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2e916037f4
Signed-off-by: Patrick Donnelly <pdonnell@redhat.com>
190 lines
6.6 KiB
ReStructuredText
190 lines
6.6 KiB
ReStructuredText
.. _mds-standby:
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Terminology
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-----------
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A Ceph cluster may have zero or more CephFS *file systems*. CephFS
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file systems have a human readable name (set in ``fs new``)
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and an integer ID. The ID is called the file system cluster ID,
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or *FSCID*.
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Each CephFS file system has a number of *ranks*, one by default,
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which start at zero. A rank may be thought of as a metadata shard.
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Controlling the number of ranks in a file system is described
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in :doc:`/cephfs/multimds`
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Each CephFS ceph-mds process (a *daemon*) initially starts up
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without a rank. It may be assigned one by the monitor cluster.
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A daemon may only hold one rank at a time. Daemons only give up
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a rank when the ceph-mds process stops.
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If a rank is not associated with a daemon, the rank is
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considered *failed*. Once a rank is assigned to a daemon,
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the rank is considered *up*.
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A daemon has a *name* that is set statically by the administrator
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when the daemon is first configured. Typical configurations
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use the hostname where the daemon runs as the daemon name.
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A ceph-mds daemons can be assigned to a particular file system by
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setting the `mds_join_fs` configuration option to the file system
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name.
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Each time a daemon starts up, it is also assigned a *GID*, which
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is unique to this particular process lifetime of the daemon. The
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GID is an integer.
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Referring to MDS daemons
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------------------------
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Most of the administrative commands that refer to an MDS daemon
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accept a flexible argument format that may contain a rank, a GID
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or a name.
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Where a rank is used, this may optionally be qualified with
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a leading file system name or ID. If a daemon is a standby (i.e.
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it is not currently assigned a rank), then it may only be
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referred to by GID or name.
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For example, if we had an MDS daemon which was called 'myhost',
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had GID 5446, and was assigned rank 0 in the file system 'myfs'
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which had FSCID 3, then any of the following would be suitable
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forms of the 'fail' command:
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::
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ceph mds fail 5446 # GID
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ceph mds fail myhost # Daemon name
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ceph mds fail 0 # Unqualified rank
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ceph mds fail 3:0 # FSCID and rank
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ceph mds fail myfs:0 # File System name and rank
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Managing failover
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-----------------
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If an MDS daemon stops communicating with the monitor, the monitor will wait
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``mds_beacon_grace`` seconds (default 15 seconds) before marking the daemon as
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*laggy*. If a standby is available, the monitor will immediately replace the
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laggy daemon.
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Each file system may specify a number of standby daemons to be considered
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healthy. This number includes daemons in standby-replay waiting for a rank to
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fail (remember that a standby-replay daemon will not be assigned to take over a
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failure for another rank or a failure in a another CephFS file system). The
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pool of standby daemons not in replay count towards any file system count.
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Each file system may set the number of standby daemons wanted using:
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::
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ceph fs set <fs name> standby_count_wanted <count>
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Setting ``count`` to 0 will disable the health check.
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.. _mds-standby-replay:
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Configuring standby-replay
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--------------------------
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Each CephFS file system may be configured to add standby-replay daemons. These
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standby daemons follow the active MDS's metadata journal to reduce failover
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time in the event the active MDS becomes unavailable. Each active MDS may have
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only one standby-replay daemon following it.
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Configuring standby-replay on a file system is done using:
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::
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ceph fs set <fs name> allow_standby_replay <bool>
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Once set, the monitors will assign available standby daemons to follow the
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active MDSs in that file system.
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Once an MDS has entered the standby-replay state, it will only be used as a
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standby for the rank that it is following. If another rank fails, this
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standby-replay daemon will not be used as a replacement, even if no other
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standbys are available. For this reason, it is advised that if standby-replay
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is used then every active MDS should have a standby-replay daemon.
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.. _mds-join-fs:
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Configuring MDS file system affinity
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------------------------------------
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You may want to have an MDS used for a particular file system. Or, perhaps you
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have larger MDSs on better hardware that should be preferred over a last-resort
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standby on lesser or over-provisioned hardware. To express this preference,
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CephFS provides a configuration option for MDS called ``mds_join_fs`` which
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enforces this `affinity`.
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As part of any failover, the Ceph monitors will prefer standby daemons with
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``mds_join_fs`` equal to the file system name with the failed rank. If no
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standby exists with ``mds_join_fs`` equal to the file system name, it will
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choose a `vanilla` standby (no setting for ``mds_join_fs``) for the replacement
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or any other available standby as a last resort. Note, this does not change the
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behavior that ``standby-replay`` daemons are always selected before looking at
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other standbys.
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Even further, the monitors will regularly examine the CephFS file systems when
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stable to check if a standby with stronger affinity is available to replace an
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MDS with lower affinity. This process is also done for standby-replay daemons:
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if a regular standby has stronger affinity than the standby-replay MDS, it will
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replace the standby-replay MDS.
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For example, given this stable and healthy file system:
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::
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$ ceph fs dump
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dumped fsmap epoch 399
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...
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Filesystem 'cephfs' (27)
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...
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e399
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max_mds 1
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in 0
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up {0=20384}
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failed
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damaged
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stopped
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...
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[mds.a{0:20384} state up:active seq 239 addr [v2:127.0.0.1:6854/966242805,v1:127.0.0.1:6855/966242805]]
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Standby daemons:
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[mds.b{-1:10420} state up:standby seq 2 addr [v2:127.0.0.1:6856/2745199145,v1:127.0.0.1:6857/2745199145]]
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You may set ``mds_join_fs`` on the standby to enforce your preference: ::
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$ ceph config set mds.b mds_join_fs cephfs
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after automatic failover: ::
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$ ceph fs dump
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dumped fsmap epoch 405
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e405
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...
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Filesystem 'cephfs' (27)
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...
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max_mds 1
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in 0
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up {0=10420}
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failed
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damaged
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stopped
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...
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[mds.b{0:10420} state up:active seq 274 join_fscid=27 addr [v2:127.0.0.1:6856/2745199145,v1:127.0.0.1:6857/2745199145]]
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Standby daemons:
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[mds.a{-1:10720} state up:standby seq 2 addr [v2:127.0.0.1:6854/1340357658,v1:127.0.0.1:6855/1340357658]]
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Note in the above example that ``mds.b`` now has ``join_fscid=27``. In this
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output, the file system name from ``mds_join_fs`` is changed to the file system
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identifier (27). If the file system is recreated with the same name, the
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standby will follow the new file system as expected.
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Finally, if the file system is degraded or undersized, no failover will occur
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to enforce ``mds_join_fs``.
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