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fixes: #3076 Signed-off-by: John Wilkins <john.wilkins@inktank.com>
383 lines
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ReStructuredText
383 lines
16 KiB
ReStructuredText
============================
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Frequently Asked Questions
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============================
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These questions have been frequently asked on the ceph-users and ceph-devel
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mailing lists, the IRC channel, and on the `Ceph.com`_ blog.
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.. _Ceph.com: http://ceph.com
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Is Ceph Production-Quality?
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===========================
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Ceph's object store (RADOS) is production ready. Large-scale storage systems (i.e.,
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petabytes of data) use Ceph's RESTful Object Gateway (RGW), which provides APIs
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compatible with Amazon's S3 and OpenStack's Swift. Many deployments also use
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the Ceph Block Device (RBD), including deployments of OpenStack and CloudStack.
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`Inktank`_ provides commercial support for the Ceph object store, Object
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Gateway, block devices and CephFS with running a single metadata server.
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The CephFS POSIX-compliant filesystem is functionally complete and has been
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evaluated by a large community of users. There are production systems using
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CephFS with a single metadata server. The Ceph community is actively testing
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clusters with multiple metadata servers for quality assurance. Once CephFS
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passes QA muster when running with multiple metadata servers, `Inktank`_ will
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provide commercial support for CephFS with multiple metadata servers, too.
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.. _Inktank: http://inktank.com
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What Kind of Hardware Does Ceph Require?
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========================================
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Ceph runs on commodity hardware. A typical configuration involves a
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rack mountable server with a baseboard management controller, multiple
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processors, multiple drives, and multiple NICs. There are no requirements for
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proprietary hardware. For details, see `Ceph Hardware Recommendations`_.
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What Kind of OS Does Ceph Require?
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==================================
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Ceph runs on Linux for both the client and server side.
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Ceph runs on Debian/Ubuntu distributions, which you can install from `APT
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packages`_.
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Ceph also runs on Fedora and Enterprise Linux derivates (RHEL, CentOS) using
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`RPM packages`_ .
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You can also download Ceph source `tarballs`_ and build Ceph for your
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distribution. See `Installation`_ for details.
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.. _try-ceph:
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How Can I Give Ceph a Try?
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==========================
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Follow our `Quick Start`_ guides. They will get you up an running quickly
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without requiring deeper knowledge of Ceph. Our `Quick Start`_ guides will also
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help you avoid a few issues related to limited deployments. If you choose to
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stray from the Quick Starts, there are a few things you need to know.
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We recommend using at least two hosts, and a recent Linux kernel. In older
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kernels, Ceph can deadlock if you try to mount CephFS or RBD client services on
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the same host that runs your test Ceph cluster. This is not a Ceph-related
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issue. It's related to memory pressure and needing to relieve free memory.
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Recent kernels with up-to-date ``glibc`` and ``syncfs(2)`` reduce this issue
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considerably. However, a memory pool large enough to handle incoming requests is
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the only thing that guarantees against the deadlock occuring. When you run Ceph
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clients on a Ceph cluster machine, loopback NFS can experience a similar problem
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related to buffer cache management in the kernel. You can avoid these scenarios
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entirely by using a separate client host, which is more realistic for deployment
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scenarios anyway.
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We recommend using at least two OSDs with at least two replicas of the data.
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OSDs report other OSDs to the monitor, and also interact with other OSDs when
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replicating data. If you have only one OSD, a second OSD cannot check its
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heartbeat. Also, if an OSD expects another OSD to tell it which placement groups
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it should have, the lack of another OSD prevents this from occurring. So a
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placement group can remain stuck "stale" forever. These are not likely
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production issues.
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Finally, `Quick Start`_ guides are a way to get you up and running quickly. To
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build performant systems, you'll need a drive for each OSD, and you will likely
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benefit by writing the OSD journal to a separate drive from the OSD data.
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How Many OSDs Can I Run per Host?
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=================================
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Theoretically, a host can run as many OSDs as the hardware can support. Many
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vendors market storage hosts that have large numbers of drives (e.g., 36 drives)
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capable of supporting many OSDs. We don't recommend a huge number of OSDs per
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host though. Ceph was designed to distribute the load across what we call
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"failure domains." See `CRUSH Maps`_ for details.
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At the petabyte scale, hardware failure is an expectation, not a freak
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occurrence. Failure domains include datacenters, rooms, rows, racks, and network
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switches. In a single host, power supplies, motherboards, NICs, and drives are
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all potential points of failure.
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If you place a large percentage of your OSDs on a single host and that host
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fails, a large percentage of your OSDs will fail too. Having too large a
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percentage of a cluster's OSDs on a single host can cause disruptive data
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migration and long recovery times during host failures. We encourage
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diversifying the risk across failure domains, and that includes making
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reasonable tradeoffs regarding the number of OSDs per host.
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Can I Use the Same Drive for Multiple OSDs?
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===========================================
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Yes. **Please don't do this!** Except for initial evaluations of Ceph, we do not
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recommend running multiple OSDs on the same drive. In fact, we recommend
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**exactly** the opposite. Only run one OSD per drive. For better performance,
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run journals on a separate drive from the OSD drive, and consider using SSDs for
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journals. Run operating systems on a separate drive from any drive storing data
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for Ceph.
