mirror of https://github.com/ceph/ceph
689 lines
27 KiB
ReStructuredText
689 lines
27 KiB
ReStructuredText
========================
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mClock Config Reference
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========================
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.. index:: mclock; configuration
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QoS support in Ceph is implemented using a queuing scheduler based on `the
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dmClock algorithm`_. See :ref:`dmclock-qos` section for more details.
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.. note:: The *mclock_scheduler* is supported for BlueStore OSDs. For Filestore
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OSDs the *osd_op_queue* is set to *wpq* and is enforced even if you
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attempt to change it.
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To make the usage of mclock more user-friendly and intuitive, mclock config
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profiles are introduced. The mclock profiles mask the low level details from
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users, making it easier to configure and use mclock.
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The following input parameters are required for a mclock profile to configure
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the QoS related parameters:
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* total capacity (IOPS) of each OSD (determined automatically -
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See `OSD Capacity Determination (Automated)`_)
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* an mclock profile type to enable
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Using the settings in the specified profile, an OSD determines and applies the
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lower-level mclock and Ceph parameters. The parameters applied by the mclock
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profile make it possible to tune the QoS between client I/O and background
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operations in the OSD.
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.. index:: mclock; mclock clients
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mClock Client Types
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===================
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The mclock scheduler handles requests from different types of Ceph services.
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Each service can be considered as a type of client from mclock's perspective.
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Depending on the type of requests handled, mclock clients are classified into
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the buckets as shown in the table below,
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+------------------------+----------------------------------------------------+
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| Client Type | Request Types |
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+========================+====================================================+
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| Client | I/O requests issued by external clients of Ceph |
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+------------------------+----------------------------------------------------+
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| Background recovery | Internal recovery/backfill requests |
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+------------------------+----------------------------------------------------+
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| Background best-effort | Internal scrub, snap trim and PG deletion requests |
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+------------------------+----------------------------------------------------+
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The mclock profiles allocate parameters like reservation, weight and limit
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(see :ref:`dmclock-qos`) differently for each client type. The next sections
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describe the mclock profiles in greater detail.
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.. index:: mclock; profile definition
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mClock Profiles - Definition and Purpose
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========================================
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A mclock profile is *“a configuration setting that when applied on a running
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Ceph cluster enables the throttling of the operations(IOPS) belonging to
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different client classes (background recovery, scrub, snaptrim, client op,
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osd subop)”*.
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The mclock profile uses the capacity limits and the mclock profile type selected
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by the user to determine the low-level mclock resource control configuration
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parameters and apply them transparently. Additionally, other Ceph configuration
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parameters are also applied. Please see sections below for more information.
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The low-level mclock resource control parameters are the *reservation*,
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*limit*, and *weight* that provide control of the resource shares, as
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described in the :ref:`dmclock-qos` section.
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.. index:: mclock; profile types
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mClock Profile Types
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====================
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mclock profiles can be broadly classified into *built-in* and *custom* profiles,
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Built-in Profiles
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-----------------
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Users can choose between the following built-in profile types:
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.. note:: The values mentioned in the tables below represent the percentage
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of the total IOPS capacity of the OSD allocated for the service type.
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By default, the *high_client_ops* profile is enabled to ensure that a larger
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chunk of the bandwidth allocation goes to client ops. Background recovery ops
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are given lower allocation (and therefore take a longer time to complete). But
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there might be instances that necessitate giving higher allocations to either
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client ops or recovery ops. In order to deal with such a situation, the
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alternate built-in profiles may be enabled by following the steps mentioned
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in next sections.
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high_client_ops (*default*)
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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This profile optimizes client performance over background activities by
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allocating more reservation and limit to client operations as compared to
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background operations in the OSD. This profile is enabled by default. The table
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shows the resource control parameters set by the profile:
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+------------------------+-------------+--------+-------+
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| Service Type | Reservation | Weight | Limit |
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+========================+=============+========+=======+
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| client | 50% | 2 | MAX |
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+------------------------+-------------+--------+-------+
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| background recovery | 25% | 1 | 100% |
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+------------------------+-------------+--------+-------+
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| background best-effort | 25% | 2 | MAX |
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+------------------------+-------------+--------+-------+
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high_recovery_ops
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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This profile optimizes background recovery performance as compared to external
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clients and other background operations within the OSD. This profile, for
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example, may be enabled by an administrator temporarily to speed-up background
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recoveries during non-peak hours. The table shows the resource control
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parameters set by the profile:
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+------------------------+-------------+--------+-------+
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| Service Type | Reservation | Weight | Limit |
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+========================+=============+========+=======+
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| client | 30% | 1 | 80% |
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+------------------------+-------------+--------+-------+
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| background recovery | 60% | 2 | 200% |
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+------------------------+-------------+--------+-------+
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| background best-effort | 1 (MIN) | 2 | MAX |
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+------------------------+-------------+--------+-------+
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balanced
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^^^^^^^^
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This profile allocates equal reservation to client I/O operations and background
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recovery operations. This means that equal I/O resources are allocated to both
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external and background recovery operations. This profile, for example, may be
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enabled by an administrator when external client performance requirement is not
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critical and there are other background operations that still need attention
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within the OSD.
