mirror of
https://github.com/ceph/ceph
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Not only in the mClock docs, but also in the reference of the options that are disabled. Otherwise users are bound to miss it, and surprised why their options are ignored or reset. Signed-off-by: Niklas Hambüchen <mail@nh2.me>
466 lines
18 KiB
ReStructuredText
466 lines
18 KiB
ReStructuredText
======================
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OSD Config Reference
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======================
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.. index:: OSD; configuration
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You can configure Ceph OSD Daemons in the Ceph configuration file (or in recent
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releases, the central config store), but Ceph OSD
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Daemons can use the default values and a very minimal configuration. A minimal
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Ceph OSD Daemon configuration sets ``host`` and
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uses default values for nearly everything else.
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Ceph OSD Daemons are numerically identified in incremental fashion, beginning
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with ``0`` using the following convention. ::
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osd.0
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osd.1
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osd.2
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In a configuration file, you may specify settings for all Ceph OSD Daemons in
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the cluster by adding configuration settings to the ``[osd]`` section of your
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configuration file. To add settings directly to a specific Ceph OSD Daemon
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(e.g., ``host``), enter it in an OSD-specific section of your configuration
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file. For example:
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.. code-block:: ini
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[osd]
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osd_journal_size = 5120
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[osd.0]
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host = osd-host-a
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[osd.1]
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host = osd-host-b
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.. index:: OSD; config settings
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General Settings
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================
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The following settings provide a Ceph OSD Daemon's ID, and determine paths to
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data and journals. Ceph deployment scripts typically generate the UUID
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automatically.
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.. warning:: **DO NOT** change the default paths for data or journals, as it
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makes it more problematic to troubleshoot Ceph later.
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When using Filestore, the journal size should be at least twice the product of the expected drive
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speed multiplied by ``filestore_max_sync_interval``. However, the most common
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practice is to partition the journal drive (often an SSD), and mount it such
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that Ceph uses the entire partition for the journal.
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.. confval:: osd_uuid
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.. confval:: osd_data
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.. confval:: osd_max_write_size
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.. confval:: osd_max_object_size
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.. confval:: osd_client_message_size_cap
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.. confval:: osd_class_dir
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:default: $libdir/rados-classes
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.. index:: OSD; file system
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File System Settings
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====================
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Ceph builds and mounts file systems which are used for Ceph OSDs.
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``osd_mkfs_options {fs-type}``
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:Description: Options used when creating a new Ceph Filestore OSD of type {fs-type}.
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:Type: String
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:Default for xfs: ``-f -i 2048``
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:Default for other file systems: {empty string}
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For example::
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``osd_mkfs_options_xfs = -f -d agcount=24``
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``osd_mount_options {fs-type}``
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:Description: Options used when mounting a Ceph Filestore OSD of type {fs-type}.
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:Type: String
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:Default for xfs: ``rw,noatime,inode64``
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:Default for other file systems: ``rw, noatime``
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For example::
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``osd_mount_options_xfs = rw, noatime, inode64, logbufs=8``
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.. index:: OSD; journal settings
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Journal Settings
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================
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This section applies only to the older Filestore OSD back end. Since Luminous
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BlueStore has been default and preferred.
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By default, Ceph expects that you will provision a Ceph OSD Daemon's journal at
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the following path, which is usually a symlink to a device or partition::
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/var/lib/ceph/osd/$cluster-$id/journal
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When using a single device type (for example, spinning drives), the journals
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should be *colocated*: the logical volume (or partition) should be in the same
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device as the ``data`` logical volume.
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When using a mix of fast (SSDs, NVMe) devices with slower ones (like spinning
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drives) it makes sense to place the journal on the faster device, while
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``data`` occupies the slower device fully.
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The default ``osd_journal_size`` value is 5120 (5 gigabytes), but it can be
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larger, in which case it will need to be set in the ``ceph.conf`` file.
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A value of 10 gigabytes is common in practice::
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osd_journal_size = 10240
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.. confval:: osd_journal
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.. confval:: osd_journal_size
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See `Journal Config Reference`_ for additional details.
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Monitor OSD Interaction
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=======================
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Ceph OSD Daemons check each other's heartbeats and report to monitors
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periodically. Ceph can use default values in many cases. However, if your
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network has latency issues, you may need to adopt longer intervals. See
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`Configuring Monitor/OSD Interaction`_ for a detailed discussion of heartbeats.
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Data Placement
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==============
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See `Pool & PG Config Reference`_ for details.
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.. index:: OSD; scrubbing
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.. _rados_config_scrubbing:
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Scrubbing
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=========
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One way that Ceph ensures data integrity is by "scrubbing" placement groups.
