============================= Block Devices and OpenStack ============================= .. index:: Ceph Block Device; OpenStack You may use Ceph Block Device images with OpenStack through ``libvirt``, which configures the QEMU interface to ``librbd``. Ceph stripes block device images as objects across the cluster, which means that large Ceph Block Device images have better performance than a standalone server! To use Ceph Block Devices with OpenStack, you must install QEMU, ``libvirt``, and OpenStack first. We recommend using a separate physical node for your OpenStack installation. OpenStack recommends a minimum of 8GB of RAM and a quad-core processor. The following diagram depicts the OpenStack/Ceph technology stack. .. ditaa:: +---------------------------------------------------+ | OpenStack | +---------------------------------------------------+ | libvirt | +------------------------+--------------------------+ | | configures v +---------------------------------------------------+ | QEMU | +---------------------------------------------------+ | librbd | +---------------------------------------------------+ | librados | +------------------------+-+------------------------+ | OSDs | | Monitors | +------------------------+ +------------------------+ .. important:: To use Ceph Block Devices with OpenStack, you must have access to a running Ceph Storage Cluster. Three parts of OpenStack integrate with Ceph's block devices: - **Images**: OpenStack Glance manages images for VMs. Images are immutable. OpenStack treats images as binary blobs and downloads them accordingly. - **Volumes**: Volumes are block devices. OpenStack uses volumes to boot VMs, or to attach volumes to running VMs. OpenStack manages volumes using Cinder services. - **Guest Disks**: Guest disks are guest operating system disks. By default, when you boot a virtual machine, its disk appears as a file on the filesystem of the hypervisor (usually under ``/var/lib/nova/instances//``). Prior to OpenStack Havana, the only way to boot a VM in Ceph was to use the boot-from-volume functionality of Cinder. However, now it is possible to boot every virtual machine inside Ceph directly without using Cinder, which is advantageous because it allows you to perform maintenance operations easily with the live-migration process. Additionally, if your hypervisor dies it is also convenient to trigger ``nova evacuate`` and run the virtual machine elsewhere almost seamlessly. You can use OpenStack Glance to store images in a Ceph Block Device, and you can use Cinder to boot a VM using a copy-on-write clone of an image. The instructions below detail the setup for Glance, Cinder and Nova, although they do not have to be used together. You may store images in Ceph block devices while running VMs using a local disk, or vice versa. .. important:: Ceph doesn’t support QCOW2 for hosting a virtual machine disk. Thus if you want to boot virtual machines in Ceph (ephemeral backend or boot from volume), the Glance image format must be ``RAW``. .. tip:: This document describes using Ceph Block Devices with OpenStack Havana. For earlier versions of OpenStack see `Block Devices and OpenStack (Dumpling)`_. .. index:: pools; OpenStack Create a Pool ============= By default, Ceph block devices use the ``rbd`` pool. You may use any available pool. We recommend creating a pool for Cinder and a pool for Glance. Ensure your Ceph cluster is running, then create the pools. :: ceph osd pool create volumes 128 ceph osd pool create images 128 ceph osd pool create backups 128 ceph osd pool create vms 128 See `Create a Pool`_ for detail on specifying the number of placement groups for your pools, and `Placement Groups`_ for details on the number of placement groups you should set for your pools. .. _Create a Pool: ../../rados/operations/pools#createpool .. _Placement Groups: ../../rados/operations/placement-groups Configure OpenStack Ceph Clients ================================ The nodes running ``glance-api``, ``cinder-volume``, ``nova-compute`` and ``cinder-backup`` act as Ceph clients. Each requires the ``ceph.conf`` file:: ssh {your-openstack-server} sudo tee /etc/ceph/ceph.conf secret.xml < 457eb676-33da-42ec-9a8c-9293d545c337 client.cinder secret EOF sudo virsh secret-define --file secret.xml Secret 457eb676-33da-42ec-9a8c-9293d545c337 created sudo virsh secret-set-value --secret 457eb676-33da-42ec-9a8c-9293d545c337 --base64 $(cat client.cinder.key) && rm client.cinder.key secret.xml Save the uuid of the secret for configuring ``nova-compute`` later. .. important:: You don't necessarily need the UUID on all the compute nodes. However from a platform consistency perspective, it's better to keep the same UUID. .. _cephx authentication: ../../rados/operations/authentication Configure OpenStack to use Ceph =============================== Configuring Glance ------------------ Glance can use multiple back ends to store images. To use Ceph block devices by default, edit ``/etc/glance/glance-api.conf`` and add:: default_store=rbd rbd_store_user=glance rbd_store_pool=images If you want to enable copy-on-write cloning of images, also add:: show_image_direct_url=True Note that this exposes the back end location via Glance's API, so the endpoint with this option enabled should not be publicly accessible. Disable the Glance cache management to avoid images getting cached under ``/var/lib/glance/image-cache/``, assuming your configuration file has ``flavor = keystone+cachemanagement``:: [paste_deploy] flavor = keystone Configuring Cinder ------------------ OpenStack requires a driver to interact with Ceph block devices. You must also specify the pool name for the block device. On your OpenStack node, edit ``/etc/cinder/cinder.conf`` by adding:: volume_driver=cinder.volume.drivers.rbd.RBDDriver