losetup/fallocate are better and match what we have for Swift. Change-Id: I1147374017e4f1cb3f3e970e048ba565388cd86f
4.6 KiB
Cinder in Kolla
Overview
Currently Kolla can deploy the cinder services:
- cinder-api
- cinder-scheduler
- cinder-backup
- cinder-volume
The cinder implementation defaults to using LVM storage. The default implementation requires a volume group be set up. This can either be a real physical volume or a loopback mounted file for development.
Create a Volume Group
When using the lvm
backend, a volume group will need to
be created on each storage node. Use pvcreate
and
vgcreate
to create the volume group. For example with the
devices /dev/sdb
and /dev/sdc
:
<WARNING ALL DATA ON /dev/sdb and /dev/sdc will be LOST!>
pvcreate /dev/sdb /dev/sdc
vgcreate cinder-volumes /dev/sdb /dev/sdc
During development, it may be desirable to use file backed block storage. It is possible to use a file and mount it as a block device via the loopback system. :
free_device=$(losetup -f)
fallocate -l 20G /var/lib/cinder_data.img
losetup $free_device /var/lib/cinder_data.img
pvcreate $free_device
vgcreate cinder-volumes $free_device
Enable the lvm
backend in
/etc/kolla/globals.yml
:
enable_cinder_backend_lvm: "yes"
Validation
Create a volume as follows:
$ openstack volume create --size 1 steak_volume
<bunch of stuff printed>
Verify it is available. If it says "error" here something went wrong during LVM creation of the volume. :
$ openstack volume list
+--------------------------------------+--------------+-----------+------+-------------+
| ID | Display Name | Status | Size | Attached to |
+--------------------------------------+--------------+-----------+------+-------------+
| 0069c17e-8a60-445a-b7f0-383a8b89f87e | steak_volume | available | 1 | |
+--------------------------------------+--------------+-----------+------+-------------+
Attach the volume to a server using:
openstack server add volume steak_server 0069c17e-8a60-445a-b7f0-383a8b89f87e
Check the console log added the disk:
openstack console log show steak_server
A /dev/vdb
should appear in the console log, at least
when booting cirros. If the disk stays in the available state, something
went wrong during the iSCSI mounting of the volume to the guest VM.
Cinder LVM2 back end with iSCSI
As of Newton-1 milestone, Kolla supports LVM2 as cinder back end. It
is accomplished by introducing two new containers tgtd
and
iscsid
. tgtd
container serves as a bridge
between cinder-volume process and a server hosting Logical Volume Groups
(LVG). iscsid
container serves as a bridge between
nova-compute process and the server hosting LVG.
In order to use Cinder's LVM back end, a LVG named
cinder-volumes
should exist on the server and following
parameter must be specified in globals.yml
:
enable_cinder_backend_lvm: "yes"
For Ubuntu and LVM2/iSCSI
iscsd
process uses configfs which is normally mounted at
/sys/kernel/config
to store discovered targets information,
on centos/rhel type of systems this special file system gets mounted
automatically, which is not the case on debian/ubuntu. Since
iscsid
container runs on every nova compute node, the
following steps must be completed on every Ubuntu server targeted for
nova compute role.
Add configfs module to
/etc/modules
Rebuild initramfs using:
update-initramfs -u
commandStop
open-iscsi
system service due to its conflicts with iscsid container.Ubuntu 16.04 (systemd):
systemctl stop open-iscsi; systemctl stop iscsid
Make sure configfs gets mounted during a server boot up process. There are multiple ways to accomplish it, one example: :
mount -t configfs /etc/rc.local /sys/kernel/config
Cinder back end with external iSCSI storage
In order to use external storage system (like one from EMC or NetApp)
the following parameter must be specified in globals.yml
:
enable_cinder_backend_iscsi: "yes"
Also enable_cinder_backend_lvm
should be set to "no" in
this case.