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Ceph scrubbing is analogous to ``fsck`` on the object storage layer. Ceph
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generates a catalog of all objects in each placement group and compares each
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primary object to its replicas, ensuring that no objects are missing or
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mismatched. Light scrubbing checks the object size and attributes, and is
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usually done daily. Deep scrubbing reads the data and uses checksums to ensure
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data integrity, and is usually done weekly. The frequencies of both light
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scrubbing and deep scrubbing are determined by the cluster's configuration,
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which is fully under your control and subject to the settings explained below
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in this section.
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Although scrubbing is important for maintaining data integrity, it can reduce
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the performance of the Ceph cluster. You can adjust the following settings to
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increase or decrease the frequency and depth of scrubbing operations.
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.. confval:: osd_max_scrubs
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.. confval:: osd_scrub_begin_hour
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.. confval:: osd_scrub_end_hour
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.. confval:: osd_scrub_begin_week_day
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.. confval:: osd_scrub_end_week_day
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.. confval:: osd_scrub_during_recovery
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.. confval:: osd_scrub_load_threshold
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.. confval:: osd_scrub_min_interval
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.. confval:: osd_scrub_max_interval
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.. confval:: osd_scrub_chunk_min
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.. confval:: osd_shallow_scrub_chunk_min
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.. confval:: osd_scrub_chunk_max
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.. confval:: osd_shallow_scrub_chunk_max
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.. confval:: osd_scrub_sleep
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.. confval:: osd_deep_scrub_interval
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.. confval:: osd_scrub_interval_randomize_ratio
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.. confval:: osd_deep_scrub_stride
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.. confval:: osd_scrub_auto_repair
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.. confval:: osd_scrub_auto_repair_num_errors
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.. index:: OSD; operations settings
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Operations
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==========
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.. confval:: osd_op_num_shards
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.. confval:: osd_op_num_shards_hdd
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.. confval:: osd_op_num_shards_ssd
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.. confval:: osd_op_num_threads_per_shard
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.. confval:: osd_op_num_threads_per_shard_hdd
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.. confval:: osd_op_num_threads_per_shard_ssd
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.. confval:: osd_op_queue
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.. confval:: osd_op_queue_cut_off
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.. confval:: osd_client_op_priority
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.. confval:: osd_recovery_op_priority
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.. confval:: osd_scrub_priority
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.. confval:: osd_requested_scrub_priority
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.. confval:: osd_snap_trim_priority
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.. confval:: osd_snap_trim_sleep
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.. confval:: osd_snap_trim_sleep_hdd
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.. confval:: osd_snap_trim_sleep_ssd
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.. confval:: osd_snap_trim_sleep_hybrid
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.. confval:: osd_op_thread_timeout
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.. confval:: osd_op_complaint_time
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.. confval:: osd_op_history_size
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.. confval:: osd_op_history_duration
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.. confval:: osd_op_log_threshold
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.. confval:: osd_op_thread_suicide_timeout
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.. note:: See https://old.ceph.com/planet/dealing-with-some-osd-timeouts/ for
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more on ``osd_op_thread_suicide_timeout``. Be aware that this is a link to a
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reworking of a blog post from 2017, and that its conclusion will direct you
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back to this page "for more information".
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.. _dmclock-qos:
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QoS Based on mClock
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-------------------
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Ceph's use of mClock is now more refined and can be used by following the
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steps as described in `mClock Config Reference`_.
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Core Concepts
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`````````````
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Ceph's QoS support is implemented using a queueing scheduler
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based on `the dmClock algorithm`_. This algorithm allocates the I/O
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resources of the Ceph cluster in proportion to weights, and enforces
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the constraints of minimum reservation and maximum limitation, so that
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the services can compete for the resources fairly. Currently the
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*mclock_scheduler* operation queue divides Ceph services involving I/O
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resources into following buckets:
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- client op: the iops issued by client
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- osd subop: the iops issued by primary OSD
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- snap trim: the snap trimming related requests
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- pg recovery: the recovery related requests
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- pg scrub: the scrub related requests
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And the resources are partitioned using following three sets of tags. In other
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words, the share of each type of service is controlled by three tags:
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#. reservation: the minimum IOPS allocated for the service.
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#. limitation: the maximum IOPS allocated for the service.
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#. weight: the proportional share of capacity if extra capacity or system
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oversubscribed.
