.. _ceph-guide:
=============
Ceph in Kolla
=============
The out-of-the-box Ceph deployment requires 3 hosts with at least one block
device on each host that can be dedicated for sole use by Ceph. However, with
tweaks to the Ceph cluster you can deploy a **healthy** cluster with a single
host and a single block device.
Requirements
============
* A minimum of 3 hosts for a vanilla deploy
* A minimum of 1 block device per host
Preparation
===========
To prepare a disk for use as a
`Ceph OSD `_ you must add a
special partition label to the disk. This partition label is how Kolla detects
the disks to format and bootstrap. Any disk with a matching partition label
will be reformatted so use caution.
To prepare an OSD as a storage drive, execute the following operations:
::
#
# where $DISK is /dev/sdb or something similar
parted $DISK -s -- mklabel gpt mkpart KOLLA_CEPH_OSD_BOOTSTRAP 1 -1
The following shows an example of using parted to configure ``/dev/sdb`` for
usage with Kolla.
::
parted /dev/sdb -s -- mklabel gpt mkpart KOLLA_CEPH_OSD_BOOTSTRAP 1 -1
parted /dev/sdb print
Model: VMware, VMware Virtual S (scsi)
Disk /dev/sdb: 10.7GB
Sector size (logical/physical): 512B/512B
Partition Table: gpt
Number Start End Size File system Name Flags
1 1049kB 10.7GB 10.7GB KOLLA_CEPH_OSD_BOOTSTRAP
Using an external journal drive
-------------------------------
Create a journal partition of 5 GByte and a data partition with the remaining
storage capacity on the same tagged drive.
::
parted /dev/sdb -s -- mklabel gpt mkpart KOLLA_CEPH_OSD_BOOTSTRAP_J 0 5GB
parted /dev/sdb -s -- mklabel gpt mkpart KOLLA_CEPH_OSD_BOOTSTRAP_D 5GB 100%
It is a common practice to place the journal of an OSD on a separate
journal drive. This section documents how to use an external journal drive.
Prepare the storage drive in the same way as documented above:
::
#
# where $DISK is /dev/sdb or something similar
parted $DISK -s -- mklabel gpt mkpart KOLLA_CEPH_OSD_BOOTSTRAP_FOO 1 -1
To prepare the journal external drive execute the following command:
::
#
# where $DISK is /dev/sdc or something similar
parted $DISK -s -- mklabel gpt mkpart KOLLA_CEPH_OSD_BOOTSTRAP_FOO_J 1 -1
.. note::
Use different suffixes (``_42``, ``_FOO``, ``_FOO42``, ..) to use different external
journal drives for different storage drives. One external journal drive can only
be used for one storage drive.
.. note::
The partition labels ``KOLLA_CEPH_OSD_BOOTSTRAP`` and ``KOLLA_CEPH_OSD_BOOTSTRAP_J``
are not working when using external journal drives. It is required to use
suffixes (``_42``, ``_FOO``, ``_FOO42``, ..). If you want to setup only one
storage drive with one external journal drive it is also necessary to use a suffix.
Configuration
=============
Edit the [storage] group in the inventory which contains the hostname of the
hosts that have the block devices you have prepped as shown above.
::
[storage]
controller
compute1
Enable Ceph in ``/etc/kolla/globals.yml``:
::
enable_ceph: "yes"
RadosGW is optional, enable it in ``/etc/kolla/globals.yml``:
::
enable_ceph_rgw: "yes"
RGW requires a healthy cluster in order to be successfully deployed. On initial
start up, RGW will create several pools. The first pool should be in an
operational state to proceed with the second one, and so on. So, in the case of
an **all-in-one** deployment, it is necessary to change the default number of
copies for the pools before deployment. Modify the file
``/etc/kolla/config/ceph.conf`` and add the contents::
[global]
osd pool default size = 1
osd pool default min size = 1
Deployment
==========
Finally deploy the Ceph-enabled OpenStack:
::
kolla-ansible deploy -i path/to/inventory
Using a Cache Tier
==================
An optional `cache tier `_
can be deployed by formatting at least one cache device and enabling cache.
tiering in the globals.yml configuration file.
To prepare an OSD as a cache device, execute the following operations:
::
#
# where $DISK is /dev/sdb or something similar
parted $DISK -s -- mklabel gpt mkpart KOLLA_CEPH_OSD_CACHE_BOOTSTRAP 1 -1
Enable the Ceph cache tier in ``/etc/kolla/globals.yml``:
::
enable_ceph: "yes"
ceph_enable_cache: "yes"
# Valid options are [ forward, none, writeback ]
ceph_cache_mode: "writeback"
After this run the playbooks as you normally would. For example:
::
kolla-ansible deploy -i path/to/inventory
Setting up an Erasure Coded Pool
================================
`Erasure code `_
is the new big thing from Ceph. Kolla has the ability to setup your Ceph pools
as erasure coded pools. Due to technical limitations with Ceph, using erasure
coded pools as OpenStack uses them requires a cache tier. Additionally, you
must make the choice to use an erasure coded pool or a replicated pool
(the default) when you initially deploy. You cannot change this without
completely removing the pool and recreating it.
