mirror of https://github.com/ceph/ceph
1073 lines
42 KiB
ReStructuredText
1073 lines
42 KiB
ReStructuredText
.. _mgr-dashboard:
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Ceph Dashboard
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==============
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Overview
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--------
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The Ceph Dashboard is a built-in web-based Ceph management and monitoring
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application to administer various aspects and objects of the cluster. It is
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implemented as a :ref:`ceph-manager-daemon` module.
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The original Ceph Dashboard that was shipped with Ceph Luminous started
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out as a simple read-only view into various run-time information and performance
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data of a Ceph cluster. It used a very simple architecture to achieve the
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original goal. However, there was a growing demand for adding more web-based
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management capabilities, to make it easier to administer Ceph for users that
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prefer a WebUI over using the command line.
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The new :term:`Ceph Dashboard` module is a replacement of the previous one and
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adds a built-in web based monitoring and administration application to the Ceph
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Manager. The architecture and functionality of this new module is derived from
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and inspired by the `openATTIC Ceph management and monitoring tool
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<https://openattic.org/>`_. The development is actively driven by the team
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behind openATTIC at `SUSE <https://www.suse.com/>`_, with a lot of support from
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companies like `Red Hat <https://redhat.com/>`_ and other members of the Ceph
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community.
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The dashboard module's backend code uses the CherryPy framework and a custom
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REST API implementation. The WebUI implementation is based on
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Angular/TypeScript, merging both functionality from the original dashboard as
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well as adding new functionality originally developed for the standalone version
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of openATTIC. The Ceph Dashboard module is implemented as a web
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application that visualizes information and statistics about the Ceph cluster
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using a web server hosted by ``ceph-mgr``.
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Feature Overview
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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The dashboard provides the following features:
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* **Multi-User and Role Management**: The dashboard supports multiple user
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accounts with different permissions (roles). The user accounts and roles
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can be modified on both the command line and via the WebUI. The dashboard
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supports various methods to enhance password security, e.g. by enforcing
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configurable password complexity rules, forcing users to change their password
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after the first login or after a configurable time period. See
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:ref:`dashboard-user-role-management` for details.
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* **Single Sign-On (SSO)**: the dashboard supports authentication
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via an external identity provider using the SAML 2.0 protocol. See
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:ref:`dashboard-sso-support` for details.
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* **SSL/TLS support**: All HTTP communication between the web browser and the
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dashboard is secured via SSL. A self-signed certificate can be created with
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a built-in command, but it's also possible to import custom certificates
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signed and issued by a CA. See :ref:`dashboard-ssl-tls-support` for details.
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* **Auditing**: the dashboard backend can be configured to log all PUT, POST
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and DELETE API requests in the Ceph audit log. See :ref:`dashboard-auditing`
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for instructions on how to enable this feature.
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* **Internationalization (I18N)**: the dashboard can be used in different
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languages that can be selected at run-time.
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Currently, Ceph Dashboard is capable of monitoring and managing the following
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aspects of your Ceph cluster:
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* **Overall cluster health**: Display overall cluster status, performance
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and capacity metrics.
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* **Embedded Grafana Dashboards**: Ceph Dashboard is capable of embedding
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`Grafana <https://grafana.com>`_ dashboards in many locations, to display
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additional information and performance metrics gathered by the
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:ref:`mgr-prometheus`. See :ref:`dashboard-grafana` for details on how to
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configure this functionality.
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* **Cluster logs**: Display the latest updates to the cluster's event and
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audit log files. Log entries can be filtered by priority, date or keyword.
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* **Hosts**: Display a list of all hosts associated to the cluster, which
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disks are attached, which services are running and which version of Ceph is
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installed.
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* **Performance counters**: Display detailed service-specific statistics for
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each running service.
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* **Monitors**: List all MONs, their quorum status, open sessions.
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* **Monitoring**: Enable creation, re-creation, editing and expiration of
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Prometheus' silences, list the alerting configuration of Prometheus and all
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configured and firing alerts. Show notifications for firing alerts.
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* **Configuration Editor**: Display all available configuration options,
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their description, type and default values and edit the current values.
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* **Pools**: List all Ceph pools and their details (e.g. applications,
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pg-autoscaling, placement groups, replication size, EC profile, CRUSH
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rulesets, quotas etc.)
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* **OSDs**: List all OSDs, their status and usage statistics as well as
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detailed information like attributes (OSD map), metadata, performance
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counters and usage histograms for read/write operations. Mark OSDs
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up/down/out, purge and reweight OSDs, perform scrub operations, modify
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various scrub-related configuration options, select different profiles to
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adjust the level of backfilling activity. List all disks associated with an
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OSD. Set and change the device class of an OSD, display and sort OSDs by
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device class. Deploy new OSDs on new disks/hosts.
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* **Device management**: List all hosts known by the orchestrator. List all
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disks and their properties attached to a node. Display disk health information
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(health prediction and SMART data). Blink enclosure LEDs.
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* **iSCSI**: List all hosts that run the TCMU runner service, display all
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images and their performance characteristics (read/write ops, traffic).
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Create, modify and delete iSCSI targets (via ``ceph-iscsi``). Display the
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iSCSI gateway status on the landing page and info about active initiators.
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See :ref:`dashboard-iscsi-management` for instructions on how to configure
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this feature.
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* **RBD**: List all RBD images and their properties (size, objects, features).
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Create, copy, modify and delete RBD images (incl. snapshots) and manage RBD
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namespaces. Define various I/O or bandwidth limitation settings on a global,
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per-pool or per-image level. Create, delete and rollback snapshots of selected
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images, protect/unprotect these snapshots against modification. Copy or clone
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snapshots, flatten cloned images.