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+------------------------+-------------+--------+-------+
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| Service Type | Reservation | Weight | Limit |
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+========================+=============+========+=======+
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| client | 40% | 1 | 100% |
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+------------------------+-------------+--------+-------+
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| background recovery | 40% | 1 | 150% |
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+------------------------+-------------+--------+-------+
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| background best-effort | 20% | 2 | MAX |
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+------------------------+-------------+--------+-------+
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.. note:: Across the built-in profiles, internal background best-effort clients
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of mclock include "scrub", "snap trim", and "pg deletion" operations.
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Custom Profile
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--------------
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This profile gives users complete control over all the mclock configuration
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parameters. This profile should be used with caution and is meant for advanced
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users, who understand mclock and Ceph related configuration options.
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.. index:: mclock; built-in profiles
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mClock Built-in Profiles - Locked Config Options
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=================================================
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The below sections describe the config options that are locked to certain values
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in order to ensure mClock scheduler is able to provide predictable QoS.
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mClock Config Options
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---------------------
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When a built-in profile is enabled, the mClock scheduler calculates the low
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level mclock parameters [*reservation*, *weight*, *limit*] based on the profile
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enabled for each client type. The mclock parameters are calculated based on
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the max OSD capacity provided beforehand. As a result, the following mclock
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config parameters cannot be modified when using any of the built-in profiles:
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- :confval:`osd_mclock_scheduler_client_res`
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- :confval:`osd_mclock_scheduler_client_wgt`
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- :confval:`osd_mclock_scheduler_client_lim`
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- :confval:`osd_mclock_scheduler_background_recovery_res`
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- :confval:`osd_mclock_scheduler_background_recovery_wgt`
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- :confval:`osd_mclock_scheduler_background_recovery_lim`
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- :confval:`osd_mclock_scheduler_background_best_effort_res`
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- :confval:`osd_mclock_scheduler_background_best_effort_wgt`
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- :confval:`osd_mclock_scheduler_background_best_effort_lim`
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Recovery/Backfill Options
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-------------------------
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The following recovery and backfill related Ceph options are set to new defaults
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for mClock:
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- :confval:`osd_max_backfills`
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- :confval:`osd_recovery_max_active`
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- :confval:`osd_recovery_max_active_hdd`
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- :confval:`osd_recovery_max_active_ssd`
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The following table shows the new mClock defaults. This is done to maximize the
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impact of the built-in profile:
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+----------------------------------------+------------------+----------------+
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| Config Option | Original Default | mClock Default |
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+========================================+==================+================+
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| :confval:`osd_max_backfills` | 1 | 10 |
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+----------------------------------------+------------------+----------------+
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| :confval:`osd_recovery_max_active` | 0 | 0 |
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+----------------------------------------+------------------+----------------+
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| :confval:`osd_recovery_max_active_hdd` | 3 | 10 |
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+----------------------------------------+------------------+----------------+
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| :confval:`osd_recovery_max_active_ssd` | 10 | 20 |
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+----------------------------------------+------------------+----------------+
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The above mClock defaults, can be modified if necessary by enabling
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:confval:`osd_mclock_override_recovery_settings` (default: false). The
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steps for this is discussed in the
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`Steps to Modify mClock Max Backfills/Recovery Limits`_ section.
