mirror of
https://github.com/ceph/ceph
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a83583e7fa
Fixes: https://tracker.ceph.com/issues/23219 Signed-off-by: Boris Ranto <branto@redhat.com>
157 lines
5.3 KiB
ReStructuredText
157 lines
5.3 KiB
ReStructuredText
restful plugin
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==============
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RESTful plugin offers the REST API access to the status of the cluster
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over an SSL-secured connection.
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Enabling
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--------
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The *restful* module is enabled with::
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ceph mgr module enable restful
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You will also need to configure an SSL certificate below before the
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API endpoint is available. By default the module will accept HTTPS
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requests on port ``8003`` on all IPv4 and IPv6 addresses on the host.
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Securing
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--------
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All connections to *restful* are secured with SSL. You can generate a
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self-signed certificate with the command::
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ceph restful create-self-signed-cert
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Note that with a self-signed certificate most clients will need a flag
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to allow a connection and/or suppress warning messages. For example,
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if the ``ceph-mgr`` daemon is on the same host,::
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curl -k https://localhost:8003/
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To properly secure a deployment, a certificate that is signed by the
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organization's certificate authority should be used. For example, a key pair
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can be generated with a command similar to::
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openssl req -new -nodes -x509 \
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-subj "/O=IT/CN=ceph-mgr-restful" \
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-days 3650 -keyout restful.key -out restful.crt -extensions v3_ca
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The ``restful.crt`` should then be signed by your organization's CA
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(certificate authority). Once that is done, you can set it with::
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ceph config-key set mgr/restful/$name/crt -i restful.crt
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ceph config-key set mgr/restful/$name/key -i restful.key
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where ``$name`` is the name of the ``ceph-mgr`` instance (usually the
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hostname). If all manager instances are to share the same certificate,
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you can leave off the ``$name`` portion::
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ceph config-key set mgr/restful/crt -i restful.crt
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ceph config-key set mgr/restful/key -i restful.key
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Configuring IP and port
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-----------------------
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Like any other RESTful API endpoint, *restful* binds to an IP and
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port. By default, the currently active ``ceph-mgr`` daemon will bind
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to port 8003 and any available IPv4 or IPv6 address on the host.
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Since each ``ceph-mgr`` hosts its own instance of *restful*, it may
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also be necessary to configure them separately. The IP and port
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can be changed via the configuration key facility::
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ceph config-key set mgr/restful/$name/server_addr $IP
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ceph config-key set mgr/restful/$name/server_port $PORT
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where ``$name`` is the ID of the ceph-mgr daemon (usually the hostname).
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These settings can also be configured cluster-wide and not manager
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specific. For example,::
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ceph config-key set mgr/restful/server_addr $IP
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ceph config-key set mgr/restful/server_port $PORT
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If the port is not configured, *restful* will bind to port ``8003``.
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If the address it not configured, the *restful* will bind to ``::``,
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which corresponds to all available IPv4 and IPv6 addresses.
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Load balancer
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-------------
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Please note that *restful* will *only* start on the manager which
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is active at that moment. Query the Ceph cluster status to see which
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manager is active (e.g., ``ceph mgr dump``). In order to make the
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API available via a consistent URL regardless of which manager
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daemon is currently active, you may want to set up a load balancer
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front-end to direct traffic to whichever manager endpoint is
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available.
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Available methods
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-----------------
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You can navigate to the ``/doc`` endpoint for full list of available
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endpoints and HTTP methods implemented for each endpoint.
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For example, if you want to use the PATCH method of the ``/osd/<id>``
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endpoint to set the state ``up`` of the OSD id ``1``, you can use the
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following curl command::
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echo -En '{"up": true}' | curl --request PATCH --data @- --silent --insecure --user <user> 'https://<ceph-mgr>:<port>/osd/1'
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or you can use python to do so::
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$ python
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>> import requests
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>> result = requests.patch(
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'https://<ceph-mgr>:<port>/osd/1',
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json={"up": True},
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auth=("<user>", "<password>")
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)
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>> print result.json()
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Some of the other endpoints implemented in the *restful* module include
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* ``/config/cluster``: **GET**
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* ``/config/osd``: **GET**, **PATCH**
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* ``/crush/rule``: **GET**
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* ``/mon``: **GET**
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* ``/osd``: **GET**
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* ``/pool``: **GET**, **POST**
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* ``/pool/<arg>``: **DELETE**, **GET**, **PATCH**
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* ``/request``: **DELETE**, **GET**, **POST**
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* ``/request/<arg>``: **DELETE**, **GET**
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* ``/server``: **GET**
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The ``/request`` endpoint
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-------------------------
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You can use the ``/request`` endpoint to poll the state of a request
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you scheduled with any **DELETE**, **POST** or **PATCH** method. These
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methods are by default asynchronous since it may take longer for them
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to finish execution. You can modify this behaviour by appending
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``?wait=1`` to the request url. The returned request will then always
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be completed.
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The **POST** method of the ``/request`` method provides a passthrough
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for the ceph mon commands as defined in ``src/mon/MonCommands.h``.
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Let's consider the following command::
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COMMAND("osd ls " \
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"name=epoch,type=CephInt,range=0,req=false", \
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"show all OSD ids", "osd", "r", "cli,rest")
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The **prefix** is **osd ls**. The optional argument's name is **epoch**
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and it is of type ``CephInt``, i.e. ``integer``. This means that you
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need to do the following **POST** request to schedule the command::
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$ python
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>> import requests
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>> result = requests.post(
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'https://<ceph-mgr>:<port>/request',
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json={'prefix': 'osd ls', 'epoch': 0},
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auth=("<user>", "<password>")
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)
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>> print result.json()
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