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* **RBD mirroring**: Enable and configure RBD mirroring to a remote Ceph server.
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Lists all active sync daemons and their status, pools and RBD images including
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their synchronization state.
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* **CephFS**: List all active file system clients and associated pools,
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including their usage statistics. Evict active CephFS clients. Manage CephFS
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quotas and snapshots. Browse a CephFS directory structure.
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* **Object Gateway**: List all active object gateways and their performance
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counters. Display and manage (add/edit/delete) object gateway users and their
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details (e.g. quotas) as well as the users' buckets and their details (e.g.
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placement targets, owner, quotas, versioning, multi-factor authentication).
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See :ref:`dashboard-enabling-object-gateway` for configuration instructions.
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* **NFS**: Manage NFS exports of CephFS file systems and RGW S3 buckets via NFS
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Ganesha. See :ref:`dashboard-nfs-ganesha-management` for details on how to
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enable this functionality.
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* **Ceph Manager Modules**: Enable and disable all Ceph Manager modules, change
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the module-specific configuration settings.
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Supported Browsers
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Ceph Dashboard is primarily tested and developed using the following web
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browsers:
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+-----------------------------------------------+----------+
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| Browser | Versions |
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+===============================================+==========+
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| `Chrome <https://www.google.com/chrome/>`_ | 68+ |
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+-----------------------------------------------+----------+
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| `Firefox <https://www.mozilla.org/firefox/>`_ | 61+ |
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+-----------------------------------------------+----------+
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While Ceph Dashboard might work in older browsers, we cannot guarantee it and
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recommend you to update your browser to the latest version.
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Enabling
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--------
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If you have installed ``ceph-mgr-dashboard`` from distribution packages, the
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package management system should have taken care of installing all the required
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dependencies.
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If you're installing Ceph from source and want to start the dashboard from your
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development environment, please see the files ``README.rst`` and ``HACKING.rst``
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in directory ``src/pybind/mgr/dashboard`` of the source code.
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Within a running Ceph cluster, the Ceph Dashboard is enabled with::
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$ ceph mgr module enable dashboard
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Configuration
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-------------
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.. _dashboard-ssl-tls-support:
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SSL/TLS Support
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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All HTTP connections to the dashboard are secured with SSL/TLS by default.
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To get the dashboard up and running quickly, you can generate and install a
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self-signed certificate using the following built-in command::
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$ ceph dashboard create-self-signed-cert
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Note that most web browsers will complain about such self-signed certificates
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and require explicit confirmation before establishing a secure connection to the
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dashboard.
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To properly secure a deployment and to remove the certificate warning, a
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certificate that is issued by a certificate authority (CA) should be used.
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For example, a key pair can be generated with a command similar to::
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$ openssl req -new -nodes -x509 \
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-subj "/O=IT/CN=ceph-mgr-dashboard" -days 3650 \
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-keyout dashboard.key -out dashboard.crt -extensions v3_ca
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The ``dashboard.crt`` file should then be signed by a CA. Once that is done, you
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can enable it for all Ceph manager instances by running the following commands::
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$ ceph dashboard set-ssl-certificate -i dashboard.crt
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$ ceph dashboard set-ssl-certificate-key -i dashboard.key
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If different certificates are desired for each manager instance for some reason,
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the name of the instance can be included as follows (where ``$name`` is the name
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of the ``ceph-mgr`` instance, usually the hostname)::
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$ ceph dashboard set-ssl-certificate $name -i dashboard.crt
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$ ceph dashboard set-ssl-certificate-key $name -i dashboard.key
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SSL can also be disabled by setting this configuration value::
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$ ceph config set mgr mgr/dashboard/ssl false
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This might be useful if the dashboard will be running behind a proxy which does
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not support SSL for its upstream servers or other situations where SSL is not
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wanted or required. See :ref:`dashboard-proxy-configuration` for more details.
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.. warning::
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Use caution when disabling SSL as usernames and passwords will be sent to the
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dashboard unencrypted.
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.. note::
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You need to restart the Ceph manager processes manually after changing the SSL
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certificate and key. This can be accomplished by either running ``ceph mgr
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fail mgr`` or by disabling and re-enabling the dashboard module (which also
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triggers the manager to respawn itself)::
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$ ceph mgr module disable dashboard
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$ ceph mgr module enable dashboard
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Host Name and Port
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Like most web applications, dashboard binds to a TCP/IP address and TCP port.
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By default, the ``ceph-mgr`` daemon hosting the dashboard (i.e., the currently
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active manager) will bind to TCP port 8443 or 8080 when SSL is disabled.
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If no specific address has been configured, the web app will bind to ``::``,
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which corresponds to all available IPv4 and IPv6 addresses.
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These defaults can be changed via the configuration key facility on a
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cluster-wide level (so they apply to all manager instances) as follows::
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$ ceph config set mgr mgr/dashboard/server_addr $IP
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$ ceph config set mgr mgr/dashboard/server_port $PORT
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$ ceph config set mgr mgr/dashboard/ssl_server_port $PORT
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Since each ``ceph-mgr`` hosts its own instance of dashboard, it may also be
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necessary to configure them separately. The IP address and port for a specific
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manager instance can be changed with the following commands::
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$ ceph config set mgr mgr/dashboard/$name/server_addr $IP
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$ ceph config set mgr mgr/dashboard/$name/server_port $PORT
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$ ceph config set mgr mgr/dashboard/$name/ssl_server_port $PORT
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Replace ``$name`` with the ID of the ceph-mgr instance hosting the dashboard web
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app.
