
- Between 5 and 10 OSDs set pg_num to 512
- Between 10 and 50 OSDs set pg_num to 1024
If you have more than 50 OSDs, you need to understand the tradeoffs and how to calculate the pg_num value by yourself. For calculating pg_num yourself please make use of the pgcalc tool.
If you’re already using a pool it is generally safe to increase its PG count on-the-fly. Decreasing the PG count is not recommended on a pool that is in use. The safest way to decrease the PG count is to back-up the data, delete the pool, and recreate it. With backups you can try a few potentially unsafe tricks for live pools, documented here.
Setting PG Count
Be sure to read the placement group sizing section before changing the number of PGs.
# Set the number of PGs in the rbd pool to 512
ceph osd pool set rbd pg_num 512
Custom ceph.conf Settings
WARNING: The advised method for controlling Ceph configuration is to manually use the Ceph CLI or the Ceph dashboard because this offers the most flexibility. It is highly recommended that this only be used when absolutely necessary and that the
config
be reset to an empty string if/when the configurations are no longer necessary. Configurations in the config file will make the Ceph cluster less configurable from the CLI and dashboard and may make future tuning or debugging difficult.
Setting configs via Ceph’s CLI requires that at least one mon be available for the configs to be
set, and setting configs via dashboard requires at least one mgr to be available. Ceph may also have
a small number of very advanced settings that aren’t able to be modified easily via CLI or
dashboard. In order to set configurations before monitors are available or to set problematic
configuration settings, the rook-config-override
ConfigMap exists, and the config
field can be
set with the contents of a ceph.conf
file. The contents will be propagated to all mon, mgr, OSD,
MDS, and RGW daemons as an /etc/ceph/ceph.conf
file.
WARNING: Rook performs no validation on the config, so the validity of the settings is the user’s responsibility.
If the rook-config-override
ConfigMap is created before the cluster is started, the Ceph daemons
will automatically pick up the settings. If you add the settings to the ConfigMap after the cluster
has been initialized, each daemon will need to be restarted where you want the settings applied:
- mons: ensure all three mons are online and healthy before restarting each mon pod, one at a time.
- mgrs: the pods are stateless and can be restarted as needed, but note that this will disrupt the Ceph dashboard during restart.
- OSDs: restart your the pods by deleting them, one at a time, and running
ceph -s
between each restart to ensure the cluster goes back to “active/clean” state. - RGW: the pods are stateless and can be restarted as needed.
- MDS: the pods are stateless and can be restarted as needed.
After the pod restart, the new settings should be in effect. Note that if the ConfigMap in the Ceph cluster’s namespace is created before the cluster is created, the daemons will pick up the settings at first launch.
Example
In this example we will set the default pool size
to two, and tell OSD
daemons not to change the weight of OSDs on startup.
WARNING: Modify Ceph settings carefully. You are leaving the sandbox tested by Rook. Changing the settings could result in unhealthy daemons or even data loss if used incorrectly.
When the Rook Operator creates a cluster, a placeholder ConfigMap is created that will allow you to override Ceph configuration settings. When the daemon pods are started, the settings specified in this ConfigMap will be merged with the default settings generated by Rook.
The default override settings are blank. Cutting out the extraneous properties, we would see the following defaults after creating a cluster:
kubectl -n rook-ceph get ConfigMap rook-config-override -o yaml
kind: ConfigMap
apiVersion: v1
metadata:
name: rook-config-override
namespace: rook-ceph
data:
config: ""
To apply your desired configuration, you will need to update this ConfigMap. The next time the daemon pod(s) start, they will use the updated configs.
kubectl -n rook-ceph edit configmap rook-config-override
Modify the settings and save. Each line you add should be indented from the config
property as such:
apiVersion: v1
kind: ConfigMap
metadata:
name: rook-config-override
namespace: rook-ceph
data:
config: |
[global]
osd crush update on start = false
osd pool default size = 2
OSD CRUSH Settings
A useful view of the CRUSH Map is generated with the following command:
ceph osd tree
In this section we will be tweaking some of the values seen in the output.
OSD Weight
The CRUSH weight controls the ratio of data that should be distributed to each OSD. This also means a higher or lower amount of disk I/O operations for an OSD with higher/lower weight, respectively.
By default OSDs get a weight relative to their storage capacity, which maximizes overall cluster capacity by filling all drives at the same rate, even if drive sizes vary. This should work for most use-cases, but the following situations could warrant weight changes:
- Your cluster has some relatively slow OSDs or nodes. Lowering their weight can reduce the impact of this bottleneck.
- You’re using bluestore drives provisioned with Rook v0.3.1 or older. In this case you may notice OSD weights did not get set relative to their storage capacity. Changing the weight can fix this and maximize cluster capacity.
This example sets the weight of osd.0 which is 600GiB
ceph osd crush reweight osd.0 .600
OSD Primary Affinity
When pools are set with a size setting greater than one, data is replicated between nodes and OSDs. For every chunk of data a Primary OSD is selected to be used for reading that data to be sent to clients. You can control how likely it is for an OSD to become a Primary using the Primary Affinity setting. This is similar to the OSD weight setting, except it only affects reads on the storage device, not capacity or writes.