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Sleep Options
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-------------
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If any mClock profile (including "custom") is active, the following Ceph config
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sleep options are disabled (set to 0),
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- :confval:`osd_recovery_sleep`
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- :confval:`osd_recovery_sleep_hdd`
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- :confval:`osd_recovery_sleep_ssd`
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- :confval:`osd_recovery_sleep_hybrid`
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- :confval:`osd_scrub_sleep`
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- :confval:`osd_delete_sleep`
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- :confval:`osd_delete_sleep_hdd`
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- :confval:`osd_delete_sleep_ssd`
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- :confval:`osd_delete_sleep_hybrid`
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- :confval:`osd_snap_trim_sleep`
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- :confval:`osd_snap_trim_sleep_hdd`
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- :confval:`osd_snap_trim_sleep_ssd`
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- :confval:`osd_snap_trim_sleep_hybrid`
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The above sleep options are disabled to ensure that mclock scheduler is able to
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determine when to pick the next op from its operation queue and transfer it to
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the operation sequencer. This results in the desired QoS being provided across
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all its clients.
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.. index:: mclock; enable built-in profile
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Steps to Enable mClock Profile
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==============================
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As already mentioned, the default mclock profile is set to *high_client_ops*.
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The other values for the built-in profiles include *balanced* and
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*high_recovery_ops*.
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If there is a requirement to change the default profile, then the option
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:confval:`osd_mclock_profile` may be set during runtime by using the following
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command:
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.. prompt:: bash #
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ceph config set osd.N osd_mclock_profile <value>
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For example, to change the profile to allow faster recoveries on "osd.0", the
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following command can be used to switch to the *high_recovery_ops* profile:
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.. prompt:: bash #
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ceph config set osd.0 osd_mclock_profile high_recovery_ops
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.. note:: The *custom* profile is not recommended unless you are an advanced
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user.
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And that's it! You are ready to run workloads on the cluster and check if the
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QoS requirements are being met.
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Switching Between Built-in and Custom Profiles
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==============================================
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There may be situations requiring switching from a built-in profile to the
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*custom* profile and vice-versa. The following sections outline the steps to
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accomplish this.
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Steps to Switch From a Built-in to the Custom Profile
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-----------------------------------------------------
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The following command can be used to switch to the *custom* profile:
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.. prompt:: bash #
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ceph config set osd osd_mclock_profile custom
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For example, to change the profile to *custom* on all OSDs, the following
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command can be used:
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.. prompt:: bash #
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ceph config set osd osd_mclock_profile custom
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After switching to the *custom* profile, the desired mClock configuration
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option may be modified. For example, to change the client reservation IOPS
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allocation for a specific OSD (say osd.0), the following command can be used:
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.. prompt:: bash #
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ceph config set osd.0 osd_mclock_scheduler_client_res 3000
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.. important:: Care must be taken to change the reservations of other services like
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recovery and background best effort accordingly to ensure that the sum of the
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reservations do not exceed the maximum IOPS capacity of the OSD.
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.. tip:: The reservation and limit parameter allocations are per-shard based on
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the type of backing device (HDD/SSD) under the OSD. See
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:confval:`osd_op_num_shards_hdd` and :confval:`osd_op_num_shards_ssd` for
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more details.
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Steps to Switch From the Custom Profile to a Built-in Profile
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-------------------------------------------------------------
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Switching from the *custom* profile to a built-in profile requires an
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intermediate step of removing the custom settings from the central config
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database for the changes to take effect.
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The following sequence of commands can be used to switch to a built-in profile:
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#. Set the desired built-in profile using:
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.. prompt:: bash #
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ceph config set osd <mClock Configuration Option>
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For example, to set the built-in profile to ``high_client_ops`` on all
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OSDs, run the following command:
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.. prompt:: bash #
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ceph config set osd osd_mclock_profile high_client_ops
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#. Determine the existing custom mClock configuration settings in the central
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config database using the following command:
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.. prompt:: bash #
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ceph config dump
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#. Remove the custom mClock configuration settings determined in the previous
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step from the central config database:
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.. prompt:: bash #
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ceph config rm osd <mClock Configuration Option>
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For example, to remove the configuration option
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:confval:`osd_mclock_scheduler_client_res` that was set on all OSDs, run the
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following command:
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.. prompt:: bash #
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ceph config rm osd osd_mclock_scheduler_client_res
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#. After all existing custom mClock configuration settings have been removed
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from the central config database, the configuration settings pertaining to
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``high_client_ops`` will come into effect. For e.g., to verify the settings
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on osd.0 use:
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.. prompt:: bash #
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ceph config show osd.0
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Switch Temporarily Between mClock Profiles
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------------------------------------------
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To switch between mClock profiles on a temporary basis, the following commands
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may be used to override the settings:
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.. warning:: This section is for advanced users or for experimental testing. The
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recommendation is to not use the below commands on a running cluster as it
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could have unexpected outcomes.