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.. note::
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The command ``ceph mgr services`` will show you all endpoints that are
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currently configured. Look for the ``dashboard`` key to obtain the URL for
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accessing the dashboard.
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Username and Password
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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In order to be able to log in, you need to create a user account and associate
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it with at least one role. We provide a set of predefined *system roles* that
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you can use. For more details please refer to the `User and Role Management`_
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section.
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To create a user with the administrator role you can use the following
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commands::
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$ ceph dashboard ac-user-create <username> <password> administrator
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Accessing the Dashboard
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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You can now access the dashboard using your (JavaScript-enabled) web browser, by
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pointing it to any of the host names or IP addresses and the selected TCP port
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where a manager instance is running: e.g., ``http(s)://<$IP>:<$PORT>/``.
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You should then be greeted by the dashboard login page, requesting your
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previously defined username and password.
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.. _dashboard-enabling-object-gateway:
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Enabling the Object Gateway Management Frontend
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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To use the Object Gateway management functionality of the dashboard, you will
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need to provide the login credentials of a user with the ``system`` flag
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enabled.
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If you do not have a user which shall be used for providing those credentials,
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you will also need to create one::
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$ radosgw-admin user create --uid=<user_id> --display-name=<display_name> \
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--system
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Take note of the keys ``access_key`` and ``secret_key`` in the output of this
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command.
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The credentials of an existing user can also be obtained by using
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`radosgw-admin`::
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$ radosgw-admin user info --uid=<user_id>
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Finally, provide the credentials to the dashboard::
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$ ceph dashboard set-rgw-api-access-key <access_key>
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$ ceph dashboard set-rgw-api-secret-key <secret_key>
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In a typical default configuration with a single RGW endpoint, this is all you
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have to do to get the Object Gateway management functionality working. The
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dashboard will try to automatically determine the host and port of the Object
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Gateway by obtaining this information from the Ceph Manager's service map.
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If multiple zones are used, it will automatically determine the host within the
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master zone group and master zone. This should be sufficient for most setups,
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but in some circumstances you might want to set the host and port manually::
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$ ceph dashboard set-rgw-api-host <host>
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$ ceph dashboard set-rgw-api-port <port>
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In addition to the settings mentioned so far, the following settings do also
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exist and you may find yourself in the situation that you have to use them::
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$ ceph dashboard set-rgw-api-scheme <scheme> # http or https
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$ ceph dashboard set-rgw-api-admin-resource <admin_resource>
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$ ceph dashboard set-rgw-api-user-id <user_id>
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If you are using a self-signed certificate in your Object Gateway setup, then
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you should disable certificate verification in the dashboard to avoid refused
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connections, e.g. caused by certificates signed by unknown CA or not matching
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the host name::
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$ ceph dashboard set-rgw-api-ssl-verify False
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If the Object Gateway takes too long to process requests and the dashboard runs
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into timeouts, then you can set the timeout value to your needs::
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$ ceph dashboard set-rest-requests-timeout <seconds>
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The default value is 45 seconds.
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.. _dashboard-iscsi-management:
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Enabling iSCSI Management
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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The Ceph Dashboard can manage iSCSI targets using the REST API provided by the
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`rbd-target-api` service of the :ref:`ceph-iscsi`. Please make sure that it's
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installed and enabled on the iSCSI gateways.
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.. note::
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The iSCSI management functionality of Ceph Dashboard depends on the latest
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version 3 of the `ceph-iscsi <https://github.com/ceph/ceph-iscsi>`_ project.
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Make sure that your operating system provides the correct version, otherwise
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the dashboard won't enable the management features.
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If ceph-iscsi REST API is configured in HTTPS mode and its using a self-signed
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certificate, then you need to configure the dashboard to avoid SSL certificate
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verification when accessing ceph-iscsi API.
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To disable API SSL verification run the following command::
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$ ceph dashboard set-iscsi-api-ssl-verification false
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The available iSCSI gateways must be defined using the following commands::
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$ ceph dashboard iscsi-gateway-list
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$ ceph dashboard iscsi-gateway-add <scheme>://<username>:<password>@<host>[:port]
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$ ceph dashboard iscsi-gateway-rm <gateway_name>
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.. _dashboard-grafana:
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Enabling the Embedding of Grafana Dashboards
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Grafana and Prometheus are likely going to be bundled and installed by some
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orchestration tools along Ceph in the near future, but currently, you will have
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to install and configure both manually. After you have installed Prometheus and
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Grafana on your preferred hosts, proceed with the following steps.
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1. Enable the Ceph Exporter which comes as Ceph Manager module by running::
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$ ceph mgr module enable prometheus
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More details can be found in the documentation of the :ref:`mgr-prometheus`.
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2. Add the corresponding scrape configuration to Prometheus. This may look
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like::
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global:
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scrape_interval: 5s
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scrape_configs:
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- job_name: 'prometheus'
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static_configs:
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- targets: ['localhost:9090']
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- job_name: 'ceph'
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static_configs:
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- targets: ['localhost:9283']
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- job_name: 'node-exporter'
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static_configs:
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- targets: ['localhost:9100']
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3. Add Prometheus as data source to Grafana
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4. Install the `vonage-status-panel and grafana-piechart-panel` plugins using::
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grafana-cli plugins install vonage-status-panel
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grafana-cli plugins install grafana-piechart-panel
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5. Add the Dashboards to Grafana:
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Dashboards can be added to Grafana by importing dashboard jsons.