In this example we will make sure osd.0
is only selected as Primary if all
other OSDs holding replica data are unavailable:
ceph osd primary-affinity osd.0 0
OSD Dedicated Network
It is possible to configure ceph to leverage a dedicated network for the OSDs to communicate across. A useful overview is the CEPH Networks section of the Ceph documentation. If you declare a cluster network, OSDs will route heartbeat, object replication and recovery traffic over the cluster network. This may improve performance compared to using a single network.
Two changes are necessary to the configuration to enable this capability:
Use hostNetwork in the rook ceph cluster configuration
Enable the hostNetwork
setting in the Ceph Cluster CRD configuration.
For example,
network:
provider: host
IMPORTANT: Changing this setting is not supported in a running Rook cluster. Host networking should be configured when the cluster is first created.
Define the subnets to use for public and private OSD networks
Edit the rook-config-override
configmap to define the custom network
configuration:
kubectl -n rook-ceph edit configmap rook-config-override
In the editor, add a custom configuration to instruct ceph which subnet is the public network and which subnet is the private network. For example:
apiVersion: v1
data:
config: |
[global]
public network = 10.0.7.0/24
cluster network = 10.0.10.0/24
public addr = ""
cluster addr = ""
After applying the updated rook-config-override configmap, it will be necessary to restart the OSDs by deleting the OSD pods in order to apply the change. Restart the OSD pods by deleting them, one at a time, and running ceph -s between each restart to ensure the cluster goes back to “active/clean” state.
Phantom OSD Removal
If you have OSDs in which are not showing any disks, you can remove those “Phantom OSDs” by following the instructions below. To check for “Phantom OSDs”, you can run:
ceph osd tree
An example output looks like this:
ID CLASS WEIGHT TYPE NAME STATUS REWEIGHT PRI-AFF -1 57.38062 root default -13 7.17258 host node1.example.com 2 hdd 3.61859 osd.2 up 1.00000 1.00000 -7 0 host node2.example.com down 0 1.00000
The host node2.example.com
in the output has no disks, so it is most likely a “Phantom OSD”.
Now to remove it, use the ID in the first column of the output and replace <ID>
with it. In the example output above the ID would be -7
.
The commands are:
$ ceph osd out <ID>
$ ceph osd crush remove osd.<ID>
$ ceph auth del osd.<ID>
$ ceph osd rm <ID>
To recheck that the Phantom OSD was removed, re-run the following command and check if the OSD with the ID doesn’t show up anymore:
ceph osd tree
Change Failure Domain
In Rook, it is now possible to indicate how the default CRUSH failure domain rule must be configured in order to ensure that replicas or erasure code shards are separated across hosts, and a single host failure does not affect availability. For instance, this is an example manifest of a block pool named replicapool
configured with a failureDomain
set to osd
:
apiVersion: ceph.rook.io/v1
kind: CephBlockPool
metadata:
name: replicapool
namespace: rook
spec:
# The failure domain will spread the replicas of the data across different failure zones
failureDomain: osd
...
However, due to several reasons, we may need to change such failure domain to its other value: host
. Unfortunately, changing it directly in the YAML manifest is not currently handled by Rook, so we need to perform the change directly using Ceph commands using the Rook tools pod, for instance:
ceph osd pool get replicapool crush_rule
crush_rule: replicapool
ceph osd crush rule create-replicated replicapool_host_rule default host
Notice that the suffix host_rule
in the name of the rule is just for clearness about the type of rule we are creating here, and can be anything else as long as it is different from the existing one. Once the new rule has been created, we simply apply it to our block pool:
ceph osd pool set replicapool crush_rule replicapool_host_rule
And validate that it has been actually applied properly:
ceph osd pool get replicapool crush_rule
crush_rule: replicapool_host_rule
If the cluster’s health was HEALTH_OK
when we performed this change, immediately, the new rule is applied to the cluster transparently without service disruption.
Exactly the same approach can be used to change from host
back to osd
.
Auto Expansion of OSDs
Prerequisites
1) A PVC-based cluster deployed in dynamic provisioning environment with a storageClassDeviceSet
.
2) Create the Rook Toolbox.
Note: Prometheus Operator and Prometheus Instances are Prerequisites that are created by the auto-grow-storage script.
To scale OSDs Vertically
Run the following script to auto-grow the size of OSDs on a PVC-based Rook-Ceph cluster whenever the OSDs have reached the storage near-full threshold.
tests/scripts/auto-grow-storage.sh size --max maxSize --growth-rate percent
growth-rate percentage represents the percent increase you want in the OSD capacity and maxSize represent the maximum disk size.
For example, if you need to increase the size of OSD by 30% and max disk size is 1Ti
./auto-grow-storage.sh size --max 1Ti --growth-rate 30
To scale OSDs Horizontally
Run the following script to auto-grow the number of OSDs on a PVC-based Rook-Ceph cluster whenever the OSDs have reached the storage near-full threshold.
tests/scripts/auto-grow-storage.sh count --max maxCount --count rate
Count of OSD represents the number of OSDs you need to add and maxCount represents the number of disks a storage cluster will support.
For example, if you need to increase the number of OSDs by 3 and maxCount is 10
./auto-grow-storage.sh count --max 10 --count 3