ceph/doc/cephfs/mount-prerequisites.rst
Rishabh Dave 07cd0e7d31 doc/cephfs: improve wording in mount-prerequisites.rst
Signed-off-by: Rishabh Dave <ridave@redhat.com>
2020-01-21 14:44:02 +05:30

71 lines
3.0 KiB
ReStructuredText

Mount CephFS: Prerequisites
===========================
You can use CephFS by mounting it to your local filesystem or by using
`cephfs-shell`_. CephFS can be mounted `using kernel`_ as well as `using
FUSE`_. Both have their own advantages. Read the following section to
understand more about both of these ways to mount CephFS.
Which CephFS Client?
--------------------
The FUSE client is the most accessible and the easiest to upgrade to the
version of Ceph used by the storage cluster, while the kernel client will
always gives better performance.
When encountering bugs or performance issues, it is often instructive to
try using the other client, in order to find out whether the bug was
client-specific or not (and then to let the developers know).
General Pre-requisite for Mounting CephFS
-----------------------------------------
Before mounting CephFS, ensure that the client host (where CephFS has to be
mounted and used) has a copy of the Ceph configuration file (i.e.
``ceph.conf``) and a keyring of the CephX user that has permission to access
the MDS. Both of these files must already be present on the host where the
Ceph MON resides.
#. Generate a minimal conf file for the client host and place it at a
standard location::
# on client host
mkdir -p -m 755 /etc/ceph
ssh {user}@{mon-host} "sudo ceph config generate-minimal-conf" | sudo tee /etc/ceph/ceph.conf
Alternatively, you may copy the conf file. But the above method generates
a conf with minimal details which is usually sufficient. For more
information, see `Client Authentication`_ and :ref:`bootstrap-options`.
#. Ensure that the conf has appropriate permissions::
chmod 644 /etc/ceph/ceph.conf
#. Create a CephX user and get its secret key::
ssh {user}@{mon-host} "sudo ceph fs authorize cephfs client.foo / rw" | sudo tee /etc/ceph/ceph.client.foo.keyring
In above command, replace ``cephfs`` with the name of your CephFS, ``foo``
by the name you want for your CephX user and ``/`` by the path within your
CephFS for which you want to allow access to the client host and ``rw``
stands for both read and write permissions. Alternatively, you may copy the
Ceph keyring from the MON host to client host at ``/etc/ceph`` but creating
a keyring specific to the client host is better. While creating a CephX
keyring/client, using same client name across multiple machines is perfectly
fine.
.. note:: If you get 2 prompts for password while running above any of 2
above command, run ``sudo ls`` (or any other trivial command with
sudo) immediately before these commands.
#. Ensure that the keyring has appropriate permissions::
chmod 600 /etc/ceph/ceph.client.foo.keyring
.. note:: There might be few more prerequisites for kernel and FUSE mounts
individually, please check respective mount documents.
.. _Client Authentication: ../client-auth
.. _cephfs-shell: ../cephfs-shell
.. _using kernel: ../mount-using-kernel-driver
.. _using FUSE: ../mount-using-fuse