rbd_pool=volumes rbd_ceph_conf=/etc/ceph/ceph.conf rbd_flatten_volume_from_snapshot=false rbd_max_clone_depth=5 rbd_store_chunk_size=4 rados_connect_timeout=-1 glance_api_version=2 If you're using `cephx authentication`_, also configure the user and uuid of the secret you added to ``libvirt`` as documented earlier:: rbd_user=cinder rbd_secret_uuid=457eb676-33da-42ec-9a8c-9293d545c337 Note that if you are configuring multiple cinder back ends, ``glance_api_version=2`` must be in the ``[DEFAULT]`` section. Configuring Cinder Backup ------------------------- OpenStack Cinder Backup requires a specific daemon so don't forget to install it. On your Cinder Backup node, edit ``/etc/cinder/cinder.conf`` and add:: backup_driver=cinder.backup.drivers.ceph backup_ceph_conf=/etc/ceph/ceph.conf backup_ceph_user=cinder-backup backup_ceph_chunk_size=134217728 backup_ceph_pool=backups backup_ceph_stripe_unit=0 backup_ceph_stripe_count=0 restore_discard_excess_bytes=true Configuring Nova to attach Ceph RBD block device ------------------------------------------------ In order to attach Cinder devices (either normal block or by issuing a boot from volume), you must tell Nova (and libvirt) which user and UUID to refer to when attaching the device. libvirt will refer to this user when connecting and authenticating with the Ceph cluster. :: rbd_user=cinder rbd_secret_uuid=457eb676-33da-42ec-9a8c-9293d545c337 These two flags are also used by the Nova ephemeral backend. Configuring Nova ---------------- In order to boot all the virtual machines directly into Ceph, you must configure the ephemeral backend for Nova. Havana and Icehouse ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Havana and Icehouse require patches to implement copy-on-write cloning and fix bugs with image size and live migration of ephemeral disks on rbd. These are available in branches based on upstream Nova `stable/havana`_ and `stable/icehouse`_. Using them is not mandatory but **highly recommended** in order to take advantage of the copy-on-write clone functionality. On every Compute node, edit ``/etc/nova/nova.conf`` and add:: libvirt_images_type=rbd libvirt_images_rbd_pool=vms libvirt_images_rbd_ceph_conf=/etc/ceph/ceph.conf rbd_user=cinder rbd_secret_uuid=457eb676-33da-42ec-9a8c-9293d545c337 It is also a good practice to disable file injection. While booting an instance, Nova usually attempts to open the rootfs of the virtual machine. Then, Nova injects values such as password, ssh keys etc. directly into the filesystem. However, it is better to rely on the metadata service and ``cloud-init``. On every Compute node, edit ``/etc/nova/nova.conf`` and add:: libvirt_inject_password=false libvirt_inject_key=false libvirt_inject_partition=-2 To ensure a proper live-migration, use the following flags:: libvirt_live_migration_flag="VIR_MIGRATE_UNDEFINE_SOURCE,VIR_MIGRATE_PEER2PEER,VIR_MIGRATE_LIVE,VIR_MIGRATE_PERSIST_DEST" Juno ~~~~ In Juno, Ceph block device was moved under the ``[libvirt]`` section. On every Compute node, edit ``/etc/nova/nova.conf`` under the ``[libvirt]`` section and add:: [libvirt] images_type=rbd images_rbd_pool=vms images_rbd_ceph_conf=/etc/ceph/ceph.conf rbd_user=cinder rbd_secret_uuid=457eb676-33da-42ec-9a8c-9293d545c337 It is also a good practice to disable file injection. While booting an instance, Nova usually attempts to open the rootfs of the virtual machine. Then, Nova injects values such as password, ssh keys etc. directly into the filesystem. However, it is better to rely on the metadata service and ``cloud-init``. On every Compute node, edit ``/etc/nova/nova.conf`` and add the following under the ``[libvirt]`` section:: inject_password=false inject_key=false inject_partition=-2 To ensure a proper live-migration, use the following flags:: live_migration_flag="VIR_MIGRATE_UNDEFINE_SOURCE,VIR_MIGRATE_PEER2PEER,VIR_MIGRATE_LIVE,VIR_MIGRATE_PERSIST_DEST" Restart OpenStack ================= To activate the Ceph block device driver and load the block device pool name into the configuration, you must restart OpenStack. Thus, for Debian based systems execute these commands on the appropriate nodes:: sudo glance-control api restart sudo service nova-compute restart sudo service cinder-volume restart sudo service cinder-backup restart For Red Hat based systems execute:: sudo service openstack-glance-api restart sudo service openstack-nova-compute restart sudo service openstack-cinder-volume restart sudo service openstack-cinder-backup restart Once OpenStack is up and running, you should be able to create a volume and boot from it. Booting from a Block Device =========================== You can create a volume from an image using the Cinder command line tool:: cinder create --image-id {id of image} --display-name {name of volume} {size of volume} Note that image must be RAW format. You can use `qemu-img`_ to convert from one format to another. For example:: qemu-img convert -f {source-format} -O {output-format} {source-filename} {output-filename} qemu-img convert -f qcow2 -O raw precise-cloudimg.img precise-cloudimg.raw When Glance and Cinder are both using Ceph block devices, the image is a copy-on-write clone, so it can create a new volume quickly. In the OpenStack dashboard, you can boot from that volume by performing the following steps: #. Launch a new instance. #. Choose the image associated to the copy-on-write clone. #. Select 'boot from volume' #. Select the volume you created. .. _qemu-img: ../qemu-rbd/#running-qemu-with-rbd .. _Block Devices and OpenStack (Dumpling): http://ceph.com/docs/dumpling/rbd/rbd-openstack .. _stable/havana: https://github.com/jdurgin/nova/tree/havana-ephemeral-rbd .. _stable/icehouse: https://github.com/angdraug/nova/tree/rbd-ephemeral-clone-stable-icehouse