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Following command can be used for downloading json files::
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wget https://raw.githubusercontent.com/ceph/ceph/master/monitoring/grafana/dashboards/<Dashboard-name>.json
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You can find all the dashboard jsons `here <https://github.com/ceph/ceph/tree/
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master/monitoring/grafana/dashboards>`_ .
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For Example, for ceph-cluster overview you can use::
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wget https://raw.githubusercontent.com/ceph/ceph/master/monitoring/grafana/dashboards/ceph-cluster.json
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6. Configure Grafana in `/etc/grafana/grafana.ini` to adapt anonymous mode::
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[auth.anonymous]
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enabled = true
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org_name = Main Org.
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org_role = Viewer
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In newer versions of Grafana (starting with 6.2.0-beta1) a new setting named
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``allow_embedding`` has been introduced. This setting needs to be explicitly
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set to ``true`` for the Grafana integration in Ceph Dashboard to work, as its
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default is ``false``.
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::
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[security]
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allow_embedding = true
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After you have set up Grafana and Prometheus, you will need to configure the
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connection information that the Ceph Dashboard will use to access Grafana.
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You need to tell the dashboard on which url Grafana instance is running/deployed::
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$ ceph dashboard set-grafana-api-url <grafana-server-url> # default: ''
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The format of url is : `<protocol>:<IP-address>:<port>`
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.. note::
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Ceph Dashboard embeds the Grafana dashboards via ``iframe`` HTML elements.
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If Grafana is configured without SSL/TLS support, most browsers will block the
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embedding of insecure content into a secured web page, if the SSL support in
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the dashboard has been enabled (which is the default configuration). If you
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can't see the embedded Grafana dashboards after enabling them as outlined
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above, check your browser's documentation on how to unblock mixed content.
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Alternatively, consider enabling SSL/TLS support in Grafana.
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If you are using a self-signed certificate in your Grafana setup, then you should
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disable certificate verification in the dashboard to avoid refused connections,
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e.g. caused by certificates signed by unknown CA or not matching the host name::
|
|
|
|
$ ceph dashboard set-grafana-api-ssl-verify False
|
|
|
|
You can directly access Grafana Instance as well to monitor your cluster.
|
|
|
|
.. _dashboard-sso-support:
|
|
|
|
Enabling Single Sign-On (SSO)
|
|
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
|
|
|
|
The Ceph Dashboard supports external authentication of users via the
|
|
`SAML 2.0 <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SAML_2.0>`_ protocol. You need to create
|
|
the user accounts and associate them with the desired roles first, as authorization
|
|
is still performed by the Dashboard. However, the authentication process can be
|
|
performed by an existing Identity Provider (IdP).
|
|
|
|
.. note::
|
|
|
|
Ceph Dashboard SSO support relies on onelogin's
|
|
`python-saml <https://pypi.org/project/python-saml/>`_ library.
|
|
Please ensure that this library is installed on your system, either by using
|
|
your distribution's package management or via Python's `pip` installer.
|
|
|
|
To configure SSO on Ceph Dashboard, you should use the following command::
|
|
|
|
$ ceph dashboard sso setup saml2 <ceph_dashboard_base_url> <idp_metadata> {<idp_username_attribute>} {<idp_entity_id>} {<sp_x_509_cert>} {<sp_private_key>}
|
|
|
|
Parameters:
|
|
|
|
* **<ceph_dashboard_base_url>**: Base URL where Ceph Dashboard is accessible (e.g., `https://cephdashboard.local`)
|
|
* **<idp_metadata>**: URL to remote (`http://`, `https://`) or local (`file://`) path or content of the IdP metadata XML (e.g., `https://myidp/metadata`, `file:///home/myuser/metadata.xml`).
|
|
* **<idp_username_attribute>** *(optional)*: Attribute that should be used to get the username from the authentication response. Defaults to `uid`.
|
|
* **<idp_entity_id>** *(optional)*: Use this when more than one entity id exists on the IdP metadata.
|
|
* **<sp_x_509_cert> / <sp_private_key>** *(optional)*: File path of the certificate that should be used by Ceph Dashboard (Service Provider) for signing and encryption.
|
|
|
|
.. note::
|
|
|
|
The issuer value of SAML requests will follow this pattern: **<ceph_dashboard_base_url>**/auth/saml2/metadata
|
|
|
|
To display the current SAML 2.0 configuration, use the following command::
|
|
|
|
$ ceph dashboard sso show saml2
|
|
|
|
.. note::
|
|
|
|
For more information about `onelogin_settings`, please check the `onelogin documentation <https://github.com/onelogin/python-saml>`_.
|
|
|
|
To disable SSO::
|
|
|
|
$ ceph dashboard sso disable
|
|
|
|
To check if SSO is enabled::
|
|
|
|
$ ceph dashboard sso status
|
|
|
|
To enable SSO::
|
|
|
|
$ ceph dashboard sso enable saml2
|
|
|
|
.. _dashboard-alerting:
|
|
|
|
Enabling Prometheus Alerting
|
|
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
|
|
|
|
Using Prometheus for monitoring, you have to define `alerting rules
|
|
<https://prometheus.io/docs/prometheus/latest/configuration/alerting_rules>`_.
|
|
To manage them you need to use the `Alertmanager
|
|
<https://prometheus.io/docs/alerting/alertmanager>`_.
|
|
If you are not using the Alertmanager yet, please `install it
|
|
<https://github.com/prometheus/alertmanager#install>`_ as it's mandatory in
|
|
order to receive and manage alerts from Prometheus.
|
|
|
|
The Alertmanager capabilities can be consumed by the dashboard in three different
|
|
ways:
|
|
|
|
#. Use the notification receiver of the dashboard.
