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Signed-off-by: Patrick Donnelly <pdonnell@redhat.com>
136 lines
5.7 KiB
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136 lines
5.7 KiB
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=========================
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Create a Ceph file system
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=========================
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Creating pools
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==============
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A Ceph file system requires at least two RADOS pools, one for data and one for metadata.
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There are important considerations when planning these pools:
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- We recommend configuring *at least* 3 replicas for the metadata pool,
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as data loss in this pool can render the entire file system inaccessible.
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Configuring 4 would not be extreme, especially since the metadata pool's
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capacity requirements are quite modest.
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- We recommend the fastest feasible low-latency storage devices (NVMe, Optane,
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or at the very least SAS/SATA SSD) for the metadata pool, as this will
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directly affect the latency of client file system operations.
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- We strongly suggest that the CephFS metadata pool be provisioned on dedicated
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SSD / NVMe OSDs. This ensures that high client workload does not adversely
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impact metadata operations. See :ref:`device_classes` to configure pools this
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way.
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- The data pool used to create the file system is the "default" data pool and
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the location for storing all inode backtrace information, which is used for hard link
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management and disaster recovery. For this reason, all CephFS inodes
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have at least one object in the default data pool. If erasure-coded
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pools are planned for file system data, it is best to configure the default as
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a replicated pool to improve small-object write and
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read performance when updating backtraces. Separately, another erasure-coded
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data pool can be added (see also :ref:`ecpool`) that can be used on an entire
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hierarchy of directories and files (see also :ref:`file-layouts`).
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Refer to :doc:`/rados/operations/pools` to learn more about managing pools. For
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example, to create two pools with default settings for use with a file system, you
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might run the following commands:
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.. code:: bash
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$ ceph osd pool create cephfs_data
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$ ceph osd pool create cephfs_metadata
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The metadata pool will typically hold at most a few gigabytes of data. For
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this reason, a smaller PG count is usually recommended. 64 or 128 is commonly
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used in practice for large clusters.
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.. note:: The names of the file systems, metadata pools, and data pools can
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only have characters in the set [a-zA-Z0-9\_-.].
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Creating a file system
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======================
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Once the pools are created, you may enable the file system using the ``fs new`` command:
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.. code:: bash
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$ ceph fs new <fs_name> <metadata> <data> [--force] [--allow-dangerous-metadata-overlay] [<fscid:int>] [--recover]
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This command creates a new file system with specified metadata and data pool.
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The specified data pool is the default data pool and cannot be changed once set.
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Each file system has its own set of MDS daemons assigned to ranks so ensure that
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you have sufficient standby daemons available to accommodate the new file system.
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The ``--force`` option is used to achieve any of the following:
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- To set an erasure-coded pool for the default data pool. Use of an EC pool for the
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default data pool is discouraged. Refer to `Creating pools`_ for details.
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- To set non-empty pool (pool already contains some objects) for the metadata pool.
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- To create a file system with a specific file system's ID (fscid).
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The --force option is required with --fscid option.
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The ``--allow-dangerous-metadata-overlay`` option permits the reuse metadata and
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data pools if it is already in-use. This should only be done in emergencies and
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after careful reading of the documentation.
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If the ``--fscid`` option is provided then this creates a file system with a
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specific fscid. This can be used when an application expects the file system's ID
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to be stable after it has been recovered, e.g., after monitor databases are
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lost and rebuilt. Consequently, file system IDs don't always keep increasing
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with newer file systems.
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The ``--recover`` option sets the state of file system's rank 0 to existing but
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failed. So when a MDS daemon eventually picks up rank 0, the daemon reads the
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existing in-RADOS metadata and doesn't overwrite it. The flag also prevents the
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standby MDS daemons to join the file system.
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For example:
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.. code:: bash
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$ ceph fs new cephfs cephfs_metadata cephfs_data
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$ ceph fs ls
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name: cephfs, metadata pool: cephfs_metadata, data pools: [cephfs_data ]
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Once a file system has been created, your MDS(s) will be able to enter
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an *active* state. For example, in a single MDS system:
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.. code:: bash
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$ ceph mds stat
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cephfs-1/1/1 up {0=a=up:active}
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Once the file system is created and the MDS is active, you are ready to mount
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the file system. If you have created more than one file system, you will
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choose which to use when mounting.
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- `Mount CephFS`_
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- `Mount CephFS as FUSE`_
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- `Mount CephFS on Windows`_
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.. _Mount CephFS: ../../cephfs/mount-using-kernel-driver
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.. _Mount CephFS as FUSE: ../../cephfs/mount-using-fuse
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.. _Mount CephFS on Windows: ../../cephfs/ceph-dokan
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If you have created more than one file system, and a client does not
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specify a file system when mounting, you can control which file system
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they will see by using the ``ceph fs set-default`` command.
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Adding a Data Pool to the File System
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-------------------------------------
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See :ref:`adding-data-pool-to-file-system`.
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Using Erasure Coded pools with CephFS
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=====================================
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You may use Erasure Coded pools as CephFS data pools as long as they have overwrites enabled, which is done as follows:
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.. code:: bash
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ceph osd pool set my_ec_pool allow_ec_overwrites true
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Note that EC overwrites are only supported when using OSDs with the BlueStore backend.
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You may not use Erasure Coded pools as CephFS metadata pools, because CephFS metadata is stored using RADOS *OMAP* data structures, which EC pools cannot store.
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