mirror of https://github.com/ceph/ceph
285 lines
8.4 KiB
ReStructuredText
285 lines
8.4 KiB
ReStructuredText
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==========================================
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crushtool -- CRUSH map manipulation tool
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==========================================
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.. program:: crushtool
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Synopsis
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========
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| **crushtool** ( -d *map* | -c *map.txt* | --build --num_osds *numosds*
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*layer1* *...* | --test ) [ -o *outfile* ]
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Description
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===========
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**crushtool** is a utility that lets you create, compile, decompile
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and test CRUSH map files.
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CRUSH is a pseudo-random data distribution algorithm that efficiently
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maps input values (which, in the context of Ceph, correspond to Placement
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Groups) across a heterogeneous, hierarchically structured device map.
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The algorithm was originally described in detail in the following paper
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(although it has evolved some since then)::
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http://www.ssrc.ucsc.edu/Papers/weil-sc06.pdf
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The tool has four modes of operation.
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.. option:: --compile|-c map.txt
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will compile a plaintext map.txt into a binary map file.
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.. option:: --decompile|-d map
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will take the compiled map and decompile it into a plaintext source
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file, suitable for editing.
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.. option:: --build --num_osds {num-osds} layer1 ...
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will create map with the given layer structure. See below for a
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detailed explanation.
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.. option:: --test
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will perform a dry run of a CRUSH mapping for a range of input
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values ``[--min-x,--max-x]`` (default ``[0,1023]``) which can be
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thought of as simulated Placement Groups. See below for a more
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detailed explanation.
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Unlike other Ceph tools, **crushtool** does not accept generic options
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such as **--debug-crush** from the command line. They can, however, be
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provided via the CEPH_ARGS environment variable. For instance, to
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silence all output from the CRUSH subsystem::
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CEPH_ARGS="--debug-crush 0" crushtool ...
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Running tests with --test
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=========================
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The test mode will use the input crush map ( as specified with **-i
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map** ) and perform a dry run of CRUSH mapping or random placement
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(if **--simulate** is set ). On completion, two kinds of reports can be
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created.
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1) The **--show-...** option outputs human readable information
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on stderr.
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2) The **--output-csv** option creates CSV files that are
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documented by the **--help-output** option.
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Note: Each Placement Group (PG) has an integer ID which can be obtained
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from ``ceph pg dump`` (for example PG 2.2f means pool id 2, PG id 32).
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The pool and PG IDs are combined by a function to get a value which is
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given to CRUSH to map it to OSDs. crushtool does not know about PGs or
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pools; it only runs simulations by mapping values in the range
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``[--min-x,--max-x]``.
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.. option:: --show-statistics
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Displays a summary of the distribution. For instance::
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rule 1 (metadata) num_rep 5 result size == 5: 1024/1024
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shows that rule **1** which is named **metadata** successfully
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mapped **1024** values to **result size == 5** devices when trying
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to map them to **num_rep 5** replicas. When it fails to provide the
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required mapping, presumably because the number of **tries** must
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be increased, a breakdown of the failures is displayed. For instance::
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rule 1 (metadata) num_rep 10 result size == 8: 4/1024
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rule 1 (metadata) num_rep 10 result size == 9: 93/1024
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rule 1 (metadata) num_rep 10 result size == 10: 927/1024
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shows that although **num_rep 10** replicas were required, **4**
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out of **1024** values ( **4/1024** ) were mapped to **result size
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== 8** devices only.
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.. option:: --show-mappings
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Displays the mapping of each value in the range ``[--min-x,--max-x]``.
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For instance::
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CRUSH rule 1 x 24 [11,6]
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shows that value **24** is mapped to devices **[11,6]** by rule
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**1**.
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.. option:: --show-bad-mappings
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Displays which value failed to be mapped to the required number of
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devices. For instance::
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bad mapping rule 1 x 781 num_rep 7 result [8,10,2,11,6,9]
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shows that when rule **1** was required to map **7** devices, it
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could map only six : **[8,10,2,11,6,9]**.
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.. option:: --show-utilization
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Displays the expected and actual utilization for each device, for
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each number of replicas. For instance::
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device 0: stored : 951 expected : 853.333
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device 1: stored : 963 expected : 853.333
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...