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Storage drives are a performance bottleneck. Total throughput is an important
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consideration. Sequential reads and writes are important considerations too.
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When you run multiple OSDs per drive, you split up the total throughput between
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competing OSDs, which can slow performance considerably.
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Why Do You Recommend One Drive Per OSD?
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=======================================
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Ceph OSD performance is one of the most common requests for assistance, and
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running an OS, a journal and an OSD on the same disk is a frequently the
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impediment to high performance. Total throughput and simultaneous reads and
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writes are a major bottleneck. If you journal data, run an OS, or run multiple
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OSDs on the same drive, you will very likely see performance degrade
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significantly--especially under high loads.
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Running multiple OSDs on a single drive is fine for evaluation purposes. We
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even encourage that in our `5-minute quick start`_. However, just because it
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works does NOT mean that it will provide acceptable performance in an
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operational cluster.
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What Underlying Filesystem Do You Recommend?
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============================================
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Currently, we recommend using XFS as the underlying filesystem for OSD drives.
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We think ``btrfs`` will become the optimal filesystem. However, we still
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encounter enough issues that we do not recommend it for production systems yet.
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See `Filesystem Recommendations`_ for details.
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How Does Ceph Ensure Data Integrity Across Replicas?
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====================================================
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Ceph periodically scrubs placement groups to ensure that they contain the same
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information. Low-level or deep scrubbing reads the object data in each replica
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of the placement group to ensure that the data is identical across replicas.
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How Many NICs Per Host?
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=======================
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You can use one :abbr:`NIC (Network Interface Card)` per machine. We recommend a
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minimum of two NICs: one for a public (front-side) network and one for a cluster
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(back-side) network. When you write an object from the client to the primary
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OSD, that single write only accounts for the bandwidth consumed during one leg
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of the transaction. If you store multiple copies (usually 2-3 copies in a
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typical cluster), the primary OSD makes a write request to your secondary and
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tertiary OSDs. So your back-end network traffic can dwarf your front-end network
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traffic on writes very easily.
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What Kind of Network Throughput Do I Need?
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==========================================
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Network throughput requirements depend on your load. We recommend starting with
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a minimum of 1GB Ethernet. 10GB Ethernet is more expensive, but often comes with
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some additional advantages, including virtual LANs (VLANs). VLANs can
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dramatically reduce the cabling requirements when you run front-side, back-side
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and other special purpose networks.
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The number of object copies (replicas) you create is an important factor,
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because replication becomes a larger network load than the initial write itself
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when making multiple copies (e.g., triplicate). Network traffic between Ceph and
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a cloud-based system such as OpenStack or CloudStack may also become a factor.
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Some deployments even run a separate NIC for management APIs.
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Finally load spikes are a factor too. Certain times of the day, week or month
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you may see load spikes. You must plan your network capacity to meet those load
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spikes in order for Ceph to perform well. This means that excess capacity may
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remain idle or unused during low load times.
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Can Ceph Support Multiple Data Centers?
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=======================================
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Yes, but with safeguards to ensure data safety. When a client writes data to
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Ceph the primary OSD will not acknowledge the write to the client until the
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secondary OSDs have written the replicas synchronously. See `How Ceph Scales`_
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for details.
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The Ceph community is working to ensure that OSD/monitor heartbeats and peering
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processes operate effectively with the additional latency that may occur when
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deploying hardware in different geographic locations. See `Monitor/OSD
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Interaction`_ for details.
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If your data centers have dedicated bandwidth and low latency, you can
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distribute your cluster across data centers easily. If you use a WAN over the
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Internet, you may need to configure Ceph to ensure effective peering, heartbeat
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acknowledgement and writes to ensure the cluster performs well with additional
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WAN latency.
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The Ceph community is working on an asynchronous write capability via the Ceph
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Object Gateway (RGW) which will provide an eventually-consistent copy of data
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for disaster recovery purposes. This will work with data read and written via
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the Object Gateway only. Work is also starting on a similar capability for Ceph
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Block devices which are managed via the various cloudstacks.
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How Does Ceph Authenticate Users?
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=================================
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Ceph provides an authentication framework called ``cephx`` that operates in a
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manner similar to Kerberos. The principal difference is that Ceph's
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authentication system is distributed too, so that it doesn't constitute a single
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point of failure. For details, see `Ceph Authentication & Authorization`_.
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Does Ceph Authentication Provide Multi-tenancy?
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===============================================
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Ceph provides authentication at the `pool`_ level, which may be sufficient
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for multi-tenancy in limited cases. Ceph plans on developing authentication
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namespaces within pools in future releases, so that Ceph is well-suited for
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multi-tenancy within pools.
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Can Ceph use other Multi-tenancy Modules?
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=========================================
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The Bobtail release of Ceph integrates the Object Gateway with OpenStack's Keystone.
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See `Keystone Integration`_ for details.
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.. _Keystone Integration: ../radosgw/config#integrating-with-openstack-keystone
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Does Ceph Enforce Quotas?
