ceph/doc/rados/configuration/mon-lookup-dns.rst
Kefu Chai 4b52a03859 doc: add descriptions for mon/mgr options
Signed-off-by: Kefu Chai <kchai@redhat.com>
2017-05-13 01:30:29 +08:00

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Looking op Monitors through DNS
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Since version 11.0.0 RADOS supports looking up Monitors through DNS.
This way daemons and clients do not require a *mon host* configuration directive in their ceph.conf configuration file.
Using DNS SRV TCP records clients are able to look up the monitors.
This allows for less configuration on clients and monitors. Using a DNS update clients and daemons can be made aware of changes in the monitor topology.
By default clients and daemons will look for the TCP service called *ceph-mon* which is configured by the *mon_dns_srv_name* configuration directive.
``mon dns srv name``
:Description: the service name used querying the DNS for the monitor hosts/addresses
:Type: String
:Default: ``ceph-mon``
Example
-------
When the DNS search domain is set to *example.com* a DNS zone file might contain the following elements.
First, create records for the Monitors, either IPv4 (A) or IPv6 (AAAA).
::
mon1.example.com. AAAA 2001:db8::100
mon2.example.com. AAAA 2001:db8::200
mon3.example.com. AAAA 2001:db8::300
::
mon1.example.com. A 192.168.0.1
mon2.example.com. A 192.168.0.2
mon3.example.com. A 192.168.0.3
With those records now existing we can create the SRV TCP records with the name *ceph-mon* pointing to the three Monitors.
::
_ceph-mon._tcp.example.com. 60 IN SRV 10 60 6789 mon1.example.com.
_ceph-mon._tcp.example.com. 60 IN SRV 10 60 6789 mon2.example.com.
_ceph-mon._tcp.example.com. 60 IN SRV 10 60 6789 mon3.example.com.
In this case the Monitors are running on port *6789*.
The current implementation in clients and daemons does *not* honor nor respect the weight or priority set in SRV records.
All records returned will be treated equally in a Round Robin fashion.