.. _cephfs-mirroring: ========================= CephFS Snapshot Mirroring ========================= CephFS supports asynchronous replication of snapshots to a remote CephFS file system via `cephfs-mirror` tool. Snapshots are synchronized by mirroring snapshot data followed by creating a snapshot with the same name (for a given directory on the remote file system) as the snapshot being synchronized. Requirements ------------ The primary (local) and secondary (remote) Ceph clusters version should be Pacific or later. Creating Users -------------- Start by creating a user (on the primary/local cluster) for the mirror daemon. This user requires write capability on the metadata pool to create RADOS objects (index objects) for watch/notify operation and read capability on the data pool(s):: $ ceph auth get-or-create client.mirror mon 'profile cephfs-mirror' mds 'allow r' osd 'allow rw tag cephfs metadata=*, allow r tag cephfs data=*' mgr 'allow r' Create a user for each file system peer (on the secondary/remote cluster). This user needs to have full capabilities on the MDS (to take snapshots) and the OSDs:: $ ceph fs authorize client.mirror_remote / rwps This user should be used (as part of peer specification) when adding a peer. Starting Mirror Daemon ---------------------- Mirror daemon should be spawned using `systemctl(1)` unit files:: $ systemctl enable cephfs-mirror@mirror $ systemctl start cephfs-mirror@mirror `cephfs-mirror` daemon can be run in foreground using:: $ cephfs-mirror --id mirror --cluster site-a -f .. note:: User used here is `mirror` created in the `Creating Users` section. Interface --------- `Mirroring` module (manager plugin) provides interfaces for managing directory snapshot mirroring. Manager interfaces are (mostly) wrappers around monitor commands for managing file system mirroring and is the recommended control interface. Mirroring Module ---------------- The mirroring module is responsible for assigning directories to mirror daemons for synchronization. Multiple mirror daemons can be spawned to achieve concurrency in directory snapshot synchronization. When mirror daemons are spawned (or terminated) , the mirroring module discovers the modified set of mirror daemons and rebalances the directory assignment amongst the new set thus providing high-availability. .. note:: Multiple mirror daemons is currently untested. Only a single mirror daemon is recommended. Mirroring module is disabled by default. To enable mirroring use:: $ ceph mgr module enable mirroring Mirroring module provides a family of commands to control mirroring of directory snapshots. To add or remove directories, mirroring needs to be enabled for a given file system. To enable mirroring use:: $ ceph fs snapshot mirror enable .. note:: Mirroring module commands use `fs snapshot mirror` prefix as compared to the monitor commands which `fs mirror` prefix. Make sure to use module commands. To disable mirroring, use:: $ ceph fs snapshot mirror disable Once mirroring is enabled, add a peer to which directory snapshots are to be mirrored. Peers follow `@` specification and get assigned a unique-id (UUID) when added. See `Creating Users` section on how to create Ceph users for mirroring. To add a peer use:: $ ceph fs snapshot mirror peer_add [] [] [] `` is optional, and defaults to `` (on the remote cluster). This requires the remote cluster ceph configuration and user keyring to be available in the primary cluster. See `Bootstrap Peers` section to avoid this. `peer_add` additionally supports passing the remote cluster monitor address and the user key. However, bootstrapping a peer is the recommended way to add a peer. .. note:: Only a single peer is supported right now. To remove a peer use:: $ ceph fs snapshot mirror peer_remove To list file system mirror peers use:: $ ceph fs snapshot mirror peer_list To configure a directory for mirroring, use:: $ ceph fs snapshot mirror add To stop a mirroring directory