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.. note:: The configuration changes on an OSD using the below commands are
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ephemeral and are lost when it restarts. It is also important to note that
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the config options overridden using the below commands cannot be modified
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further using the *ceph config set osd.N ...* command. The changes will not
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take effect until a given OSD is restarted. This is intentional, as per the
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config subsystem design. However, any further modification can still be made
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ephemerally using the commands mentioned below.
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#. Run the *injectargs* command as shown to override the mclock settings:
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.. prompt:: bash #
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ceph tell osd.N injectargs '--<mClock Configuration Option>=<value>'
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For example, the following command overrides the
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:confval:`osd_mclock_profile` option on osd.0:
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.. prompt:: bash #
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ceph tell osd.0 injectargs '--osd_mclock_profile=high_recovery_ops'
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#. An alternate command that can be used is:
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.. prompt:: bash #
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ceph daemon osd.N config set <mClock Configuration Option> <value>
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For example, the following command overrides the
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:confval:`osd_mclock_profile` option on osd.0:
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.. prompt:: bash #
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ceph daemon osd.0 config set osd_mclock_profile high_recovery_ops
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The individual QoS-related config options for the *custom* profile can also be
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modified ephemerally using the above commands.
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Steps to Modify mClock Max Backfills/Recovery Limits
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====================================================
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This section describes the steps to modify the default max backfills or recovery
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limits if the need arises.
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.. warning:: This section is for advanced users or for experimental testing. The
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recommendation is to retain the defaults as is on a running cluster as
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modifying them could have unexpected performance outcomes. The values may
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be modified only if the cluster is unable to cope/showing poor performance
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with the default settings or for performing experiments on a test cluster.
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.. important:: The max backfill/recovery options that can be modified are listed
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in section `Recovery/Backfill Options`_. The modification of the mClock
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default backfills/recovery limit is gated by the
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:confval:`osd_mclock_override_recovery_settings` option, which is set to
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*false* by default. Attempting to modify any default recovery/backfill
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limits without setting the gating option will reset that option back to the
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mClock defaults along with a warning message logged in the cluster log. Note
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that it may take a few seconds for the default value to come back into
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effect. Verify the limit using the *config show* command as shown below.
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#. Set the :confval:`osd_mclock_override_recovery_settings` config option on all
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osds to *true* using:
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.. prompt:: bash #
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ceph config set osd osd_mclock_override_recovery_settings true
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#. Set the desired max backfill/recovery option using:
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.. prompt:: bash #
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ceph config set osd osd_max_backfills <value>
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For example, the following command modifies the :confval:`osd_max_backfills`
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option on all osds to 5.
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.. prompt:: bash #
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ceph config set osd osd_max_backfills 5
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#. Wait for a few seconds and verify the running configuration for a specific
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OSD using:
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.. prompt:: bash #
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ceph config show osd.N | grep osd_max_backfills
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For example, the following command shows the running configuration of
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:confval:`osd_max_backfills` on osd.0.
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.. prompt:: bash #
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ceph config show osd.0 | grep osd_max_backfills
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#. Reset the :confval:`osd_mclock_override_recovery_settings` config option on
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all osds to *false* using:
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.. prompt:: bash #
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ceph config set osd osd_mclock_override_recovery_settings false
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OSD Capacity Determination (Automated)
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======================================
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The OSD capacity in terms of total IOPS is determined automatically during OSD
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initialization. This is achieved by running the OSD bench tool and overriding
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the default value of ``osd_mclock_max_capacity_iops_[hdd, ssd]`` option
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depending on the device type. No other action/input is expected from the user
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to set the OSD capacity.
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.. note:: If you wish to manually benchmark OSD(s) or manually tune the
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Bluestore throttle parameters, see section
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`Steps to Manually Benchmark an OSD (Optional)`_.
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You may verify the capacity of an OSD after the cluster is brought up by using
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the following command:
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.. prompt:: bash #
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ceph config show osd.N osd_mclock_max_capacity_iops_[hdd, ssd]
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For example, the following command shows the max capacity for "osd.0" on a Ceph
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node whose underlying device type is SSD:
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.. prompt:: bash #
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ceph config show osd.0 osd_mclock_max_capacity_iops_ssd
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Mitigation of Unrealistic OSD Capacity From Automated Test
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----------------------------------------------------------
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In certain conditions, the OSD bench tool may show unrealistic/inflated result
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depending on the drive configuration and other environment related conditions.