|
|
|
|
#. Use the Prometheus Alertmanager API.
|
|
|
|
#. Use both sources simultaneously.
|
|
|
|
All three methods are going to notify you about alerts. You won't be notified
|
|
twice if you use both sources, but you need to consume at least the Alertmanager API
|
|
in order to manage silences.
|
|
|
|
1. Use the notification receiver of the dashboard
|
|
|
|
This allows you to get notifications as `configured
|
|
<https://prometheus.io/docs/alerting/configuration/>`_ from the Alertmanager.
|
|
You will get notified inside the dashboard once a notification is send out,
|
|
but you are not able to manage alerts.
|
|
|
|
Add the dashboard receiver and the new route to your Alertmanager
|
|
configuration. This should look like::
|
|
|
|
route:
|
|
receiver: 'ceph-dashboard'
|
|
...
|
|
receivers:
|
|
- name: 'ceph-dashboard'
|
|
webhook_configs:
|
|
- url: '<url-to-dashboard>/api/prometheus_receiver'
|
|
|
|
|
|
Please make sure that the Alertmanager considers your SSL certificate in terms
|
|
of the dashboard as valid. For more information about the correct
|
|
configuration checkout the `<http_config> documentation
|
|
<https://prometheus.io/docs/alerting/configuration/#%3Chttp_config%3E>`_.
|
|
|
|
2. Use the API of Prometheus and the Alertmanager
|
|
|
|
This allows you to manage alerts and silences. This will enable the "Active
|
|
Alerts", "All Alerts" as well as the "Silences" tabs in the "Monitoring"
|
|
section of the "Cluster" menu entry.
|
|
|
|
Alerts can be sorted by name, job, severity, state and start time.
|
|
Unfortunately it's not possible to know when an alert was sent out through a
|
|
notification by the Alertmanager based on your configuration, that's why the
|
|
dashboard will notify the user on any visible change to an alert and will
|
|
notify the changed alert.
|
|
|
|
Silences can be sorted by id, creator, status, start, updated and end time.
|
|
Silences can be created in various ways, it's also possible to expire them.
|
|
|
|
#. Create from scratch
|
|
|
|
#. Based on a selected alert
|
|
|
|
#. Recreate from expired silence
|
|
|
|
#. Update a silence (which will recreate and expire it (default Alertmanager behaviour))
|
|
|
|
To use it, specify the host and port of the Alertmanager server::
|
|
|
|
$ ceph dashboard set-alertmanager-api-host <alertmanager-host:port> # default: ''
|
|
|
|
For example::
|
|
|
|
$ ceph dashboard set-alertmanager-api-host 'http://localhost:9093'
|
|
|
|
To be able to see all configured alerts, you will need to configure the URL to
|
|
the Prometheus API. Using this API, the UI will also help you in verifying
|
|
that a new silence will match a corresponding alert.
|
|
|
|
::
|
|
|
|
$ ceph dashboard set-prometheus-api-host <prometheus-host:port> # default: ''
|
|
|
|
For example::
|
|
|
|
$ ceph dashboard set-prometheus-api-host 'http://localhost:9090'
|
|
|
|
After setting up the hosts, you have to refresh the dashboard in your browser window.
|
|
|
|
3. Use both methods
|
|
|
|
The different behaviors of both methods are configured in a way that they
|
|
should not disturb each other through annoying duplicated notifications
|
|
popping up.
|
|
|
|
.. _dashboard-user-role-management:
|
|
|
|
User and Role Management
|
|
------------------------
|
|
|
|
Password Policy
|
|
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
|
|
|
|
By default the password policy feature is enabled including the following
|
|
checks:
|
|
|
|
- Is the password longer than N characters?
|
|
- Are the old and new password the same?
|
|
|
|
The password policy feature can be switched on or off completely::
|
|
|
|
$ ceph dashboard set-pwd-policy-enabled <true|false>
|
|
|
|
The following individual checks can be switched on or off::
|
|
|
|
$ ceph dashboard set-pwd-policy-check-length-enabled <true|false>
|
|
$ ceph dashboard set-pwd-policy-check-oldpwd-enabled <true|false>
|
|
$ ceph dashboard set-pwd-policy-check-username-enabled <true|false>
|
|
$ ceph dashboard set-pwd-policy-check-exclusion-list-enabled <true|false>
|
|
$ ceph dashboard set-pwd-policy-check-complexity-enabled <true|false>
|
|
$ ceph dashboard set-pwd-policy-check-sequential-chars-enabled <true|false>
|
|
$ ceph dashboard set-pwd-policy-check-repetitive-chars-enabled <true|false>
|
|
|
|
Additionally the following options are available to configure the password
|
|
policy behaviour.
|
|
|
|
- The minimum password length (defaults to 8)::
|
|
|
|
$ ceph dashboard set-pwd-policy-min-length <N>
|
|
|
|
- The minimum password complexity (defaults to 10)::
|
|
|
|
$ ceph dashboard set-pwd-policy-min-complexity <N>
|
|
|
|
The password complexity is calculated by classifying each character in
|
|
the password. The complexity count starts by 0. A character is rated by
|
|
the following rules in the given order.
|
|
|
|
- Increase by 1 if the character is a digit.
|
|
- Increase by 1 if the character is a lower case ASCII character.
|
|
- Increase by 2 if the character is an upper case ASCII character.
|
|
- Increase by 3 if the character is a special character like ``!"#$%&'()*+,-./:;<=>?@[\]^_`{|}~``.
|
|
- Increase by 5 if the character has not been classified by one of the previous rules.