snapshots use:: $ ceph fs snapshot mirror remove Only absolute directory paths are allowed. Also, paths are normalized by the mirroring module, therfore, `/a/b/../b` is equivalent to `/a/b`. $ mkdir -p /d0/d1/d2 $ ceph fs snapshot mirror add cephfs /d0/d1/d2 {} $ ceph fs snapshot mirror add cephfs /d0/d1/../d1/d2 Error EEXIST: directory /d0/d1/d2 is already tracked Once a directory is added for mirroring, its subdirectory or ancestor directories are disallowed to be added for mirorring:: $ ceph fs snapshot mirror add cephfs /d0/d1 Error EINVAL: /d0/d1 is a ancestor of tracked path /d0/d1/d2 $ ceph fs snapshot mirror add cephfs /d0/d1/d2/d3 Error EINVAL: /d0/d1/d2/d3 is a subtree of tracked path /d0/d1/d2 Commands to check directory mapping (to mirror daemons) and directory distribution are detailed in `Mirroring Status` section. Bootstrap Peers --------------- Adding a peer (via `peer_add`) requires the peer cluster configuration and user keyring to be available in the primary cluster (manager host and hosts running the mirror daemon). This can be avoided by bootstrapping and importing a peer token. Peer bootstrap involves creating a bootstrap token on the peer cluster via:: $ ceph fs snapshot mirror peer_bootstrap create e.g.:: $ ceph fs snapshot mirror peer_bootstrap create backup_fs client.mirror_remote site-remote {"token": "eyJmc2lkIjogIjBkZjE3MjE3LWRmY2QtNDAzMC05MDc5LTM2Nzk4NTVkNDJlZiIsICJmaWxlc3lzdGVtIjogImJhY2t1cF9mcyIsICJ1c2VyIjogImNsaWVudC5taXJyb3JfcGVlcl9ib290c3RyYXAiLCAic2l0ZV9uYW1lIjogInNpdGUtcmVtb3RlIiwgImtleSI6ICJBUUFhcDBCZ0xtRmpOeEFBVnNyZXozai9YYUV0T2UrbUJEZlJDZz09IiwgIm1vbl9ob3N0IjogIlt2MjoxOTIuMTY4LjAuNTo0MDkxOCx2MToxOTIuMTY4LjAuNTo0MDkxOV0ifQ=="} `site-name` refers to a user-defined string to identify the remote filesystem. In context of `peer_add` interface, `site-name` is the passed in `cluster` name from `remote_cluster_spec`. Import the bootstrap token in the primary cluster via:: $ ceph fs snapshot mirror peer_bootstrap import e.g.:: $ ceph fs snapshot mirror peer_bootstrap import cephfs eyJmc2lkIjogIjBkZjE3MjE3LWRmY2QtNDAzMC05MDc5LTM2Nzk4NTVkNDJlZiIsICJmaWxlc3lzdGVtIjogImJhY2t1cF9mcyIsICJ1c2VyIjogImNsaWVudC5taXJyb3JfcGVlcl9ib290c3RyYXAiLCAic2l0ZV9uYW1lIjogInNpdGUtcmVtb3RlIiwgImtleSI6ICJBUUFhcDBCZ0xtRmpOeEFBVnNyZXozai9YYUV0T2UrbUJEZlJDZz09IiwgIm1vbl9ob3N0IjogIlt2MjoxOTIuMTY4LjAuNTo0MDkxOCx2MToxOTIuMTY4LjAuNTo0MDkxOV0ifQ== Mirroring Status ---------------- CephFS mirroring module provides `mirror daemon status` interface to check mirror daemon status:: $ ceph fs snapshot mirror daemon status [ { "daemon_id": 284167, "filesystems": [ { "filesystem_id": 1, "name": "a", "directory_count": 1, "peers": [ { "uuid": "02117353-8cd1-44db-976b-eb20609aa160", "remote": { "client_name": "client.mirror_remote", "cluster_name": "ceph", "fs_name": "backup_fs" }, "stats": { "failure_count": 1, "recovery_count": 0 } } ] } ] } ] An entry per mirror daemon instance is displayed along with information such as configured peers and basic stats. For more detailed stats, use the admin socket interface as detailed below. CephFS mirror daemons provide admin socket commands for querying mirror status. To check available commands for mirror status use:: $ ceph --admin-daemon /path/to/mirror/daemon/admin/socket help { .... .... "fs mirror status cephfs@360": "get filesystem mirror status", .... .... } Commands with `fs mirror status` prefix provide mirror status for mirror enabled file systems. Note that `cephfs@360` is of format `filesystem-name@filesystem-id`. This format is required since mirror daemons get asynchronously notified regarding file system mirror status (A file system can be deleted and recreated with the same name). Right now, the command provides minimal information regarding mirror status:: $ ceph --admin-daemon /var/run/ceph/cephfs-mirror.asok fs mirror status cephfs@360 { "rados_inst": "192.168.0.5:0/1476644347", "peers": { "a2dc7784-e7a1-4723-b103-03ee8d8768f8": { "remote": { "client_name": "client.mirror_remote", "cluster_name": "site-a", "fs_name": "backup_fs" } } }, "snap_dirs": { "dir_count": 1 } } `Peers` section in the command output above shows the peer information such as unique peer-id (UUID) and specification. The peer-id is required to remove an existing peer as mentioned in the `Mirror Module and Interface` section. Command with `fs mirror peer status` prefix provide peer synchronization status. This command is of format `filesystem-name@filesystem-id peer-uuid`:: $ ceph --admin-daemon /var/run/ceph/cephfs-mirror.asok fs mirror peer status cephfs@360 a2dc7784-e7a1-4723-b103-03ee8d8768f8 { "/d0": { "state": "idle", "last_synced_snap": { "id": 120, "name": "snap1", "sync_duration": 0.079997898999999997, "sync_time_stamp": "274900.558797s" }, "snaps_synced": 2, "snaps_deleted": 0, "snaps_renamed": 0 } } Synchronization stats such as `snaps_synced`, `snaps_deleted` and `snaps_renamed` are reset on daemon restart and/or when a directory is reassigned to another mirror daemon (when multiple mirror daemons are deployed). A directory can be in one of the following states:: - `idle`: The directory is currently not being synchronized - `syncing`: The directory is currently being synchronized - `failed`: The directory has hit upper limit of consecutive failures When a directory hits a configured number of consecutive synchronization failures, the mirror daemon marks it as `failed`. Synchronization for these directories are retried. By default, the number of consecutive failures before a directory is marked as failed is controlled by `cephfs_mirror_max_consecutive_failures_per_directory` configuration option (default: 10) and the retry interval for failed directories is controlled via `cephfs_mirror_retry_failed_directories_interval` configuration option (default: 60s). E.g., adding a regular file for synchronization would result in failed status:: $ ceph fs snapshot mirror add cephfs /f0 $ ceph --admin-daemon /var/run/ceph/cephfs-mirror.asok fs mirror peer status cephfs@360 a2dc7784-e7a1-4723-b103-03ee8d8768f8 { "/d0": { "state": "idle", "last_synced_snap": { "id": 120, "name": "snap1", "sync_duration": 0.079997898999999997, "sync_time_stamp": "274900.558797s" }, "snaps_synced": 2, "snaps_deleted": 0, "snaps_renamed": 0 }, "/f0": { "state": "failed", "snaps_synced": 0, "snaps_deleted": 0, "snaps_renamed": 0 } } This allows a user to add a non-existent directory for synchronization. The mirror daemon would mark the directory as failed and retry (less frequently). When the directory comes to existence, the mirror daemons would unmark the failed state upon successfull snapshot synchronization. When mirroring is disabled, the respective `fs mirror status` command for the file system will not show up in command help. Configuration Options --------------------- .. confval:: cephfs_mirror_max_concurrent_directory_syncs .. confval:: cephfs_mirror_action_update_interval .. confval:: cephfs_mirror_restart_mirror_on_blocklist_interval .. confval:: cephfs_mirror_max_snapshot_sync_per_cycle .. confval:: cephfs_mirror_directory_scan_interval .. confval:: cephfs_mirror_max_consecutive_failures_per_directory .. confval:: cephfs_mirror_retry_failed_directories_interval .. confval:: cephfs_mirror_restart_mirror_on_failure_interval .. confval:: cephfs_mirror_mount_timeout Re-adding Peers --------------- When re-adding (reassigning) a peer to a file system in another cluster, ensure that all mirror daemons have stopped synchronization to the peer. This can be checked via `fs mirror status` admin socket command (the `Peer UUID` should not show up in the command output). Also, it is recommended to purge synchronized directories from the peer before re-adding it to another file system (especially those directories which might exist in the new primary file system). This is not required if re-adding a peer to the same primary file system it was earlier synchronized from.