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shows that device **0** stored **951** values and was expected to store **853**.
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Implies **--show-statistics**.
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.. option:: --show-utilization-all
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Displays the same as **--show-utilization** but does not suppress
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output when the weight of a device is zero.
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Implies **--show-statistics**.
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.. option:: --show-choose-tries
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Displays how many attempts were needed to find a device mapping.
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For instance::
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0: 95224
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1: 3745
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2: 2225
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..
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shows that **95224** mappings succeeded without retries, **3745**
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mappings succeeded with one attempts, etc. There are as many rows
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as the value of the **--set-choose-total-tries** option.
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.. option:: --output-csv
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Creates CSV files (in the current directory) containing information
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documented by **--help-output**. The files are named after the rule
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used when collecting the statistics. For instance, if the rule
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: 'metadata' is used, the CSV files will be::
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metadata-absolute_weights.csv
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metadata-device_utilization.csv
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...
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The first line of the file shortly explains the column layout. For
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instance::
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metadata-absolute_weights.csv
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Device ID, Absolute Weight
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0,1
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...
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.. option:: --output-name NAME
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Prepend **NAME** to the file names generated when **--output-csv**
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is specified. For instance **--output-name FOO** will create
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files::
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FOO-metadata-absolute_weights.csv
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FOO-metadata-device_utilization.csv
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...
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The **--set-...** options can be used to modify the tunables of the
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input crush map. The input crush map is modified in
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memory. For example::
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$ crushtool -i mymap --test --show-bad-mappings
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bad mapping rule 1 x 781 num_rep 7 result [8,10,2,11,6,9]
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could be fixed by increasing the **choose-total-tries** as follows:
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$ crushtool -i mymap --test \
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--show-bad-mappings \
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--set-choose-total-tries 500
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Building a map with --build
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===========================
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The build mode will generate hierarchical maps. The first argument
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specifies the number of devices (leaves) in the CRUSH hierarchy. Each
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layer describes how the layer (or devices) preceding it should be
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grouped.
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Each layer consists of::
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bucket ( uniform | list | tree | straw ) size
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The **bucket** is the type of the buckets in the layer
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(e.g. "rack"). Each bucket name will be built by appending a unique
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number to the **bucket** string (e.g. "rack0", "rack1"...).
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The second component is the type of bucket: **straw** should be used
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most of the time.
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The third component is the maximum size of the bucket. A size of zero
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means a bucket of infinite capacity.
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Example
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=======
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Suppose we have two rows with two racks each and 20 nodes per rack. Suppose
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each node contains 4 storage devices for Ceph OSD Daemons. This configuration
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allows us to deploy 320 Ceph OSD Daemons. Lets assume a 42U rack with 2U nodes,
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leaving an extra 2U for a rack switch.
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To reflect our hierarchy of devices, nodes, racks and rows, we would execute
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the following::
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$ crushtool -o crushmap --build --num_osds 320 \
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node straw 4 \
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rack straw 20 \
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row straw 2 \
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root straw 0
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# id weight type name reweight
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-87 320 root root
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-85 160 row row0
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-81 80 rack rack0
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-1 4 node node0
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0 1 osd.0 1
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1 1 osd.1 1
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2 1 osd.2 1
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3 1 osd.3 1
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-2 4 node node1
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4 1 osd.4 1
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5 1 osd.5 1
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...
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CRUSH rules are created so the generated crushmap can be
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tested. They are the same rules as the ones created by default when
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creating a new Ceph cluster. They can be further edited with::
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# decompile
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crushtool -d crushmap -o map.txt
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# edit
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emacs map.txt
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# recompile
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crushtool -c map.txt -o crushmap
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Example output from --test
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==========================
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See https://github.com/ceph/ceph/blob/master/src/test/cli/crushtool/set-choose.t
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for sample ``crushtool --test`` commands and output produced thereby.
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Availability
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============
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**crushtool** is part of Ceph, a massively scalable, open-source, distributed storage system. Please
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refer to the Ceph documentation at http://ceph.com/docs for more
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information.
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See also
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========
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:doc:`ceph <ceph>`\(8),
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:doc:`osdmaptool <osdmaptool>`\(8),
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Authors
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=======
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John Wilkins, Sage Weil, Loic Dachary
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