|
|
To mitigate the performance impact due to this unrealistic capacity, a couple
|
|
of threshold config options depending on the osd's device type are defined and
|
|
used:
|
|
|
|
- :confval:`osd_mclock_iops_capacity_threshold_hdd` = 500
|
|
- :confval:`osd_mclock_iops_capacity_threshold_ssd` = 80000
|
|
|
|
The following automated step is performed:
|
|
|
|
Fallback to using default OSD capacity (automated)
|
|
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
|
|
If OSD bench reports a measurement that exceeds the above threshold values
|
|
depending on the underlying device type, the fallback mechanism reverts to the
|
|
default value of :confval:`osd_mclock_max_capacity_iops_hdd` or
|
|
:confval:`osd_mclock_max_capacity_iops_ssd`. The threshold config options
|
|
can be reconfigured based on the type of drive used. Additionally, a cluster
|
|
warning is logged in case the measurement exceeds the threshold. For example, ::
|
|
|
|
2022-10-27T15:30:23.270+0000 7f9b5dbe95c0 0 log_channel(cluster) log [WRN]
|
|
: OSD bench result of 39546.479392 IOPS exceeded the threshold limit of
|
|
25000.000000 IOPS for osd.1. IOPS capacity is unchanged at 21500.000000
|
|
IOPS. The recommendation is to establish the osd's IOPS capacity using other
|
|
benchmark tools (e.g. Fio) and then override
|
|
osd_mclock_max_capacity_iops_[hdd|ssd].
|
|
|
|
If the default capacity doesn't accurately represent the OSD's capacity, the
|
|
following additional step is recommended to address this:
|
|
|
|
Run custom drive benchmark if defaults are not accurate (manual)
|
|
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
|
|
If the default OSD capacity is not accurate, the recommendation is to run a
|
|
custom benchmark using your preferred tool (e.g. Fio) on the drive and then
|
|
override the ``osd_mclock_max_capacity_iops_[hdd, ssd]`` option as described
|
|
in the `Specifying Max OSD Capacity`_ section.
|
|
|
|
This step is highly recommended until an alternate mechansim is worked upon.
|
|
|
|
Steps to Manually Benchmark an OSD (Optional)
|
|
=============================================
|
|
|
|
.. note:: These steps are only necessary if you want to override the OSD
|
|
capacity already determined automatically during OSD initialization.
|
|
Otherwise, you may skip this section entirely.
|
|
|
|
.. tip:: If you have already determined the benchmark data and wish to manually
|
|
override the max osd capacity for an OSD, you may skip to section
|
|
`Specifying Max OSD Capacity`_.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Any existing benchmarking tool (e.g. Fio) can be used for this purpose. In this
|
|
case, the steps use the *Ceph OSD Bench* command described in the next section.
|
|
Regardless of the tool/command used, the steps outlined further below remain the
|
|
same.
|
|
|
|
As already described in the :ref:`dmclock-qos` section, the number of
|
|
shards and the bluestore's throttle parameters have an impact on the mclock op
|
|
queues. Therefore, it is critical to set these values carefully in order to
|
|
maximize the impact of the mclock scheduler.
|
|
|
|
:Number of Operational Shards:
|
|
We recommend using the default number of shards as defined by the
|
|
configuration options ``osd_op_num_shards``, ``osd_op_num_shards_hdd``, and
|
|
``osd_op_num_shards_ssd``. In general, a lower number of shards will increase
|
|
the impact of the mclock queues.
|
|
|
|
:Bluestore Throttle Parameters:
|
|
We recommend using the default values as defined by
|
|
:confval:`bluestore_throttle_bytes` and
|
|
:confval:`bluestore_throttle_deferred_bytes`. But these parameters may also be
|
|
determined during the benchmarking phase as described below.
|
|
|
|
OSD Bench Command Syntax
|
|
------------------------
|
|
|
|
The :ref:`osd-subsystem` section describes the OSD bench command. The syntax
|
|
used for benchmarking is shown below :
|
|
|
|
.. prompt:: bash #
|
|
|
|
ceph tell osd.N bench [TOTAL_BYTES] [BYTES_PER_WRITE] [OBJ_SIZE] [NUM_OBJS]
|
|
|
|
where,
|
|
|
|
* ``TOTAL_BYTES``: Total number of bytes to write
|
|
* ``BYTES_PER_WRITE``: Block size per write
|
|
* ``OBJ_SIZE``: Bytes per object
|
|
* ``NUM_OBJS``: Number of objects to write
|
|
|
|
Benchmarking Test Steps Using OSD Bench
|
|
---------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
The steps below use the default shards and detail the steps used to determine
|
|
the correct bluestore throttle values (optional).
