ceph/doc/cephadm/install.rst
Sebastian Wagner cb529acaf4
Merge pull request #36496 from Daniel-Pivonka/cephadm-44926
mgr/cephadm: rgw update period after realm, zone creation

Reviewed-by: Sebastian Wagner <sebastian.wagner@suse.com>
2020-08-21 11:40:17 +02:00

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============================
Deploying a new Ceph cluster
============================
Cephadm creates a new Ceph cluster by "bootstrapping" on a single
host, expanding the cluster to encompass any additional hosts, and
then deploying the needed services.
.. highlight:: console
Requirements
============
- Systemd
- Podman or Docker for running containers
- Time synchronization (such as chrony or NTP)
- LVM2 for provisioning storage devices
Any modern Linux distribution should be sufficient. Dependencies
are installed automatically by the bootstrap process below.
.. _get-cephadm:
Install cephadm
===============
The ``cephadm`` command can (1) bootstrap a new cluster, (2)
launch a containerized shell with a working Ceph CLI, and (3) aid in
debugging containerized Ceph daemons.
There are a few ways to install cephadm:
* Use ``curl`` to fetch the most recent version of the
standalone script::
# curl --silent --remote-name --location https://github.com/ceph/ceph/raw/octopus/src/cephadm/cephadm
# chmod +x cephadm
This script can be run directly from the current directory with::
# ./cephadm <arguments...>
* Although the standalone script is sufficient to get a cluster started, it is
convenient to have the ``cephadm`` command installed on the host. To install
these packages for the current Octopus release::
# ./cephadm add-repo --release octopus
# ./cephadm install
Confirm that ``cephadm`` is now in your PATH with::
# which cephadm
* Some commercial Linux distributions (e.g., RHEL, SLE) may already
include up-to-date Ceph packages. In that case, you can install
cephadm directly. For example::
# dnf install -y cephadm # or
# zypper install -y cephadm
Bootstrap a new cluster
=======================
You need to know which *IP address* to use for the cluster's first
monitor daemon. This is normally just the IP for the first host. If there
are multiple networks and interfaces, be sure to choose one that will
be accessible by any host accessing the Ceph cluster.
To bootstrap the cluster::
# mkdir -p /etc/ceph
# cephadm bootstrap --mon-ip *<mon-ip>*
This command will:
* Create a monitor and manager daemon for the new cluster on the local
host.
* Generate a new SSH key for the Ceph cluster and adds it to the root
user's ``/root/.ssh/authorized_keys`` file.
* Write a minimal configuration file needed to communicate with the
new cluster to ``/etc/ceph/ceph.conf``.
* Write a copy of the ``client.admin`` administrative (privileged!)
secret key to ``/etc/ceph/ceph.client.admin.keyring``.
* Write a copy of the public key to
``/etc/ceph/ceph.pub``.
The default bootstrap behavior will work for the vast majority of
users. See below for a few options that may be useful for some users,
or run ``cephadm bootstrap -h`` to see all available options:
* Bootstrap writes the files needed to access the new cluster to
``/etc/ceph`` for convenience, so that any Ceph packages installed
on the host itself (e.g., to access the command line interface) can
easily find them.
Daemon containers deployed with cephadm, however, do not need
``/etc/ceph`` at all. Use the ``--output-dir *<directory>*`` option
to put them in a different directory (like ``.``), avoiding any
potential conflicts with existing Ceph configuration (cephadm or
otherwise) on the same host.
* You can pass any initial Ceph configuration options to the new
cluster by putting them in a standard ini-style configuration file
and using the ``--config *<config-file>*`` option.
* You can choose the ssh user cephadm will use to connect to hosts by
using the ``--ssh-user *<user>*`` option. The ssh key will be added
to ``/home/*<user>*/.ssh/authorized_keys``. This user will require
passwordless sudo access.
* If you are using a container on an authenticated registry that requires
login you may add the three arguments ``--registry-url <url of registry>``,
``--registry-username <username of account on registry>``,
``--registry-password <password of account on registry>`` OR
``--registry-json <json file with login info>``. Cephadm will attempt
to login to this registry so it may pull your container and then store
the login info in its config database so other hosts added to the cluster
may also make use of the authenticated registry.