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In Ceph, operations are graded with "cost". And the resources allocated
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for serving various services are consumed by these "costs". So, for
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example, the more reservation a services has, the more resource it is
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guaranteed to possess, as long as it requires. Assuming there are 2
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services: recovery and client ops:
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- recovery: (r:1, l:5, w:1)
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- client ops: (r:2, l:0, w:9)
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The settings above ensure that the recovery won't get more than 5
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requests per second serviced, even if it requires so (see CURRENT
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IMPLEMENTATION NOTE below), and no other services are competing with
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it. But if the clients start to issue large amount of I/O requests,
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neither will they exhaust all the I/O resources. 1 request per second
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is always allocated for recovery jobs as long as there are any such
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requests. So the recovery jobs won't be starved even in a cluster with
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high load. And in the meantime, the client ops can enjoy a larger
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portion of the I/O resource, because its weight is "9", while its
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competitor "1". In the case of client ops, it is not clamped by the
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limit setting, so it can make use of all the resources if there is no
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recovery ongoing.
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CURRENT IMPLEMENTATION NOTE: the current implementation enforces the limit
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values. Therefore, if a service crosses the enforced limit, the op remains
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in the operation queue until the limit is restored.
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Subtleties of mClock
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````````````````````
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The reservation and limit values have a unit of requests per
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second. The weight, however, does not technically have a unit and the
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weights are relative to one another. So if one class of requests has a
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weight of 1 and another a weight of 9, then the latter class of
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requests should get 9 executed at a 9 to 1 ratio as the first class.
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However that will only happen once the reservations are met and those
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values include the operations executed under the reservation phase.
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Even though the weights do not have units, one must be careful in
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choosing their values due how the algorithm assigns weight tags to
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requests. If the weight is *W*, then for a given class of requests,
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the next one that comes in will have a weight tag of *1/W* plus the
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previous weight tag or the current time, whichever is larger. That
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means if *W* is sufficiently large and therefore *1/W* is sufficiently
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small, the calculated tag may never be assigned as it will get a value
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of the current time. The ultimate lesson is that values for weight
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should not be too large. They should be under the number of requests
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one expects to be serviced each second.
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.. _dmclock-qos-caveats:
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Caveats
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```````
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There are some factors that can reduce the impact of the mClock op
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queues within Ceph. First, requests to an OSD are sharded by their
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placement group identifier. Each shard has its own mClock queue and
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these queues neither interact nor share information among them. The
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number of shards can be controlled with the configuration options
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:confval:`osd_op_num_shards`, :confval:`osd_op_num_shards_hdd`, and
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:confval:`osd_op_num_shards_ssd`. A lower number of shards will increase the
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impact of the mClock queues, but may have other deleterious effects.
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This is especially the case if there are insufficient shard worker
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threads. The number of shard worker threads can be controlled with the
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configuration options :confval:`osd_op_num_threads_per_shard`,
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:confval:`osd_op_num_threads_per_shard_hdd` and
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:confval:`osd_op_num_threads_per_shard_ssd`.
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Second, requests are transferred from the operation queue to the
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operation sequencer, in which they go through the phases of
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execution. The operation queue is where mClock resides and mClock
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determines the next op to transfer to the operation sequencer. The
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number of operations allowed in the operation sequencer is a complex
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issue. In general we want to keep enough operations in the sequencer
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so it's always getting work done on some operations while it's waiting
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for disk and network access to complete on other operations. On the
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other hand, once an operation is transferred to the operation
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sequencer, mClock no longer has control over it. Therefore to maximize
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the impact of mClock, we want to keep as few operations in the
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operation sequencer as possible. So we have an inherent tension.
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The configuration options that influence the number of operations in
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the operation sequencer are :confval:`bluestore_throttle_bytes`,
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:confval:`bluestore_throttle_deferred_bytes`,
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:confval:`bluestore_throttle_cost_per_io`,
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:confval:`bluestore_throttle_cost_per_io_hdd`, and
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:confval:`bluestore_throttle_cost_per_io_ssd`.
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A third factor that affects the impact of the mClock algorithm is that
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we're using a distributed system, where requests are made to multiple
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OSDs and each OSD has (can have) multiple shards. Yet we're currently
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using the mClock algorithm, which is not distributed (note: dmClock is
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the distributed version of mClock).
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Various organizations and individuals are currently experimenting with
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mClock as it exists in this code base along with their modifications
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to the code base. We hope you'll share you're experiences with your
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mClock and dmClock experiments on the ``ceph-devel`` mailing list.