To enable erasure coded pools add the following options to your
``/etc/kolla/globals.yml`` configuration file:
::
# A requirement for using the erasure-coded pools is you must setup a cache tier
# Valid options are [ erasure, replicated ]
ceph_pool_type: "erasure"
# Optionally, you can change the profile
#ceph_erasure_profile: "k=4 m=2 ruleset-failure-domain=host"
Managing Ceph
=============
Check the Ceph status for more diagnostic information. The sample output below
indicates a healthy cluster:
::
docker exec ceph_mon ceph -s
cluster 5fba2fbc-551d-11e5-a8ce-01ef4c5cf93c
health HEALTH_OK
monmap e1: 1 mons at {controller=10.0.0.128:6789/0}
election epoch 2, quorum 0 controller
osdmap e18: 2 osds: 2 up, 2 in
pgmap v27: 64 pgs, 1 pools, 0 bytes data, 0 objects
68676 kB used, 20390 MB / 20457 MB avail
64 active+clean
If Ceph is run in an **all-in-one** deployment or with less than three storage
nodes, further configuration is required. It is necessary to change the default
number of copies for the pool. The following example demonstrates how to change
the number of copies for the pool to 1:
::
docker exec ceph_mon ceph osd pool set rbd size 1
All the pools must be modified if Glance, Nova, and Cinder have been deployed.
An example of modifying the pools to have 2 copies:
::
for p in images vms volumes backups; do docker exec ceph_mon ceph osd pool set ${p} size 2; done
If using a cache tier, these changes must be made as well:
::
for p in images vms volumes backups; do docker exec ceph_mon ceph osd pool set ${p}-cache size 2; done
The default pool Ceph creates is named **rbd**. It is safe to remove this pool:
::
docker exec ceph_mon ceph osd pool delete rbd rbd --yes-i-really-really-mean-it
Troubleshooting
===============
Deploy fails with 'Fetching Ceph keyrings ... No JSON object could be decoded'
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
If an initial deploy of Ceph fails, perhaps due to improper configuration or
similar, the cluster will be partially formed and will need to be reset for a
successful deploy.
In order to do this the operator should remove the `ceph_mon_config` volume
from each Ceph monitor node:
::
ansible \
-i ansible/inventory/multinode \
-a 'docker volume rm ceph_mon_config' \
ceph-mon
=====================
Simple 3 Node Example
=====================
This example will show how to deploy Ceph in a very simple setup using 3
storage nodes. 2 of those nodes (kolla1 and kolla2) will also provide other
services like control, network, compute, and monitoring. The 3rd
(kolla3) node will only act as a storage node.
This example will only focus on the Ceph aspect of the deployment and assumes
that you can already deploy a fully functional environment using 2 nodes that
does not employ Ceph yet. So we will be adding to the existing multinode
inventory file you already have.
Each of the 3 nodes are assumed to have two disk, ``/dev/sda`` (40GB)
and ``/dev/sdb`` (10GB). Size is not all that important... but for now make
sure each sdb disk are of the same size and are at least 10GB. This example
will use a single disk (/dev/sdb) for both Ceph data and journal. It will not
implement caching.
Here is the top part of the multinode inventory file used in the example
environment before adding the 3rd node for Ceph:
::
[control]
# These hostname must be resolvable from your deployment host
kolla1.ducourrier.com
kolla2.ducourrier.com
[network]
kolla1.ducourrier.com
kolla2.ducourrier.com
[compute]
kolla1.ducourrier.com
kolla2.ducourrier.com
[monitoring]
kolla1.ducourrier.com
kolla2.ducourrier.com
[storage]
kolla1.ducourrier.com
kolla2.ducourrier.com
Configuration
=============
To prepare the 2nd disk (/dev/sdb) of each nodes for use by Ceph you will need
to add a partition label to it as shown below:
::
#
parted /dev/sdb -s -- mklabel gpt mkpart KOLLA_CEPH_OSD_BOOTSTRAP 1 -1
Make sure to run this command on each of the 3 nodes or the deployment will
fail.
Next, edit the multinode inventory file and make sure the 3 nodes are listed
under [storage]. In this example I will add kolla3.ducourrier.com to the
existing inventory file:
::
[control]
# These hostname must be resolvable from your deployment host
kolla1.ducourrier.com
kolla2.ducourrier.com
[network]
kolla1.ducourrier.com
kolla2.ducourrier.com
[compute]
kolla1.ducourrier.com
kolla2.ducourrier.com
[monitoring]
kolla1.ducourrier.com
kolla2.ducourrier.com
[storage]
kolla1.ducourrier.com
kolla2.ducourrier.com
kolla3.ducourrier.com
It is now time to enable Ceph in the environment by editing the
``/etc/kolla/globals.yml`` file:
::
enable_ceph: "yes"
enable_ceph_rgw: "yes"
enable_cinder: "yes"
glance_backend_file: "no"
glance_backend_ceph: "yes"
Finally deploy the Ceph-enabled configuration:
::
kolla-ansible deploy -i path/to/inventory-file