mirror of
https://github.com/ceph/ceph
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800f1544ba
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Wagner <sebastian.wagner@suse.com>
221 lines
7.0 KiB
ReStructuredText
221 lines
7.0 KiB
ReStructuredText
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.. _kubernetes-dev:
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=======================================
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Hacking on Ceph in Kubernetes with Rook
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=======================================
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.. warning::
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This is *not* official user documentation for setting up production
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Ceph clusters with Kubernetes. It is aimed at developers who want
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to hack on Ceph in Kubernetes.
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This guide is aimed at Ceph developers getting started with running
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in a Kubernetes environment. It assumes that you may be hacking on Rook,
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Ceph or both, so everything is built from source.
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TL;DR for hacking on MGR modules
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================================
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Make your changes to the Python code base and then from Ceph's
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``build`` directory, run::
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../src/script/kubejacker/kubejacker.sh '192.168.122.1:5000'
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where ``'192.168.122.1:5000'`` is a local docker registry and
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Rook's ``CephCluster`` CR uses ``image: 192.168.122.1:5000/ceph/ceph:latest``.
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1. Build a kubernetes cluster
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=============================
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Before installing Ceph/Rook, make sure you've got a working kubernetes
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cluster with some nodes added (i.e. ``kubectl get nodes`` shows you something).
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The rest of this guide assumes that your development workstation has network
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access to your kubernetes cluster, such that ``kubectl`` works from your
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workstation.
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`There are many ways <https://kubernetes.io/docs/setup/>`_
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to build a kubernetes cluster: here we include some tips/pointers on where
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to get started.
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`kubic-terraform-kvm <https://github.com/kubic-project/kubic-terraform-kvm>`_
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might also be an option.
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Or `Host your own <https://kubernetes.io/docs/setup/independent/create-cluster-kubeadm/>`_ with
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``kubeadm``.
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Some Tips
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---------
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Here are some tips for a smoother ride with ``kubeadm``:
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- If you have previously added any yum/deb repos for kubernetes packages,
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disable them before trying to use the packages.cloud.google.com repository.
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If you don't, you'll get quite confusing conflicts.
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- Even if your distro already has docker, make sure you're installing it
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a version from docker.com that is within the range mentioned in the
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kubeadm install instructions. Especially, note that the docker in CentOS 7
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will *not* work.
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Hosted elsewhere
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----------------
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If you do not have any servers to hand, you might try a pure
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container provider such as Google Compute Engine. Your mileage may
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vary when it comes to what kinds of storage devices are visible
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to your kubernetes cluster.
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Make sure you check how much it's costing you before you spin up a big cluster!
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2. Run a docker registry
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========================
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Run this somewhere accessible from both your workstation and your
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kubernetes cluster (i.e. so that ``docker push/pull`` just works everywhere).
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This is likely to be the same host you're using as your kubernetes master.
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1. Install the ``docker-distribution`` package.
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2. If you want to configure the port, edit ``/etc/docker-distribution/registry/config.yml``
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3. Enable the registry service:
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::
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systemctl enable docker-distribution
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systemctl start docker-distribution
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You may need to mark the registry as **insecure**.
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3. Build Rook
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=============
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.. note::
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Building Rook is **not required** to make changes to Ceph.
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Install Go if you don't already have it.
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Download the Rook source code:
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::
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go get github.com/rook/rook
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# Ignore this warning, as Rook is not a conventional go package
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can't load package: package github.com/rook/rook: no Go files in /home/jspray/go/src/github.com/rook/rook
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You will now have a Rook source tree in ~/go/src/github.com/rook/rook -- you may
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be tempted to clone it elsewhere, but your life will be easier if you
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leave it in your GOPATH.
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Run ``make`` in the root of your Rook tree to build its binaries and containers:
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::
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make
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...
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=== saving image build-9204c79b/ceph-amd64
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=== docker build build-9204c79b/ceph-toolbox-base-amd64
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sha256:653bb4f8d26d6178570f146fe637278957e9371014ea9fce79d8935d108f1eaa
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=== docker build build-9204c79b/ceph-toolbox-amd64
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sha256:445d97b71e6f8de68ca1c40793058db0b7dd1ebb5d05789694307fd567e13863
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=== caching image build-9204c79b/ceph-toolbox-base-amd64
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You can use ``docker image ls`` to see the resulting built images. The
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images you care about are the ones with tags ending "ceph-amd64" (used
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for the Rook operator and Ceph daemons) and "ceph-toolbox-amd64" (used
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for the "toolbox" container where the CLI is run).
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4. Build Ceph
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=============
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.. note::
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Building Ceph is **not required** to make changes to MGR modules
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written in Python.
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The Rook containers and the Ceph containers are independent now. Note that
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Rook's Ceph client libraries need to communicate with the Ceph cluster,
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therefore a compatible major version is required.
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You can run a CentOS docker container with access to your Ceph source
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tree using a command like:
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::
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docker run -i -v /my/ceph/src:/my/ceph/src -t centos:7 /bin/bash
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Once you have built Ceph, you can inject the resulting binaries into
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the Rook container image using the ``kubejacker.sh`` script (run from
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your build directory but from *outside* your build container).
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5. Run Kubejacker
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=================
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``kubejacker`` needs access to your docker registry. Execute the script
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to build a docker image containing your latest Ceph binaries:
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::
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build$ ../src/script/kubejacker/kubejacker.sh "<host>:<port>"
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Now you've got your freshly built Rook and freshly built Ceph into
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a single container image, ready to run. Next time you change something
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in Ceph, you can re-run this to update your image and restart your
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kubernetes containers. If you change something in Rook, then re-run the Rook
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build, and the Ceph build too.
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5. Run a Rook cluster
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=====================
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Please refer to `Rook's documentation <https://rook.io/docs/rook/master/ceph-quickstart.html>`_
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for setting up a Rook operator, a Ceph cluster and the toolbox.
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The Rook source tree includes example .yaml files in
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``cluster/examples/kubernetes/ceph/``. Copy these into
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a working directory, and edit as necessary to configure
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the setup you want:
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- Ensure that ``spec.cephVersion.image`` points to your docker registry::
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spec:
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cephVersion:
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allowUnsupported: true
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image: 192.168.122.1:5000/ceph/ceph:latest
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Then, load the configuration into the kubernetes API using ``kubectl``:
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::
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kubectl apply -f ./cluster-test.yaml
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Use ``kubectl -n rook-ceph get pods`` to check the operator
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pod the Ceph daemons and toolbox are is coming up.
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Once everything is up and running,
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you should be able to open a shell in the toolbox container and
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run ``ceph status``.
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If your mon services start but the rest don't, it could be that they're
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unable to form a quorum due to a Kubernetes networking issue: check that
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containers in your Kubernetes cluster can ping containers on other nodes.
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Cheat sheet
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===========
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Open a shell in your toolbox container::
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kubectl -n rook-ceph exec -it $(kubectl -n rook-ceph get pod -l "app=rook-ceph-tools" -o jsonpath="{.items[0].metadata.name}") -- bash
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Inspect the Rook operator container's logs::
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kubectl -n rook-ceph logs -l app=rook-ceph-operator
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Inspect the ceph-mgr container's logs::
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kubectl -n rook-ceph logs -l app=rook-ceph-mgr
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