|
|
|
|
#. Bring up your Ceph cluster and login to the Ceph node hosting the OSDs that
|
|
you wish to benchmark.
|
|
#. Run a simple 4KiB random write workload on an OSD using the following
|
|
commands:
|
|
|
|
.. note:: Note that before running the test, caches must be cleared to get an
|
|
accurate measurement.
|
|
|
|
For example, if you are running the benchmark test on osd.0, run the following
|
|
commands:
|
|
|
|
.. prompt:: bash #
|
|
|
|
ceph tell osd.0 cache drop
|
|
|
|
.. prompt:: bash #
|
|
|
|
ceph tell osd.0 bench 12288000 4096 4194304 100
|
|
|
|
#. Note the overall throughput(IOPS) obtained from the output of the osd bench
|
|
command. This value is the baseline throughput(IOPS) when the default
|
|
bluestore throttle options are in effect.
|
|
#. If the intent is to determine the bluestore throttle values for your
|
|
environment, then set the two options, :confval:`bluestore_throttle_bytes`
|
|
and :confval:`bluestore_throttle_deferred_bytes` to 32 KiB(32768 Bytes) each
|
|
to begin with. Otherwise, you may skip to the next section.
|
|
#. Run the 4KiB random write test as before using OSD bench.
|
|
#. Note the overall throughput from the output and compare the value
|
|
against the baseline throughput recorded in step 3.
|
|
#. If the throughput doesn't match with the baseline, increment the bluestore
|
|
throttle options by 2x and repeat steps 5 through 7 until the obtained
|
|
throughput is very close to the baseline value.
|
|
|
|
For example, during benchmarking on a machine with NVMe SSDs, a value of 256 KiB
|
|
for both bluestore throttle and deferred bytes was determined to maximize the
|
|
impact of mclock. For HDDs, the corresponding value was 40 MiB, where the
|
|
overall throughput was roughly equal to the baseline throughput. Note that in
|
|
general for HDDs, the bluestore throttle values are expected to be higher when
|
|
compared to SSDs.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Specifying Max OSD Capacity
|
|
----------------------------
|
|
|
|
The steps in this section may be performed only if you want to override the
|
|
max osd capacity automatically set during OSD initialization. The option
|
|
``osd_mclock_max_capacity_iops_[hdd, ssd]`` for an OSD can be set by running the
|
|
following command:
|
|
|
|
.. prompt:: bash #
|
|
|
|
ceph config set osd.N osd_mclock_max_capacity_iops_[hdd,ssd] <value>
|
|
|
|
For example, the following command sets the max capacity for a specific OSD
|
|
(say "osd.0") whose underlying device type is HDD to 350 IOPS:
|
|
|
|
.. prompt:: bash #
|
|
|
|
ceph config set osd.0 osd_mclock_max_capacity_iops_hdd 350
|
|
|
|
Alternatively, you may specify the max capacity for OSDs within the Ceph
|
|
configuration file under the respective [osd.N] section. See
|
|
:ref:`ceph-conf-settings` for more details.
|
|
|
|
|
|
.. index:: mclock; config settings
|
|
|
|
mClock Config Options
|
|
=====================
|
|
|
|
.. confval:: osd_mclock_profile
|
|
.. confval:: osd_mclock_max_capacity_iops_hdd
|
|
.. confval:: osd_mclock_max_capacity_iops_ssd
|
|
.. confval:: osd_mclock_cost_per_io_usec
|
|
.. confval:: osd_mclock_cost_per_io_usec_hdd
|
|
.. confval:: osd_mclock_cost_per_io_usec_ssd
|
|
.. confval:: osd_mclock_cost_per_byte_usec
|
|
.. confval:: osd_mclock_cost_per_byte_usec_hdd
|
|
.. confval:: osd_mclock_cost_per_byte_usec_ssd
|
|
.. confval:: osd_mclock_force_run_benchmark_on_init
|
|
.. confval:: osd_mclock_skip_benchmark
|
|
.. confval:: osd_mclock_override_recovery_settings
|
|
.. confval:: osd_mclock_iops_capacity_threshold_hdd
|
|
.. confval:: osd_mclock_iops_capacity_threshold_ssd
|
|
|
|
.. _the dmClock algorithm: https://www.usenix.org/legacy/event/osdi10/tech/full_papers/Gulati.pdf
|