ceph/doc/rbd/rbd-ko.rst
John Wilkins 171fcd8133 :doc: Remove legacy usage. Initial format cleanup.
Signed-off-by: John Wilkins <john.wilkins@inktank.com>
2012-09-18 13:00:07 -07:00

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==============================
RBD Kernel Object Operations
==============================
.. important:: To use kernel object operations, you must have a running Ceph cluster.
Load the Ceph RBD Module
========================
To map an RBD image to a kernel object, first load the Ceph RBD module::
modprobe rbd
Get a List of RBD Images
========================
To mount an RBD image, first return a list of the images. ::
rbd list
Map a Block Device
==================
Use ``rbd`` to map an image name to a kernel object. You must specify the
image name, the pool name, and the client name. If you use ``cephx``
authentication, you must also specify a secret. ::
sudo rbd map {image-name} --pool {pool-name} --name {client-name}
For example::
sudo rbd map foo --pool rbd myimage --name client.admin
If you use ``cephx`` authentication, you must also specify a secret. It may come from a keyring, a file containing the secret, or be specified explicitly on the command line. ::
sudo rbd map foo --pool rbd myimage --name client.foo --keyring /path/to/keyring
sudo rbd map foo --pool rbd myimage --name client.foo --keyfile /path/to/file
Show Mapped Block Devices
=========================
To show RBD images mapped to kernel block devices with the ``rbd`` command,
specify the ``showmapped`` option. ::
sudo rbd showmapped
Unmapping a Block Device
========================
To unmap an RBD image with the ``rbd`` command, specify the ``rm`` option
and the device name (i.e., by convention the same as the RBD image name). ::
sudo rbd unmap /dev/rbd/{poolname}/{imagename}
For example::
sudo rbd unmap /dev/rbd/rbd/foo