Enable Ceph CLI
===============
Cephadm does not require any Ceph packages to be installed on the
host. However, we recommend enabling easy access to the ``ceph``
command. There are several ways to do this:
* The ``cephadm shell`` command launches a bash shell in a container
with all of the Ceph packages installed. By default, if
configuration and keyring files are found in ``/etc/ceph`` on the
host, they are passed into the container environment so that the
shell is fully functional. Note that when executed on a MON host,
``cephadm shell`` will infer the ``config`` from the MON container
instead of using the default configuration. If ``--mount <path>``
is given, then the host ``<path>`` (file or directory) will appear
under ``/mnt`` inside the container::
# cephadm shell
* To execute ``ceph`` commands, you can also run commands like so::
# cephadm shell -- ceph -s
* You can install the ``ceph-common`` package, which contains all of the
ceph commands, including ``ceph``, ``rbd``, ``mount.ceph`` (for mounting
CephFS file systems), etc.::
# cephadm add-repo --release octopus
# cephadm install ceph-common
Confirm that the ``ceph`` command is accessible with::
# ceph -v
Confirm that the ``ceph`` command can connect to the cluster and also
its status with::
# ceph status
Add hosts to the cluster
========================
To add each new host to the cluster, perform two steps:
#. Install the cluster's public SSH key in the new host's root user's
``authorized_keys`` file::
# ssh-copy-id -f -i /etc/ceph/ceph.pub root@*<new-host>*
For example::
# ssh-copy-id -f -i /etc/ceph/ceph.pub root@host2
# ssh-copy-id -f -i /etc/ceph/ceph.pub root@host3
#. Tell Ceph that the new node is part of the cluster::
# ceph orch host add *newhost*
For example::
# ceph orch host add host2
# ceph orch host add host3
.. _deploy_additional_monitors:
Deploy additional monitors (optional)
=====================================
A typical Ceph cluster has three or five monitor daemons spread
across different hosts. We recommend deploying five
monitors if there are five or more nodes in your cluster.
.. _CIDR: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Classless_Inter-Domain_Routing#CIDR_notation
When Ceph knows what IP subnet the monitors should use it can automatically
deploy and scale monitors as the cluster grows (or contracts). By default,
Ceph assumes that other monitors should use the same subnet as the first
monitor's IP.
If your Ceph monitors (or the entire cluster) live on a single subnet,
then by default cephadm automatically adds up to 5 monitors as you add new
hosts to the cluster. No further steps are necessary.
* If there is a specific IP subnet that should be used by monitors, you
can configure that in `CIDR`_ format (e.g., ``10.1.2.0/24``) with::
# ceph config set mon public_network *<mon-cidr-network>*
For example::
# ceph config set mon public_network 10.1.2.0/24
Cephadm only deploys new monitor daemons on hosts that have IPs
configured in the configured subnet.
* If you want to adjust the default of 5 monitors::
# ceph orch apply mon *<number-of-monitors>*
* To deploy monitors on a specific set of hosts::
# ceph orch apply mon *<host1,host2,host3,...>*
Be sure to include the first (bootstrap) host in this list.
* You can control which hosts the monitors run on by making use of
host labels. To set the ``mon`` label to the appropriate
hosts::
# ceph orch host label add *<hostname>* mon
To view the current hosts and labels::
# ceph orch host ls
For example::
# ceph orch host label add host1 mon
# ceph orch host label add host2 mon
# ceph orch host label add host3 mon
# ceph orch host ls
HOST ADDR LABELS STATUS
host1 mon
host2 mon
host3 mon
host4
host5
Tell cephadm to deploy monitors based on the label::
# ceph orch apply mon label:mon
* You can explicitly specify the IP address or CIDR network for each monitor
and control where it is placed. To disable automated monitor deployment::
# ceph orch apply mon --unmanaged
To deploy each additional monitor::
# ceph orch daemon add mon *<host1:ip-or-network1> [<host1:ip-or-network-2>...]*
For example, to deploy a second monitor on ``newhost1`` using an IP
address ``10.1.2.123`` and a third monitor on ``newhost2`` in
network ``10.1.2.0/24``::
# ceph orch apply mon --unmanaged
# ceph orch daemon add mon newhost1:10.1.2.123
# ceph orch daemon add mon newhost2:10.1.2.0/24
.. note::
The **apply** command can be confusing. For this reason, we recommend using
YAML specifications.
Each 'ceph orch apply mon' command supersedes the one before it.
This means that you must use the proper comma-separated list-based
syntax when you want to apply monitors to more than one host.
If you do not use the proper syntax, you will clobber your work
as you go.
For example::
# ceph orch apply mon host1
# ceph orch apply mon host2
# ceph orch apply mon host3
This results in only one host having a monitor applied to it: host 3.