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=========================
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Currently, Ceph doesn't provide enforced storage quotas. The Ceph community has
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discussed enforcing user quotas within CephFS.
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Does Ceph Track Per User Usage?
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===============================
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The CephFS filesystem provides user-based usage tracking on a subtree basis.
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RADOS Gateway also provides detailed per-user usage tracking. RBD and the
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underlying object store do not track per user statistics. The underlying object
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store provides storage capacity utilization statistics.
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Does Ceph Provide Billing?
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==========================
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Usage information is available via a RESTful API for the Ceph Object Gateway
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which can be integrated into billing systems. Usage data at the RADOS pool
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level is not currently possible but is on the roadmap.
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Can Ceph Export a Filesystem via NFS or Samba/CIFS?
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===================================================
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Ceph doesn't export CephFS via NFS or Samba. However, you can use a gateway to
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serve a CephFS filesystem to NFS or Samba clients.
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Can I Access Ceph via a Hypervisor?
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===================================
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Currently, the `QEMU`_ hypervisor can interact with the Ceph `block device`_.
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The :abbr:`KVM (Kernel Virtual Machine)` `module`_ and the `librbd` library
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allow you to use QEMU with Ceph. Most Ceph deployments use the `librbd` library.
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Cloud solutions like `OpenStack`_ and `CloudStack`_ interact `libvirt`_ and QEMU
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to as a means of integrating with Ceph.
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Ceph integrates cloud solutions via ``libvirt`` and QEMU. The Ceph community
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is also looking to support the Xen hypervisor in a future release.
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There is interest in support for VMWare, but there is no deep-level integration
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between VMWare and Ceph as yet.
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Can Block, CephFS, and Gateway Clients Share Data?
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==================================================
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For the most part, no. You cannot write data to Ceph using RBD and access the
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same data via CephFS, for example. You cannot write data with RADOS gateway and
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read it with RBD. However, you can write data with the RADOS Gateway
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S3-compatible API and read the same data using the RADOS Gateway
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Swift-comptatible API.
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RBD, CephFS and the RADOS Gateway each have their own namespace. The way they
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store data differs significantly enough that it isn't possible to use the
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clients interchangeably. However, you can use all three types of clients, and
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clients you develop yourself via ``librados`` simultaneously on the same
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cluster.
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Which Ceph Clients Support Striping?
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====================================
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Ceph clients--RBD, CephFS and RADOS Gateway--providing striping capability. For
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details on striping, see `Striping`_.
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What Programming Languages can Interact with the Object Store?
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==============================================================
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Ceph's ``librados`` is written in the C programming language. There are
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interfaces for other languages, including:
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- C++
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- Java
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- PHP
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- Python
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- Ruby
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Can I Develop a Client With Another Language?
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=============================================
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Ceph does not have many native bindings for ``librados`` at this time. If you'd
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like to fork Ceph and build a wrapper to the C or C++ versions of ``librados``,
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please check out the `Ceph repository`_. You can also use other languages that
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can use the ``librados`` native bindings (e.g., you can access the C/C++ bindings
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from within Perl).
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Do Ceph Clients Run on Windows?
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===============================
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No. There are no immediate plans to support Windows clients at this time. However,
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you may be able to emulate a Linux environment on a Windows host. For example,
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Cygwin may make it feasible to use ``librados`` in an emulated environment.
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How can I add a question to this list?
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======================================
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If you'd like to add a question to this list (hopefully with an
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accompanying answer!), you can find it in the doc/ directory of our
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main git repository:
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`https://github.com/ceph/ceph/blob/master/doc/faq.rst`_
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We use Sphinx to manage our documentation, and this page is generated
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from reStructuredText source. See the section on Building Ceph
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Documentation for the build procedure.
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.. _Ceph Hardware Recommendations: ../install/hardware-recommendations
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.. _APT packages: ../install/debian
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.. _RPM packages: ../install/rpm
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.. _tarballs: ../install/get-tarballs
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.. _Installation: ../install
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.. _CRUSH Maps: ../rados/operations/crush-map
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.. _5-minute quick start: ../start/quick-start
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.. _How Ceph Scales: ../architecture#how-ceph-scales
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.. _Monitor/OSD Interaction: ../rados/configuration/mon-osd-interaction
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.. _Ceph Authentication & Authorization: ../rados/operations/auth-intro
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.. _Ceph repository: https://github.com/ceph/ceph
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.. _QEMU: ../rbd/qemu-rbd
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.. _block device: ../rbd
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.. _module: ../rbd/rbd-ko
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.. _libvirt: ../rbd/libvirt
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.. _OpenStack: ../rbd/rbd-openstack
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.. _CloudStack: ../rbd/rbd-cloudstack
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.. _pool: ../rados/operations/pools
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.. _Striping: ../architecture##how-ceph-clients-stripe-data
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.. _https://github.com/ceph/ceph/blob/master/doc/faq.rst: https://github.com/ceph/ceph/blob/master/doc/faq.rst
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.. _Filesystem Recommendations: ../rados/configuration/filesystem-recommendations
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.. _Quick Start: ../start |