ceph/doc/rbd/rbd-snapshot.rst
rallred 0de0efa936 RBD Documentation and Example fixes for --image-format
- RBD Documentation, --image-format wrongly specified as --format in examples
 - RBD Documentation, better describe image format, to differentiate from --format

Reviewed-by: Josh Durgin <josh.durgin@inktank.com>
2013-11-18 18:12:38 -08:00

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===========
Snapshots
===========
.. index:: Ceph Block Device; snapshots
A snapshot is a read-only copy of the state of an image at a particular point in
time. One of the advanced features of Ceph block devices is that you can create
snapshots of the images to retain a history of an image's state. Ceph also
supports snapshot layering, which allows you to clone images (e.g., a VM image)
quickly and easily. Ceph supports block device snapshots using the ``rbd``
command and many higher level interfaces, including `QEMU`_, `libvirt`_,
`OpenStack`_ and `CloudStack`_.
.. important:: To use use RBD snapshots, you must have a running Ceph cluster.
.. note:: **STOP I/O BEFORE** snapshotting an image.
If the image contains a filesystem, the filesystem must be in a
consistent state **BEFORE** snapshotting.
.. ditaa:: +------------+ +-------------+
| {s} | | {s} c999 |
| Active |<-------*| Snapshot |
| Image | | of Image |
| (stop i/o) | | (read only) |
+------------+ +-------------+
Cephx Notes
===========
When `cephx`_ is enabled, you must specify a user and a secret file
on the command line, or use the ``CEPH_ARGS`` environment variable
to avoid re-entry of the following parameters. ::
rbd --id {user-name} --keyring=/path/to/secret [commands]
For example::
rbd --id client.admin --keyring=/etc/ceph/ceph.keyring [commands]
.. tip:: Add the user and secret to the ``CEPH_ARGS`` environment
variable so that you don't need to enter them each time.
Snapshot Basics
===============
The following procedures demonstrate how to create, list, and remove
snapshots using the ``rbd`` command on the command line.
Create Snapshot
---------------
To create a snapshot with ``rbd``, specify the ``snap create`` option, the pool
name and the image name. ::
rbd --pool {pool-name} snap create --snap {snap-name} {image-name}
rbd snap create {pool-name}/{image-name}@{snap-name}
For example::
rbd --pool rbd snap create --snap snapname foo
rbd snap create rbd/foo@snapname
List Snapshots
--------------
To list snapshots of an image, specify the pool name and the image name. ::
rbd --pool {pool-name} snap ls {image-name}
rbd snap ls {pool-name}/{image-name}
For example::
rbd --pool rbd snap ls foo
rbd snap ls rbd/foo
Rollback Snapshot
-----------------
To rollback to a snapshot with ``rbd``, specify the ``snap rollback`` option, the
pool name, the image name and the snap name. ::
rbd --pool {pool-name} snap rollback --snap {snap-name} {image-name}
rbd snap rollback {pool-name}/{image-name}@{snap-name}
For example::
rbd --pool rbd snap rollback --snap snapname foo
rbd snap rollback rbd/foo@snapname
For the rollback section, you could mention that rollback means
overwriting the current version with data from a snapshot, and takes
longer with larger images. So cloning is preferable for fast recovery.
.. note:: Rolling back an image to a snapshot means overwriting
the current version of the image with data from a snapshot. The
time it takes to execute a rollback increases with the size of the
image. It is **faster to clone** from a snapshot **than to rollback**
an image to a snapshot, and it is the preferred method of returning
to a pre-existing state.
Delete a Snapshot
-----------------
To delete a snapshot with ``rbd``, specify the ``snap rm`` option, the pool
name, the image name and the username. ::
rbd --pool {pool-name} snap rm --snap {snap-name} {image-name}
rbd snap rm {pool-name}/{image-name}@{snap-name}
For example::
rbd --pool rbd snap rm --snap snapname foo
rbd snap rm rbd/foo@snapname
.. note:: Ceph OSDs delete data asynchronously, so deleting a snapshot
doesn't free up the disk space immediately.
Purge Snapshots
---------------
To delete all snapshots for an image with ``rbd``, specify the ``snap purge``
option and the image name. ::
rbd --pool {pool-name} snap purge {image-name}
rbd snap purge {pool-name}/{image-name}
For example::
rbd --pool rbd snap purge foo
rbd snap purge rbd/foo
.. index:: Ceph Block Device; snapshot layering
Layering
========
Ceph supports the ability to create many copy-on-write (COW) clones of a block
device shapshot. Snapshot layering enables Ceph block device clients to create
images very quickly. For example, you might create a block device image with a
Linux VM written to it; then, snapshot the image, protect the snapshot, and
create as many copy-on-write clones as you like. A snapshot is read-only,
so cloning a snapshot simplifies semantics--making it possible to create
clones rapidly.
.. ditaa:: +-------------+ +-------------+
| {s} c999 | | {s} |
| Snapshot | Child refers | COW Clone |
| of Image |<------------*| of Snapshot |
| | to Parent | |
| (read only) | | (writable) |
+-------------+ +-------------+
Parent Child
.. note:: The terms "parent" and "child" mean a Ceph block device snapshot (parent),
and the corresponding image cloned from the snapshot (child). These terms are
important for the command line usage below.
Each cloned image (child) stores a reference to its parent image, which enables
the cloned image to open the parent snapshot and read it.