(The first command creates a monitor on host1. Then the second command
clobbers the monitor on host1 and creates a monitor on host2. Then the
third command clobbers the monitor on host2 and creates a monitor on
host3. In this scenario, at this point, there is a monitor ONLY on
host3.)
To make certain that a monitor is applied to each of these three hosts,
run a command like this::
# ceph orch apply mon "host1,host2,host3"
Instead of using the "ceph orch apply mon" commands, run a command like
this::
# ceph orch apply -i file.yaml
Here is a sample **file.yaml** file::
service_type: mon
placement:
hosts:
- host1
- host2
- host3
Deploy OSDs
===========
An inventory of storage devices on all cluster hosts can be displayed with::
# ceph orch device ls
A storage device is considered *available* if all of the following
conditions are met:
* The device must have no partitions.
* The device must not have any LVM state.
* The device must not be mounted.
* The device must not contain a file system.
* The device must not contain a Ceph BlueStore OSD.
* The device must be larger than 5 GB.
Ceph refuses to provision an OSD on a device that is not available.
There are a few ways to create new OSDs:
* Tell Ceph to consume any available and unused storage device::
# ceph orch apply osd --all-available-devices
* Create an OSD from a specific device on a specific host::
# ceph orch daemon add osd *<host>*:*<device-path>*
For example::
# ceph orch daemon add osd host1:/dev/sdb
* Use :ref:`drivegroups` to describe device(s) to consume
based on their properties, such device type (SSD or HDD), device
model names, size, or the hosts on which the devices exist::
# ceph orch apply osd -i spec.yml
Deploy MDSs
===========
One or more MDS daemons is required to use the CephFS file system.
These are created automatically if the newer ``ceph fs volume``
interface is used to create a new file system. For more information,
see :ref:`fs-volumes-and-subvolumes`.
To deploy metadata servers::
# ceph orch apply mds *<fs-name>* --placement="*<num-daemons>* [*<host1>* ...]"
See :ref:`orchestrator-cli-placement-spec` for details of the placement specification.
Deploy RGWs
===========
Cephadm deploys radosgw as a collection of daemons that manage a
particular *realm* and *zone*. (For more information about realms and
zones, see :ref:`multisite`.)
Note that with cephadm, radosgw daemons are configured via the monitor
configuration database instead of via a `ceph.conf` or the command line. If
that configuration isn't already in place (usually in the
``client.rgw.<realmname>.<zonename>`` section), then the radosgw
daemons will start up with default settings (e.g., binding to port
80).
To deploy a set of radosgw daemons for a particular realm and zone::
# ceph orch apply rgw *<realm-name>* *<zone-name>* --placement="*<num-daemons>* [*<host1>* ...]"
For example, to deploy 2 rgw daemons serving the *myorg* realm and the *us-east-1*
zone on *myhost1* and *myhost2*::
# ceph orch apply rgw myorg us-east-1 --placement="2 myhost1 myhost2"
Cephadm will wait for a healthy cluster and automatically create the supplied realm and zone if they do not exist before deploying the rgw daemon(s)
Alternatively, the realm, zonegroup, and zone can be manually created using ``radosgw-admin`` commands::
# radosgw-admin realm create --rgw-realm=<realm-name> --default
# radosgw-admin zonegroup create --rgw-zonegroup=<zonegroup-name> --master --default
# radosgw-admin zone create --rgw-zonegroup=<zonegroup-name> --rgw-zone=<zone-name> --master --default
# radosgw-admin period update --rgw-realm=<realm-name> --commit
See :ref:`orchestrator-cli-placement-spec` for details of the placement specification.
Deploying NFS ganesha
=====================
Cephadm deploys NFS Ganesha using a pre-defined RADOS *pool*
and optional *namespace*
To deploy a NFS Ganesha gateway,::
# ceph orch apply nfs *<svc_id>* *<pool>* *<namespace>* --placement="*<num-daemons>* [*<host1>* ...]"
For example, to deploy NFS with a service id of *foo*, that will use the
RADOS pool *nfs-ganesha* and namespace *nfs-ns*,::
# ceph orch apply nfs foo nfs-ganesha nfs-ns
.. note::
Create the *nfs-ganesha* pool first if it doesn't exist.
See :ref:`orchestrator-cli-placement-spec` for details of the placement specification.
Deploying custom containers
===========================
It is also possible to choose different containers than the default containers to deploy Ceph. See :ref:`containers` for information about your options in this regard.