|
|
|
|
- A list of comma separated words that are not allowed to be used in a
|
|
password::
|
|
|
|
$ ceph dashboard set-pwd-policy-exclusion-list <word>[,...]
|
|
|
|
|
|
User Accounts
|
|
^^^^^^^^^^^^^
|
|
|
|
Ceph Dashboard supports managing multiple user accounts. Each user account
|
|
consists of a username, a password (stored in encrypted form using ``bcrypt``),
|
|
an optional name, and an optional email address.
|
|
|
|
If a new user is created via Web UI, it is possible to set an option that this
|
|
user must assign a new password when they log in for the first time.
|
|
|
|
User accounts are stored in MON's configuration database, and are globally
|
|
shared across all ceph-mgr instances.
|
|
|
|
We provide a set of CLI commands to manage user accounts:
|
|
|
|
- *Show User(s)*::
|
|
|
|
$ ceph dashboard ac-user-show [<username>]
|
|
|
|
- *Create User*::
|
|
|
|
$ ceph dashboard ac-user-create [--enabled] [--force-password] [--pwd_update_required] <username> [<password>] [<rolename>] [<name>] [<email>] [<pwd_expiration_date>]
|
|
|
|
To bypass the password policy checks use the `force-password` option.
|
|
Use the option `pwd_update_required` so that a newly created user has
|
|
to change their password after the first login.
|
|
|
|
- *Delete User*::
|
|
|
|
$ ceph dashboard ac-user-delete <username>
|
|
|
|
- *Change Password*::
|
|
|
|
$ ceph dashboard ac-user-set-password [--force-password] <username> <password>
|
|
|
|
- *Change Password Hash*::
|
|
|
|
$ ceph dashboard ac-user-set-password-hash <username> <hash>
|
|
|
|
The hash must be a bcrypt hash and salt, e.g. ``$2b$12$Pt3Vq/rDt2y9glTPSV.VFegiLkQeIpddtkhoFetNApYmIJOY8gau2``.
|
|
This can be used to import users from an external database.
|
|
|
|
- *Modify User (name, and email)*::
|
|
|
|
$ ceph dashboard ac-user-set-info <username> <name> <email>
|
|
|
|
- *Disable User*::
|
|
|
|
$ ceph dashboard ac-user-disable <username>
|
|
|
|
- *Enable User*::
|
|
|
|
$ ceph dashboard ac-user-enable <username>
|
|
|
|
User Roles and Permissions
|
|
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
|
|
|
|
User accounts are also associated with a set of roles that define which
|
|
dashboard functionality can be accessed by the user.
|
|
|
|
The Dashboard functionality/modules are grouped within a *security scope*.
|
|
Security scopes are predefined and static. The current available security
|
|
scopes are:
|
|
|
|
- **hosts**: includes all features related to the ``Hosts`` menu
|
|
entry.
|
|
- **config-opt**: includes all features related to management of Ceph
|
|
configuration options.
|
|
- **pool**: includes all features related to pool management.
|
|
- **osd**: includes all features related to OSD management.
|
|
- **monitor**: includes all features related to Monitor management.
|
|
- **rbd-image**: includes all features related to RBD image
|
|
management.
|
|
- **rbd-mirroring**: includes all features related to RBD-Mirroring
|
|
management.
|
|
- **iscsi**: includes all features related to iSCSI management.
|
|
- **rgw**: includes all features related to Rados Gateway management.
|
|
- **cephfs**: includes all features related to CephFS management.
|
|
- **manager**: include all features related to Ceph Manager
|
|
management.
|
|
- **log**: include all features related to Ceph logs management.
|
|
- **grafana**: include all features related to Grafana proxy.
|
|
- **prometheus**: include all features related to Prometheus alert management.
|
|
- **dashboard-settings**: allows to change dashboard settings.
|
|
|
|
A *role* specifies a set of mappings between a *security scope* and a set of
|
|
*permissions*. There are four types of permissions:
|
|
|
|
- **read**
|
|
- **create**
|
|
- **update**
|
|
- **delete**
|
|
|
|
See below for an example of a role specification based on a Python dictionary::
|
|
|
|
# example of a role
|
|
{
|
|
'role': 'my_new_role',
|
|
'description': 'My new role',
|
|
'scopes_permissions': {
|
|
'pool': ['read', 'create'],
|
|
'rbd-image': ['read', 'create', 'update', 'delete']
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
The above role dictates that a user has *read* and *create* permissions for
|
|
features related to pool management, and has full permissions for
|
|
features related to RBD image management.
|
|
|
|
The Dashboard already provides a set of predefined roles that we call
|
|
*system roles*, and can be used right away in a fresh Ceph Dashboard
|
|
installation.
|
|
|
|
The list of system roles are:
|
|
|
|
- **administrator**: provides full permissions for all security scopes.
|
|
- **read-only**: provides *read* permission for all security scopes except
|
|
the dashboard settings.
|
|
- **block-manager**: provides full permissions for *rbd-image*,
|
|
*rbd-mirroring*, and *iscsi* scopes.
|
|
- **rgw-manager**: provides full permissions for the *rgw* scope
|
|
- **cluster-manager**: provides full permissions for the *hosts*, *osd*,
|
|
*monitor*, *manager*, and *config-opt* scopes.
|
|
- **pool-manager**: provides full permissions for the *pool* scope.
|
|
- **cephfs-manager**: provides full permissions for the *cephfs* scope.