A COW clone of a snapshot behaves exactly like any other Ceph block device
image. You can read to, write from, clone, and resize cloned images. There are
no special restrictions with cloned images. However, the copy-on-write clone of
a snapshot refers to the snapshot, so you **MUST** protect the snapshot before
you clone it. The following diagram depicts the process.
.. note:: Ceph only supports cloning for ``format 2`` images (i.e., created with
``rbd create --image-format 2``), and is not yet supported by the kernel ``rbd`` module.
So you MUST use QEMU/KVM or ``librbd`` directly to access clones in the current
release.
Getting Started with Layering
-----------------------------
Ceph block device layering is a simple process. You must have an image. You must
create a snapshot of the image. You must protect the snapshot. Once you have
performed these steps, you can begin cloning the snapshot.
.. ditaa:: +----------------------------+ +-----------------------------+
| | | |
| Create Block Device Image |------->| Create a Snapshot |
| | | |
+----------------------------+ +-----------------------------+
|
+--------------------------------------+
|
v
+----------------------------+ +-----------------------------+
| | | |
| Protect the Snapshot |------->| Clone the Snapshot |
| | | |
+----------------------------+ +-----------------------------+
The cloned image has a reference to the parent snapshot, and includes the pool
ID, image ID and snapshot ID. The inclusion of the pool ID means that you may
clone snapshots from one pool to images in another pool.
#. **Image Template:** A common use case for block device layering is to create a
a master image and a snapshot that serves as a template for clones. For example,
a user may create an image for a Linux distribution (e.g., Ubuntu 12.04), and
create a snapshot for it. Periodically, the user may update the image and create
a new snapshot (e.g., ``sudo apt-get update``, ``sudo apt-get upgrade``,
``sudo apt-get dist-upgrade`` followed by `` rbd snap create``). As the image
matures, the user can clone any one of the snapshots.
#. **Extended Template:** A more advanced use case includes extending a template
image that provides more information than a base image. For example, a user may
clone an image (e.g., a VM template) and install other software (e.g., a database,
a content management system, an analytics system, etc.) and then snapshot the
extended image, which itself may be updated just like the base image.
#. **Template Pool:** One way to use block device layering is to create a
pool that contains master images that act as templates, and snapshots of those
templates. You may then extend read-only priveleges to users so that they
may clone the snapshots without the ability to write or execute within the pool.
#. **Image Migration/Recovery:** One way to use block device layering is to migrate
or recover data from one pool into another pool.
Protecting a Snapshot
---------------------
Clones access the parent snapshots. All clones would break if a user inadvertantly
deleted the parent snapshot. To prevent data loss, you **MUST** protect the
snapshot before you can clone it. ::
rbd --pool {pool-name} snap protect --image {image-name} --snap {snapshot-name}
rbd snap protect {pool-name}/{image-name}@{snapshot-name}
For example::
rbd --pool rbd snap protect --image my-image --snap my-snapshot
rbd snap protect rbd/my-image@my-snapshot
.. note:: You cannot delete a protected snapshot.
Cloning a Snapshot
------------------
To clone a snapshot, specify you need to specify the parent pool, image and
snapshot; and, the child pool and image name. You must protect the snapshot
before you can clone it. ::
rbd --pool {pool-name} --image {parent-image} --snap {snap-name} --dest-pool {pool-name} --dest {child-image}
rbd clone {pool-name}/{parent-image}@{snap-name} {pool-name}/{child-image-name}
For example::
rbd clone rbd/my-image@my-snapshot rbd/new-image
.. note:: You may clone a snapshot from one pool to an image in another pool. For example,
you may maintain read-only images and snapshots as templates in one pool, and writeable
clones in another pool.
Unprotecting a Snapshot
-----------------------
Before you can delete a snapshot, you must unprotect it first. Additionally,
you may *NOT* delete snapshots that have references from clones. You must
flatten each clone of a snapshot, before you can delete the snapshot. ::
rbd --pool {pool-name} snap unprotect --image {image-name} --snap {snapshot-name}
rbd snap unprotect {pool-name}/{image-name}@{snapshot-name}
For example::
rbd --pool rbd snap unprotect --image my-image --snap my-snapshot
rbd snap unprotect rbd/my-image@my-snapshot
Listing Children of a Snapshot
------------------------------
To list the children of a snapshot, execute the following::
rbd --pool {pool-name} children --image {image-name} --snap {snap-name}
rbd children {pool-name}/{image-name}@{snapshot-name}
For example::
rbd --pool rbd children --image my-image --snap my-snapshot
rbd children rbd/my-image@my-snapshot
Flattening a Cloned Image
-------------------------
Cloned images retain a reference to the parent snapshot. When you remove the
reference from the child clone to the parent snapshot, you effectively "flatten"
the image by copying the information from the snapshot to the clone. The time
it takes to flatten a clone increases with the size of the snapshot. To delete
a snapshot, you must flatten the child images first. ::
rbd --pool {pool-name} flatten --image {image-name}
rbd flatten {pool-name}/{image-name}
For example::
rbd --pool rbd flatten --image my-image
rbd flatten rbd/my-image
.. note:: Since a flattened image contains all the information from the snapshot,
a flattened image will take up more storage space than a layered clone.
.. _cephx: ../../rados/operations/authentication/
.. _QEMU: ../qemu-rbd/
.. _OpenStack: ../rbd-openstack/
.. _CloudStack: ../rbd-cloudstack/
.. _libvirt: ../libvirt/