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cd92ea0cb4
Fixes: https://tracker.ceph.com/issues/53509 Signed-off-by: Kotresh HR <khiremat@redhat.com>
89 lines
3.7 KiB
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89 lines
3.7 KiB
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Quotas
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======
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CephFS allows quotas to be set on any directory in the system. The
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quota can restrict the number of *bytes* or the number of *files*
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stored beneath that point in the directory hierarchy.
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Limitations
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-----------
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#. *Quotas are cooperative and non-adversarial.* CephFS quotas rely on
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the cooperation of the client who is mounting the file system to
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stop writers when a limit is reached. A modified or adversarial
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client cannot be prevented from writing as much data as it needs.
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Quotas should not be relied on to prevent filling the system in
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environments where the clients are fully untrusted.
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#. *Quotas are imprecise.* Processes that are writing to the file
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system will be stopped a short time after the quota limit is
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reached. They will inevitably be allowed to write some amount of
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data over the configured limit. How far over the quota they are
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able to go depends primarily on the amount of time, not the amount
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of data. Generally speaking writers will be stopped within 10s of
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seconds of crossing the configured limit.
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#. *Quotas are implemented in the kernel client 4.17 and higher.*
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Quotas are supported by the userspace client (libcephfs, ceph-fuse).
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Linux kernel clients >= 4.17 support CephFS quotas but only on
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mimic+ clusters. Kernel clients (even recent versions) will fail
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to handle quotas on older clusters, even if they may be able to set
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the quotas extended attributes.
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#. *Quotas must be configured carefully when used with path-based
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mount restrictions.* The client needs to have access to the
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directory inode on which quotas are configured in order to enforce
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them. If the client has restricted access to a specific path
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(e.g., ``/home/user``) based on the MDS capability, and a quota is
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configured on an ancestor directory they do not have access to
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(e.g., ``/home``), the client will not enforce it. When using
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path-based access restrictions be sure to configure the quota on
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the directory the client is restricted too (e.g., ``/home/user``)
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or something nested beneath it.
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In case of a kernel client, it needs to have access to the parent
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of the directory inode on which quotas are configured in order to
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enforce them. If quota is configured on a directory path
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(e.g., ``/home/volumes/group``), the kclient needs to have access
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to the parent (e.g., ``/home/volumes``).
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An example command to create such an user is as below::
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$ ceph auth get-or-create client.guest mds 'allow r path=/home/volumes, allow rw path=/home/volumes/group' mgr 'allow rw' osd 'allow rw tag cephfs metadata=*' mon 'allow r'
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See also: https://tracker.ceph.com/issues/55090
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#. *Snapshot file data which has since been deleted or changed does not count
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towards the quota.* See also: http://tracker.ceph.com/issues/24284
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Configuration
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-------------
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Like most other things in CephFS, quotas are configured using virtual
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extended attributes:
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* ``ceph.quota.max_files`` -- file limit
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* ``ceph.quota.max_bytes`` -- byte limit
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If the attributes appear on a directory inode that means a quota is
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configured there. If they are not present then no quota is set on
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that directory (although one may still be configured on a parent directory).
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To set a quota::
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setfattr -n ceph.quota.max_bytes -v 100000000 /some/dir # 100 MB
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setfattr -n ceph.quota.max_files -v 10000 /some/dir # 10,000 files
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To view quota settings::
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getfattr -n ceph.quota.max_bytes /some/dir
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getfattr -n ceph.quota.max_files /some/dir
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Note that if the value of the extended attribute is ``0`` that means
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the quota is not set.
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To remove a quota::
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setfattr -n ceph.quota.max_bytes -v 0 /some/dir
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setfattr -n ceph.quota.max_files -v 0 /some/dir
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