swiftonhpss/doc/markdown/quick_start_guide.md
Prashanth Pai 73aa6e7883 Update quick_start_guide.md
Author: John Dickinson
Original pull request can be found here:
https://github.com/gluster/gluster-swift/pull/2

Change-Id: Id5cd45e7090f69407938e5f9431560ed0977b22d
Signed-off-by: Prashanth Pai <ppai@redhat.com>
Reviewed-on: http://review.gluster.org/7234
Reviewed-by: Thiago da Silva <thiago@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Luis Pabon <lpabon@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Luis Pabon <lpabon@redhat.com>
2014-03-14 11:54:59 -07:00

6.8 KiB

Quick Start Guide

Contents

## Overview Gluster-swift allows GlusterFS to be used as the backend to the object store OpenStack Swift.

The following guide will get you quickly started with a gluster-swift environment on a Fedora or RHEL/CentOS system. This guide is a great way to begin using gluster-swift, and can be easily deployed on a single virtual machine. The final result will be a single gluster-swift node.

NOTE: In Gluster-Swift, accounts must be GlusterFS volumes.

## System Setup

Prerequisites on CentOS/RHEL

On CentOS/RHEL you will need to setup GlusterFS and EPEL repos.

GlusterFS CentOS/RHEL Repo

  • CentOS
wget -O /etc/yum.repos.d/glusterfs-epel.repo \
  http://download.gluster.org/pub/gluster/glusterfs/LATEST/CentOS/glusterfs-epel.repo
  • RHEL
wget -O /etc/yum.repos.d/glusterfs-epel.repo \
  http://download.gluster.org/pub/gluster/glusterfs/LATEST/RHEL/glusterfs-epel.repo

EPEL CentOS/RHEL Repo

Please refer to EPEL for more information on how to setup the EPEL repo.

Required Package Installation

Install and start the required packages on your system to create a GlusterFS volume.

yum install glusterfs glusterfs-server glusterfs-fuse memcached xfsprogs

Start services

Type the following to start memcached and glusterfs services:

service memcached start
service glusterd start

Type the following to start the services automatically on system startup:

chkconfig memcached on
chkconfig glusterd on

Gluster Volume Setup

Now you need to determine whether you are going to use a partition or a loopback device for storage.

Partition Storage Setup

If you are using a separate disk partition, please execute the following instructions to create a GlusterFS brick:

mkfs.xfs -i size=512 /dev/<disk partition>
mkdir -p /export/brick

Add the following line to /etc/fstab to mount the storage automatically on system startup:

/dev/<disk partition>   /export/brick   xfs   inode64,noatime,nodiratime 0 0

Now type the following to mount the storage:

mount -a

Loopback Storage Setup

If you do not have a separate partition, please execute the following instructions to create a disk image as a file:

truncate -s 5GB /srv/swift-disk
mkfs.xfs -i size=512 /srv/swift-disk
mkdir -p /export/brick

Add the following line to /etc/fstab to mount the storage automatically on system startup:

/srv/swift-disk /export/brick   xfs   loop,inode64,noatime,nodiratime 0 0

Now type the following to mount the storage:

mount -a

Create a GlusterFS Volume

You now need to create a GlusterFS volume (make sure your hostname is in /etc/hosts or is DNS-resolvable)

mkdir /export/brick/b1
gluster volume create myvolume `hostname`:/export/brick/b1
gluster volume start myvolume
## Gluster-Swift Setup

Repository Setup on RHEL/CentOS

Gluster-Swift requires OpenStack Swift's Havana release, which may not be available on some older operating systems. For RHEL/CentOS systems, please setup Red Hat RDO's repo by executing the following command:

yum install -y http://rdo.fedorapeople.org/rdo-release.rpm

Download

Download the latest Havana release RPMs from launchpad.net downloads:

Install

Install the RPM by executing the following:

yum install -y <path to RPM>

Enabling gluster-swift accross reboots

Type the following to make sure gluster-swift is enabled at system startup:

chkconfig openstack-swift-proxy on
chkconfig openstack-swift-account on
chkconfig openstack-swift-container on
chkconfig openstack-swift-object on

Fedora 19 Adjustment

Currently gluster-swift requires its processes to be run as root. You need to edit the openstack-swift-*.service files in /etc/systemd/system/multi-user.target.wants and change the User entry value to root.

Then run the following command to reload the configuration:

systemctl --system daemon-reload

Configuration

As with OpenStack Swift, gluster-swift uses /etc/swift as the directory containing the configuration files. You will need to base the configuration files on the template files provided. On new installations, the simplest way is to copy the *.conf-gluster files to *.conf files as follows:

cd /etc/swift
for tmpl in *.conf-gluster ; do cp ${tmpl} ${tmpl%.*}.conf; done

Generate Ring Files

You now need to generate the ring files, which inform gluster-swift which GlusterFS volumes are accessible over the object storage interface. The format is

gluster-swift-gen-builders [VOLUME] [VOLUME...]

Where VOLUME is the name of the GlusterFS volume which you would like to access over gluster-swift.

Let's now expose the GlusterFS volume called myvolume you created above by executing the following command:

cd /etc/swift
/usr/bin/gluster-swift-gen-builders myvolume

Start gluster-swift

Use the following commands to start gluster-swift:

service openstack-swift-object start
service openstack-swift-container start
service openstack-swift-account start
service openstack-swift-proxy start
## Using gluster-swift

Create a container

Create a container using the following command:

curl -v -X PUT http://localhost:8080/v1/AUTH_myvolume/mycontainer

It should return HTTP/1.1 201 Created on a successful creation. You can also confirm that the container has been created by inspecting the GlusterFS volume:

ls /mnt/gluster-object/myvolume

Create an object

You can now place an object in the container you have just created:

echo "Hello World" > mytestfile
curl -v -X PUT -T mytestfile http://localhost:8080/v1/AUTH_myvolume/mycontainer/mytestfile

To confirm that the object has been written correctly, you can compare the test file with the object you created:

cat /mnt/gluster-object/myvolume/mycontainer/mytestfile

Request the object

Now you can retreive the object and inspect its contents using the following commands:

curl -v -X GET -o newfile http://localhost:8080/v1/AUTH_myvolume/mycontainer/mytestfile
cat newfile
## What now? For more information, please visit the following links: