ceph/PendingReleaseNotes

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14.2.1
------
* The default value for `mon_crush_min_required_version` has been
changed from `firefly` to `hammer`, which means the cluster will
issue a health warning if your CRUSH tunables are older than hammer.
There is generally a small (but non-zero) amount of data that will
move around by making the switch to hammer tunables; for more information,
see :ref:`crush-map-tunables`.
If possible, we recommend that you set the oldest allowed client to `hammer`
or later. You can tell what the current oldest allowed client is with::
ceph osd dump | min_compat_client
If the current value is older than hammer, you can tell whether it
is safe to make this change by verifying that there are no clients
older than hammer current connected to the cluster with::
ceph features
The newer `straw2` CRUSH bucket type was introduced in hammer, and
ensuring that all clients are hammer or newer allows new features
only supported for `straw2` buckets to be used, including the
`crush-compat` mode for the :ref:`balancer`.
14.2.5
------
* Ceph will now issue a health warning if a RADOS pool as a ``pg_num``
value that is not a power of two. This can be fixed by adjusting
the pool to a nearby power of two::
ceph osd pool set <pool-name> pg_num <new-pg-num>
Alternatively, the warning can be silenced with::
ceph config set global mon_warn_on_pool_pg_num_not_power_of_two false
* Ceph will issue a health warning if a RADOS pool's ``size`` is set to 1
or in other words the pool is configured with no redundancy. This can
be fixed by setting the pool size to the minimum recommended value
with::
ceph osd pool set <pool-name> size <num-replicas>
The warning can be silenced with::
ceph config set global mon_warn_on_pool_no_redundancy false
>=15.0.0
--------
* The RGW "num_rados_handles" has been removed.
* If you were using a value of "num_rados_handles" greater than 1
multiply your current "objecter_inflight_ops" and
"objecter_inflight_op_bytes" paramaeters by the old
"num_rados_handles" to get the same throttle behavior.
* Ceph now packages python bindings for python3.6 instead of
python3.4, because python3 in EL7/EL8 is now using python3.6
as the native python3. see the `announcement <https://lists.fedoraproject.org/archives/list/epel-announce@lists.fedoraproject.org/message/EGUMKAIMPK2UD5VSHXM53BH2MBDGDWMO/>_`
for more details on the background of this change.
* librbd now uses a write-around cache policy be default,
replacing the previous write-back cache policy default.
This cache policy allows librbd to immediately complete
write IOs while they are still in-flight to the OSDs.
Subsequent flush requests will ensure all in-flight
write IOs are completed prior to completing. The
librbd cache policy can be controlled via a new
"rbd_cache_policy" configuration option.
* librbd now includes a simple IO scheduler which attempts to
batch together multiple IOs against the same backing RBD
data block object. The librbd IO scheduler policy can be
controlled via a new "rbd_io_scheduler" configuration
option.
* RGW: radosgw-admin introduces two subcommands that allow the
managing of expire-stale objects that might be left behind after a
bucket reshard in earlier versions of RGW. One subcommand lists such
objects and the other deletes them. Read the troubleshooting section
of the dynamic resharding docs for details.
* RGW: Bucket naming restrictions have changed and likely to cause
InvalidBucketName errors. We recommend to set ``rgw_relaxed_s3_bucket_names``
option to true as a workaround.
* In the Zabbix Mgr Module there was a typo in the key being send
to Zabbix for PGs in backfill_wait state. The key that was sent
was 'wait_backfill' and the correct name is 'backfill_wait'.
Update your Zabbix template accordingly so that it accepts the
new key being send to Zabbix.
* zabbix plugin for ceph manager now includes osd and pool
discovery. Update of zabbix_template.xml is needed
to receive per-pool (read/write throughput, diskspace usage)
and per-osd (latency, status, pgs) statistics
* The format of all date + time stamps has been modified to fully
conform to ISO 8601. The old format (``YYYY-MM-DD
HH:MM:SS.ssssss``) excluded the ``T`` separator between the date and
time and was rendered using the local time zone without any explicit
indication. The new format includes the separator as well as a
``+nnnn`` or ``-nnnn`` suffix to indicate the time zone, or a ``Z``
suffix if the time is UTC. For example,
``2019-04-26T18:40:06.225953+0100``.
Any code or scripts that was previously parsing date and/or time
values from the JSON or XML structure CLI output should be checked
to ensure it can handle ISO 8601 conformant values. Any code
parsing date or time values from the unstructured human-readable
output should be modified to parse the structured output instead, as
the human-readable output may change without notice.
* The ``bluestore_no_per_pool_stats_tolerance`` config option has been
replaced with ``bluestore_fsck_error_on_no_per_pool_stats``
(default: false). The overall default behavior has not changed:
fsck will warn but not fail on legacy stores, and repair will
convert to per-pool stats.
* The disaster-recovery related 'ceph mon sync force' command has been
replaced with 'ceph daemon <...> sync_force'.
* The ``osd_recovery_max_active`` option now has
``osd_recovery_max_active_hdd`` and ``osd_recovery_max_active_ssd``
variants, each with different default values for HDD and SSD-backed
OSDs, respectively. By default ``osd_recovery_max_active`` now
defaults to zero, which means that the OSD will conditionally use
the HDD or SSD option values. Administrators who have customized
this value may want to consider whether they have set this to a
value similar to the new defaults (3 for HDDs and 10 for SSDs) and,
if so, remove the option from their configuration entirely.
* monitors now have a `ceph osd info` command that will provide information
on all osds, or provided osds, thus simplifying the process of having to
parse `osd dump` for the same information.
* The structured output of ``ceph status`` or ``ceph -s`` is now more
concise, particularly the `mgrmap` and `monmap` sections, and the
structure of the `osdmap` section has been cleaned up.
* A health warning is now generated if the average osd heartbeat ping
time exceeds a configurable threshold for any of the intervals
computed. The OSD computes 1 minute, 5 minute and 15 minute
intervals with average, minimum and maximum values. New configuration
option ``mon_warn_on_slow_ping_ratio`` specifies a percentage of
``osd_heartbeat_grace`` to determine the threshold. A value of zero
disables the warning. New configuration option
``mon_warn_on_slow_ping_time`` specified in milliseconds over-rides the
computed value, causes a warning
when OSD heartbeat pings take longer than the specified amount.
New admin command ``ceph daemon mgr.# dump_osd_network [threshold]`` command will
list all connections with a ping time longer than the specified threshold or
value determined by the config options, for the average for any of the 3 intervals.
New admin command ``ceph daemon osd.# dump_osd_network [threshold]`` will
do the same but only including heartbeats initiated by the specified OSD.
* Inline data support for CephFS has been deprecated. When setting the flag,
users will see a warning to that effect, and enabling it now requires the
``--yes-i-really-really-mean-it`` flag. If the MDS is started on a
filesystem that has it enabled, a health warning is generated. Support for
this feature will be removed in a future release.
* ``ceph {set,unset} full`` is not supported anymore. We have been using
``full`` and ``nearfull`` flags in OSD map for tracking the fullness status
of a cluster back since the Hammer release, if the OSD map is marked ``full``
all write operations will be blocked until this flag is removed. In the
Infernalis release and Linux kernel 4.7 client, we introduced the per-pool
full/nearfull flags to track the status for a finer-grained control, so the
clients will hold the write operations if either the cluster-wide ``full``
flag or the per-pool ``full`` flag is set. This was a compromise, as we
needed to support the cluster with and without per-pool ``full`` flags
support. But this practically defeated the purpose of introducing the
per-pool flags. So, in the Mimic release, the new flags finally took the
place of their cluster-wide counterparts, as the monitor started removing
these two flags from OSD map. So the clients of Infernalis and up can benefit
from this change, as they won't be blocked by the full pools which they are
not writing to. In this release, ``ceph {set,unset} full`` is now considered
as an invalid command. And the clients will continue honoring both the
cluster-wide and per-pool flags to be backward comaptible with pre-infernalis
clusters.
* The telemetry module now has a 'device' channel, enabled by default, that
will report anonymized hard disk and SSD hea lth metrics to telemetry.ceph.com
in order to build and improve device failure prediction algorithms. Because
the content of telemetry reports has changed, you will need to either re-opt-in
with::
ceph telemetry on
You can view exactly what information will be reported first with::
ceph telemetry show
ceph telemetry show device # specifically show the device channel
If you are not comfortable sharing device metrics, you can disable that
channel first before re-opting-in:
ceph config set mgr mgr/telemetry/channel_crash false
ceph telemetry on
* The telemetry module now reports more information about CephFS file systems,
including:
- how many MDS daemons (in total and per file system)
- which features are (or have been) enabled
- how many data pools
- approximate file system age (year + month of creation)
- how many files, bytes, and snapshots
- how much metadata is being cached
We have also added:
- which Ceph release the monitors are running
- whether msgr v1 or v2 addresses are used for the monitors
- whether IPv4 or IPv6 addresses are used for the monitors
- whether RADOS cache tiering is enabled (and which mode)
- whether pools are replicated or erasure coded, and
which erasure code profile plugin and parameters are in use
- how many hosts are in the cluster, and how many hosts have each type of daemon
- whether a separate OSD cluster network is being used
- how many RBD pools and images are in the cluster, and how many pools have RBD mirroring enabled
- how many RGW daemons, zones, and zonegroups are present; which RGW frontends are in use
- aggregate stats about the CRUSH map, like which algorithms are used, how big buckets are, how many rules are defined, and what tunables are in use
If you had telemetry enabled, you will need to re-opt-in with::
ceph telemetry on
You can view exactly what information will be reported first with::
ceph telemetry show # see everything
ceph telemetry show basic # basic cluster info (including all of the new info)
* Following invalid settings now are not tolerated anymore
for the command `ceph osd erasure-code-profile set xxx`.
* invalid `m` for "reed_sol_r6_op" erasure technique
* invalid `m` and invalid `w` for "liber8tion" erasure technique
* New OSD daemon command dump_recovery_reservations which reveals the
recovery locks held (in_progress) and waiting in priority queues.
* New OSD daemon command dump_scrub_reservations which reveals the
scrub reservations that are held for local (primary) and remote (replica) PGs.
* Previously, ``ceph tell mgr ...`` could be used to call commands
implemented by mgr modules. This is no longer supported. Since
luminous, using ``tell`` has not been necessary: those same commands
are also accessible without the ``tell mgr`` portion (e.g., ``ceph
tell mgr influx foo`` is the same as ``ceph influx foo``. ``ceph
tell mgr ...`` will now call admin commands--the same set of
commands accessible via ``ceph daemon ...`` when you are logged into
the appropriate host.
* The ``ceph tell`` and ``ceph daemon`` commands have been unified,
such that all such commands are accessible via either interface.
Note that ceph-mgr tell commands are accessible via either ``ceph
tell mgr ...`` or ``ceph tell mgr.<id> ...``, and it is only
possible to send tell commands to the active daemon (the standbys do
not accept incoming connections over the network).
* Ceph will now issue a health warning if a RADOS pool as a ``pg_num``
value that is not a power of two. This can be fixed by adjusting
the pool to a nearby power of two::
ceph osd pool set <pool-name> pg_num <new-pg-num>
Alternatively, the warning can be silenced with::
ceph config set global mon_warn_on_pool_pg_num_not_power_of_two false
* The format of MDSs in `ceph fs dump` has changed.
* The ``pg_autoscale_mode`` is now set to ``on`` by default for newly
created pools, which means that Ceph will automatically manage the
number of PGs. To change this behavior, or to learn more about PG
autoscaling, see :ref:`pg-autoscaler`. Note that existing pools in
upgraded clusters will still be set to ``warn`` by default.
* The ``upmap_max_iterations`` config option of mgr/balancer has been
renamed to ``upmap_max_optimizations`` to better match its behaviour.
* ``mClockClientQueue`` and ``mClockClassQueue`` OpQueue
implementations have been removed in favor of of a single
``mClockScheduler`` implementation of a simpler OSD interface.
Accordingly, the ``osd_op_queue_mclock*`` family of config options
has been removed in favor of the ``osd_mclock_scheduler*`` family
of options.
* The config subsystem now searches dot ('.') delineated prefixes for
options. That means for an entity like ``client.foo.bar``, it's
overall configuration will be a combination of the global options,
``client``, ``client.foo``, and ``client.foo.bar``. Previously,
only global, ``client``, and ``client.foo.bar`` options would apply.
This change may affect the configuration for clients that include a
``.`` in their name.
Note that this only applies to configuration options in the
monitor's database--config file parsing is not affected.
* RGW: bucket listing performance on sharded bucket indexes has been
notably improved by heuristically -- and significantly, in many
cases -- reducing the number of entries requested from each bucket
index shard.
* The behaviour of the ``-o`` argument to the rados tool has been reverted to
its orignal behaviour of indicating an output file. This reverts it to a more
consisten behaviour when compared to other tools. Specifying obect size is now
accomplished by using an upper case O ``-O``.
* In certain rare cases, OSDs would self-classify themselves as type
'nvme' instead of 'hdd' or 'ssh'. This appears to be limited to
cases where BlueStore was deployed with older versions of ceph-disk,
or manually without ceph-volume and LVM. Going forward, the OSD
will limit itself to only 'hdd' and 'ssd' (or whatever device class the user
manually specifies).