ceph/doc/man/8/radosgw.rst

230 lines
6.2 KiB
ReStructuredText

:orphan:
===============================
radosgw -- rados REST gateway
===============================
.. program:: radosgw
Synopsis
========
| **radosgw**
Description
===========
:program:`radosgw` is an HTTP REST gateway for the RADOS object store, a part
of the Ceph distributed storage system. It is implemented as a FastCGI
module using libfcgi, and can be used in conjunction with any FastCGI
capable web server.
Options
=======
.. option:: -c ceph.conf, --conf=ceph.conf
Use ``ceph.conf`` configuration file instead of the default
``/etc/ceph/ceph.conf`` to determine monitor addresses during startup.
.. option:: -m monaddress[:port]
Connect to specified monitor (instead of looking through ``ceph.conf``).
.. option:: -i ID, --id ID
Set the ID portion of name for radosgw
.. option:: -n TYPE.ID, --name TYPE.ID
Set the rados user name for the gateway (eg. client.radosgw.gateway)
.. option:: --cluster NAME
Set the cluster name (default: ceph)
.. option:: -d
Run in foreground, log to stderr
.. option:: -f
Run in foreground, log to usual location
.. option:: --rgw-region=region
The region where radosgw runs
.. option:: --rgw-zone=zone
The zone where radosgw runs
Configuration
=============
Earlier RADOS Gateway had to be configured with ``Apache`` and ``mod_fastcgi``.
Now, ``mod_proxy_fcgi`` module is used instead of ``mod_fastcgi``.
``mod_proxy_fcgi`` works differently than a traditional FastCGI module. This
module requires the service of ``mod_proxy`` which provides support for the
FastCGI protocol. So, to be able to handle FastCGI protocol, both ``mod_proxy``
and ``mod_proxy_fcgi`` have to be present in the server. Unlike ``mod_fastcgi``,
``mod_proxy_fcgi`` cannot start the application process. Some platforms have
``fcgistarter`` for that purpose. However, external launching of application
or process management may be available in the FastCGI application framework
in use.
``Apache`` must be configured in a way that enables ``mod_proxy_fcgi`` to be
used with localhost tcp.
The following steps show the configuration in Ceph's configuration file i.e,
``/etc/ceph/ceph.conf`` and the gateway configuration file i.e,
``/etc/httpd/conf.d/rgw.conf`` (RPM-based distros) or
``/etc/apache2/conf-available/rgw.conf`` (Debian-based distros) with localhost
tcp:
#. For distros with Apache 2.2 and early versions of Apache 2.4 that use
localhost TCP, append the following contents to ``/etc/ceph/ceph.conf``::
[client.radosgw.gateway]
host = {hostname}
keyring = /etc/ceph/ceph.client.radosgw.keyring
log_file = /var/log/ceph/client.radosgw.gateway.log
rgw_frontends = fastcgi socket_port=9000 socket_host=0.0.0.0
rgw_print_continue = false
#. Add the following content in the gateway configuration file:
For Debian/Ubuntu add in ``/etc/apache2/conf-available/rgw.conf``::
<VirtualHost *:80>
ServerName localhost
DocumentRoot /var/www/html
ErrorLog /var/log/apache2/rgw_error.log
CustomLog /var/log/apache2/rgw_access.log combined
# LogLevel debug
RewriteEngine On
RewriteRule .* - [E=HTTP_AUTHORIZATION:%{HTTP:Authorization},L]
SetEnv proxy-nokeepalive 1
ProxyPass / fcgi://localhost:9000/
</VirtualHost>
For CentOS/RHEL add in ``/etc/httpd/conf.d/rgw.conf``::
<VirtualHost *:80>
ServerName localhost
DocumentRoot /var/www/html
ErrorLog /var/log/httpd/rgw_error.log
CustomLog /var/log/httpd/rgw_access.log combined
# LogLevel debug
RewriteEngine On
RewriteRule .* - [E=HTTP_AUTHORIZATION:%{HTTP:Authorization},L]
SetEnv proxy-nokeepalive 1
ProxyPass / fcgi://localhost:9000/
</VirtualHost>
#. Add the following content in the gateway configuration file:
For CentOS/RHEL add in ``/etc/httpd/conf.d/rgw.conf``::
<VirtualHost *:80>
ServerName localhost
DocumentRoot /var/www/html
ErrorLog /var/log/httpd/rgw_error.log
CustomLog /var/log/httpd/rgw_access.log combined
# LogLevel debug
RewriteEngine On
RewriteRule .* - [E=HTTP_AUTHORIZATION:%{HTTP:Authorization},L]
SetEnv proxy-nokeepalive 1
ProxyPass / unix:///var/run/ceph/ceph.radosgw.gateway.fastcgi.sock|fcgi://localhost:9000/
</VirtualHost>
#. Generate a key for radosgw to use for authentication with the cluster. ::
ceph-authtool -C -n client.radosgw.gateway --gen-key /etc/ceph/keyring.radosgw.gateway
ceph-authtool -n client.radosgw.gateway --cap mon 'allow rw' --cap osd 'allow rwx' /etc/ceph/keyring.radosgw.gateway
#. Add the key to the auth entries. ::
ceph auth add client.radosgw.gateway --in-file=keyring.radosgw.gateway
#. Start Apache and radosgw.
Debian/Ubuntu::
sudo /etc/init.d/apache2 start
sudo /etc/init.d/radosgw start
CentOS/RHEL::
sudo apachectl start
sudo /etc/init.d/ceph-radosgw start
Usage Logging
=============
:program:`radosgw` maintains an asynchronous usage log. It accumulates
statistics about user operations and flushes it periodically. The
logs can be accessed and managed through :program:`radosgw-admin`.
The information that is being logged contains total data transfer,
total operations, and total successful operations. The data is being
accounted in an hourly resolution under the bucket owner, unless the
operation was done on the service (e.g., when listing a bucket) in
which case it is accounted under the operating user.
Following is an example configuration::
[client.radosgw.gateway]
rgw_enable_usage_log = true
rgw_usage_log_tick_interval = 30
rgw_usage_log_flush_threshold = 1024
rgw_usage_max_shards = 32
rgw_usage_max_user_shards = 1
The total number of shards determines how many total objects hold the
usage log information. The per-user number of shards specify how many
objects hold usage information for a single user. The tick interval
configures the number of seconds between log flushes, and the flush
threshold specify how many entries can be kept before resorting to
synchronous flush.
Availability
============
:program:`radosgw` is part of Ceph, a massively scalable, open-source, distributed
storage system. Please refer to the Ceph documentation at https://docs.ceph.com for
more information.
See also
========
:doc:`ceph <ceph>`\(8)
:doc:`radosgw-admin <radosgw-admin>`\(8)