|
|
|
|
The list of currently available roles can be retrieved by the following
|
|
command::
|
|
|
|
$ ceph dashboard ac-role-show [<rolename>]
|
|
|
|
It is also possible to create new roles using CLI commands. The available
|
|
commands to manage roles are the following:
|
|
|
|
- *Create Role*::
|
|
|
|
$ ceph dashboard ac-role-create <rolename> [<description>]
|
|
|
|
- *Delete Role*::
|
|
|
|
$ ceph dashboard ac-role-delete <rolename>
|
|
|
|
- *Add Scope Permissions to Role*::
|
|
|
|
$ ceph dashboard ac-role-add-scope-perms <rolename> <scopename> <permission> [<permission>...]
|
|
|
|
- *Delete Scope Permission from Role*::
|
|
|
|
$ ceph dashboard ac-role-del-scope-perms <rolename> <scopename>
|
|
|
|
To associate roles to users, the following CLI commands are available:
|
|
|
|
- *Set User Roles*::
|
|
|
|
$ ceph dashboard ac-user-set-roles <username> <rolename> [<rolename>...]
|
|
|
|
- *Add Roles To User*::
|
|
|
|
$ ceph dashboard ac-user-add-roles <username> <rolename> [<rolename>...]
|
|
|
|
- *Delete Roles from User*::
|
|
|
|
$ ceph dashboard ac-user-del-roles <username> <rolename> [<rolename>...]
|
|
|
|
|
|
Example of User and Custom Role Creation
|
|
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
|
|
|
|
In this section we show a full example of the commands that need to be used
|
|
in order to create a user account, that should be able to manage RBD images,
|
|
view and create Ceph pools, and have read-only access to any other scopes.
|
|
|
|
1. *Create the user*::
|
|
|
|
$ ceph dashboard ac-user-create bob mypassword
|
|
|
|
2. *Create role and specify scope permissions*::
|
|
|
|
$ ceph dashboard ac-role-create rbd/pool-manager
|
|
$ ceph dashboard ac-role-add-scope-perms rbd/pool-manager rbd-image read create update delete
|
|
$ ceph dashboard ac-role-add-scope-perms rbd/pool-manager pool read create
|
|
|
|
3. *Associate roles to user*::
|
|
|
|
$ ceph dashboard ac-user-set-roles bob rbd/pool-manager read-only
|
|
|
|
.. _dashboard-proxy-configuration:
|
|
|
|
Proxy Configuration
|
|
-------------------
|
|
|
|
In a Ceph cluster with multiple ceph-mgr instances, only the dashboard running
|
|
on the currently active ceph-mgr daemon will serve incoming requests. Accessing
|
|
the dashboard's TCP port on any of the other ceph-mgr instances that are
|
|
currently on standby will perform a HTTP redirect (303) to the currently active
|
|
manager's dashboard URL. This way, you can point your browser to any of the
|
|
ceph-mgr instances in order to access the dashboard.
|
|
|
|
If you want to establish a fixed URL to reach the dashboard or if you don't want
|
|
to allow direct connections to the manager nodes, you could set up a proxy that
|
|
automatically forwards incoming requests to the currently active ceph-mgr
|
|
instance.
|
|
|
|
Configuring a URL Prefix
|
|
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
|
|
|
|
If you are accessing the dashboard via a reverse proxy configuration,
|
|
you may wish to service it under a URL prefix. To get the dashboard
|
|
to use hyperlinks that include your prefix, you can set the
|
|
``url_prefix`` setting:
|
|
|
|
::
|
|
|
|
ceph config set mgr mgr/dashboard/url_prefix $PREFIX
|
|
|
|
so you can access the dashboard at ``http://$IP:$PORT/$PREFIX/``.
|
|
|
|
Disable the redirection
|
|
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
|
|
|
|
If the dashboard is behind a load-balancing proxy like `HAProxy <https://www.haproxy.org/>`_
|
|
you might want to disable the redirection behaviour to prevent situations that
|
|
internal (unresolvable) URL's are published to the frontend client. Use the
|
|
following command to get the dashboard to respond with a HTTP error (500 by default)
|
|
instead of redirecting to the active dashboard::
|
|
|
|
$ ceph config set mgr mgr/dashboard/standby_behaviour "error"
|
|
|
|
To reset the setting to the default redirection behaviour, use the following command::
|
|
|
|
$ ceph config set mgr mgr/dashboard/standby_behaviour "redirect"
|
|
|
|
Configure the error status code
|
|
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
|
|
|
|
When the redirection behaviour is disabled, then you want to customize the HTTP status
|
|
code of standby dashboards. To do so you need to run the command::
|
|
|
|
$ ceph config set mgr mgr/dashboard/standby_error_status_code 503
|
|
|
|
HAProxy example configuration
|
|
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
|
|
|
|
Below you will find an example configuration for SSL/TLS pass through using
|
|
`HAProxy <https://www.haproxy.org/>`_.
|
|
|
|
Please note that the configuration works under the following conditions.
|
|
If the dashboard fails over, the front-end client might receive a HTTP redirect
|
|
(303) response and will be redirected to an unresolvable host. This happens when
|
|
the failover occurs during two HAProxy health checks. In this situation the
|
|
previously active dashboard node will now respond with a 303 which points to
|
|
the new active node. To prevent that situation you should consider to disable
|
|
the redirection behaviour on standby nodes.