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.. confval:: osd_async_recovery_min_cost
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.. confval:: osd_push_per_object_cost
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.. confval:: osd_mclock_scheduler_client_res
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.. confval:: osd_mclock_scheduler_client_wgt
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.. confval:: osd_mclock_scheduler_client_lim
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.. confval:: osd_mclock_scheduler_background_recovery_res
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.. confval:: osd_mclock_scheduler_background_recovery_wgt
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.. confval:: osd_mclock_scheduler_background_recovery_lim
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.. confval:: osd_mclock_scheduler_background_best_effort_res
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.. confval:: osd_mclock_scheduler_background_best_effort_wgt
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.. confval:: osd_mclock_scheduler_background_best_effort_lim
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.. _the dmClock algorithm: https://www.usenix.org/legacy/event/osdi10/tech/full_papers/Gulati.pdf
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.. index:: OSD; backfilling
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Backfilling
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===========
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When you add or remove Ceph OSD Daemons to a cluster, CRUSH will
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rebalance the cluster by moving placement groups to or from Ceph OSDs
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to restore balanced utilization. The process of migrating placement groups and
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the objects they contain can reduce the cluster's operational performance
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considerably. To maintain operational performance, Ceph performs this migration
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with 'backfilling', which allows Ceph to set backfill operations to a lower
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priority than requests to read or write data.
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.. note:: Some of these settings are automatically reset if the `mClock`_
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scheduler is active, see `mClock backfill`_.
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.. confval:: osd_max_backfills
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.. confval:: osd_backfill_scan_min
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.. confval:: osd_backfill_scan_max
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.. confval:: osd_backfill_retry_interval
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.. index:: OSD; osdmap
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OSD Map
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=======
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OSD maps reflect the OSD daemons operating in the cluster. Over time, the
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number of map epochs increases. Ceph provides some settings to ensure that
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Ceph performs well as the OSD map grows larger.
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.. confval:: osd_map_dedup
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.. confval:: osd_map_cache_size
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.. confval:: osd_map_message_max
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.. index:: OSD; recovery
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Recovery
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========
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When the cluster starts or when a Ceph OSD Daemon crashes and restarts, the OSD
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begins peering with other Ceph OSD Daemons before writes can occur. See
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`Monitoring OSDs and PGs`_ for details.
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If a Ceph OSD Daemon crashes and comes back online, usually it will be out of
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sync with other Ceph OSD Daemons containing more recent versions of objects in
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the placement groups. When this happens, the Ceph OSD Daemon goes into recovery
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mode and seeks to get the latest copy of the data and bring its map back up to
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date. Depending upon how long the Ceph OSD Daemon was down, the OSD's objects
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and placement groups may be significantly out of date. Also, if a failure domain
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went down (e.g., a rack), more than one Ceph OSD Daemon may come back online at
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the same time. This can make the recovery process time consuming and resource
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intensive.
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To maintain operational performance, Ceph performs recovery with limitations on
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the number recovery requests, threads and object chunk sizes which allows Ceph
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perform well in a degraded state.
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.. note:: Some of these settings are automatically reset if the `mClock`_
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scheduler is active, see `mClock backfill`_.
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.. confval:: osd_recovery_delay_start
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.. confval:: osd_recovery_max_active
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.. confval:: osd_recovery_max_active_hdd
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.. confval:: osd_recovery_max_active_ssd
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.. confval:: osd_recovery_max_chunk
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.. confval:: osd_recovery_max_single_start
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.. confval:: osd_recover_clone_overlap
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.. confval:: osd_recovery_sleep
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.. confval:: osd_recovery_sleep_hdd
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.. confval:: osd_recovery_sleep_ssd
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.. confval:: osd_recovery_sleep_hybrid
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.. confval:: osd_recovery_priority
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Tiering
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=======
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.. confval:: osd_agent_max_ops
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.. confval:: osd_agent_max_low_ops
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See `cache target dirty high ratio`_ for when the tiering agent flushes dirty
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objects within the high speed mode.
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Miscellaneous
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=============
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.. confval:: osd_default_notify_timeout
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.. confval:: osd_check_for_log_corruption
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.. confval:: osd_delete_sleep
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.. confval:: osd_delete_sleep_hdd
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.. confval:: osd_delete_sleep_ssd
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.. confval:: osd_delete_sleep_hybrid
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.. confval:: osd_command_max_records
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.. confval:: osd_fast_fail_on_connection_refused
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.. _pool: ../../operations/pools
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.. _Configuring Monitor/OSD Interaction: ../mon-osd-interaction
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.. _Monitoring OSDs and PGs: ../../operations/monitoring-osd-pg#peering
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.. _mClock: ../mclock-config-ref.rst
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.. _mClock backfill: ../mclock-config-ref.rst#recovery-backfill-options
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.. _Pool & PG Config Reference: ../pool-pg-config-ref
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.. _Journal Config Reference: ../journal-ref
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.. _cache target dirty high ratio: ../../operations/pools#cache-target-dirty-high-ratio
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.. _mClock Config Reference: ../mclock-config-ref
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