|
|
|
|
::
|
|
|
|
defaults
|
|
log global
|
|
option log-health-checks
|
|
timeout connect 5s
|
|
timeout client 50s
|
|
timeout server 450s
|
|
|
|
frontend dashboard_front
|
|
mode http
|
|
bind *:80
|
|
option httplog
|
|
redirect scheme https code 301 if !{ ssl_fc }
|
|
|
|
frontend dashboard_front_ssl
|
|
mode tcp
|
|
bind *:443
|
|
option tcplog
|
|
default_backend dashboard_back_ssl
|
|
|
|
backend dashboard_back_ssl
|
|
mode tcp
|
|
option httpchk GET /
|
|
http-check expect status 200
|
|
server x <HOST>:<PORT> check-ssl check verify none
|
|
server y <HOST>:<PORT> check-ssl check verify none
|
|
server z <HOST>:<PORT> check-ssl check verify none
|
|
|
|
.. _dashboard-auditing:
|
|
|
|
Auditing API Requests
|
|
---------------------
|
|
|
|
The REST API is capable of logging PUT, POST and DELETE requests to the Ceph
|
|
audit log. This feature is disabled by default, but can be enabled with the
|
|
following command::
|
|
|
|
$ ceph dashboard set-audit-api-enabled <true|false>
|
|
|
|
If enabled, the following parameters are logged per each request:
|
|
|
|
* from - The origin of the request, e.g. https://[::1]:44410
|
|
* path - The REST API path, e.g. /api/auth
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* method - e.g. PUT, POST or DELETE
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* user - The name of the user, otherwise 'None'
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The logging of the request payload (the arguments and their values) is enabled
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by default. Execute the following command to disable this behaviour::
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$ ceph dashboard set-audit-api-log-payload <true|false>
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A log entry may look like this::
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2018-10-22 15:27:01.302514 mgr.x [INF] [DASHBOARD] from='https://[::ffff:127.0.0.1]:37022' path='/api/rgw/user/klaus' method='PUT' user='admin' params='{"max_buckets": "1000", "display_name": "Klaus Mustermann", "uid": "klaus", "suspended": "0", "email": "klaus.mustermann@ceph.com"}'
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.. _dashboard-nfs-ganesha-management:
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NFS-Ganesha Management
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----------------------
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|
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Ceph Dashboard can manage `NFS Ganesha <http://nfs-ganesha.github.io/>`_ exports that use
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CephFS or RadosGW as their backstore.
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|
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To enable this feature in Ceph Dashboard there are some assumptions that need
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to be met regarding the way NFS-Ganesha services are configured.
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|
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The dashboard manages NFS-Ganesha config files stored in RADOS objects on the Ceph Cluster.
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NFS-Ganesha must store part of their configuration in the Ceph cluster.
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|
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These configuration files must follow some conventions.
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Each export block must be stored in its own RADOS object named
|
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``export-<id>``, where ``<id>`` must match the ``Export_ID`` attribute of the
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export configuration. Then, for each NFS-Ganesha service daemon there should
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|
exist a RADOS object named ``conf-<daemon_id>``, where ``<daemon_id>`` is an
|
|
arbitrary string that should uniquely identify the daemon instance (e.g., the
|
|
hostname where the daemon is running).
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Each ``conf-<daemon_id>`` object contains the RADOS URLs to the exports that
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|
the NFS-Ganesha daemon should serve. These URLs are of the form::
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%url rados://<pool_name>[/<namespace>]/export-<id>
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Both the ``conf-<daemon_id>`` and ``export-<id>`` objects must be stored in the
|
|
same RADOS pool/namespace.
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|
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Configuring NFS-Ganesha in the Dashboard
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|
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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|
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To enable the management of NFS-Ganesha exports in Ceph Dashboard, we only
|
|
need to tell the Dashboard, in which RADOS pool and namespace the
|
|
configuration objects are stored. Then, Ceph Dashboard can access the objects
|
|
by following the naming convention described above.
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|
|
|
The Dashboard command to configure the NFS-Ganesha configuration objects
|
|
location is::
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$ ceph dashboard set-ganesha-clusters-rados-pool-namespace <pool_name>[/<namespace>]
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|
|
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After running the above command, Ceph Dashboard is able to find the NFS-Ganesha
|
|
configuration objects and we can start manage the exports through the Web UI.
|
|
|
|
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|
Support for Multiple NFS-Ganesha Clusters
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|
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
|
|
|
|
Ceph Dashboard also supports the management of NFS-Ganesha exports belonging
|
|
to different NFS-Ganesha clusters. An NFS-Ganesha cluster is a group of
|
|
NFS-Ganesha service daemons sharing the same exports. Different NFS-Ganesha
|
|
clusters are independent and don't share the exports configuration between each
|
|
other.
|
|
|
|
Each NFS-Ganesha cluster should store its configuration objects in a
|
|
different RADOS pool/namespace to isolate the configuration from each other.
|
|
|
|
To specify the locations of the configuration of each NFS-Ganesha cluster we
|
|
can use the same command as above but with a different value pattern::
|
|
|
|
$ ceph dashboard set-ganesha-clusters-rados-pool-namespace <cluster_id>:<pool_name>[/<namespace>](,<cluster_id>:<pool_name>[/<namespace>])*
|
|
|
|
The ``<cluster_id>`` is an arbitrary string that should uniquely identify the
|
|
NFS-Ganesha cluster.
|
|
|
|
When configuring the Ceph Dashboard with multiple NFS-Ganesha clusters, the
|
|
Web UI will automatically allow to choose to which cluster an export belongs.
|
|
|
|
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|
Plug-ins
|
|
--------
|
|
|
|
Dashboard Plug-ins extend the functionality of the dashboard in a modular
|
|
and loosely coupled fashion.
|
|
|
|
.. include:: dashboard_plugins/feature_toggles.inc.rst
|
|
.. include:: dashboard_plugins/debug.inc.rst
|