Ceph: Difference between revisions

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Add to CRUSH map:
Add to CRUSH map:
  ceph osd crush add {id-or-name} {weight}  [{bucket-type}={bucket-name} ...]
  ceph osd crush add {id-or-name} {weight}  [{bucket-type}={bucket-name} ...]
== File System ==
ceph fs ls
Get fsid for mount:
sudo ceph fsid
sudo mount.ceph client.admin@8fc87072-5946-466f-a10a-6fa9bd6fa925.cephfs=/ /mnt


== POOL ==
== POOL ==
Line 211: Line 220:


  ceph osd pool stats
  ceph osd pool stats
== Mouting Ceph ==
Mount CephFS using Kernel Driver — Ceph Documentation
https://docs.ceph.com/en/quincy/cephfs/mount-using-kernel-driver/
mount -t ceph {device-string}={path-to-mounted} {mount-point} -o {key-value-args} {other-args}
mkdir /mnt/mycephfs
mount -t ceph <name>@<fsid>.<fs_name>=/ /mnt/mycephfs
name is the username of the CephX user we are using to mount CephFS. fsid is the FSID of the ceph cluster which can be found using ceph fsid command. fs_name is the file system to mount.
example:
mount -t ceph cephuser@b3acfc0d-575f-41d3-9c91-0e7ed3dbb3fa.cephfs=/ -o mon_addr=192.168.0.1:6789,secret=AQATSKdNGBnwLhAAnNDKnH65FmVKpXZJVasUeQ==
When using the mount helper, monitor hosts and FSID are optional. mount.ceph helper figures out these details automatically by finding and reading ceph conf file, .e.g:
mount -t ceph cephuser@.cephfs=/ -o secret=AQATSKdNGBnwLhAAnNDKnH65FmVKpXZJVasUeQ==
Note that the dot (.) still needs to be a part of the device string.
A potential problem with the above command is that the secret key is left in your shell’s command history. To prevent that you can copy the secret key inside a file and pass the file by using the option secretfile instead of secret:
mount -t ceph cephuser@.cephfs=/ /mnt/mycephfs -o secretfile=/etc/ceph/cephuser.secret


== References ==
== References ==

Latest revision as of 05:11, 8 September 2024


Subpage Table of Contents


Ceph

Hardware Recommendations

hardware recommendations — Ceph Documentation
https://docs.ceph.com/en/quincy/start/hardware-recommendations/

Status

ceph status
# OR: ceph -s

Example:

# ceph status
  cluster:
    id:     ff74f760-84b2-4dc4-b518-8408e3f10779
    health: HEALTH_OK

  services:
    mon: 3 daemons, quorum vm-05,vm-06,vm-07 (age 12m)
    mgr: vm-07(active, since 47m), standbys: vm-06, vm-05
    mds: 1/1 daemons up, 2 standby
    osd: 3 osds: 3 up (since 4m), 3 in (since 4m)

  data:
    volumes: 1/1 healthy
    pools:   4 pools, 97 pgs
    objects: 3.68k objects, 13 GiB
    usage:   38 GiB used, 3.7 TiB / 3.7 TiB avail
    pgs:     97 active+clean

  io:
    client:   107 KiB/s rd, 4.0 KiB/s wr, 0 op/s rd, 0 op/s wr

Health

Health summary:

osd health
# good health:
HEALTH_OK
# bad health:
HEALTH_WARN Reduced data availability: 47 pgs inactive, 47 pgs peering; 47 pgs not deep-scrubbed in time; 47 pgs not scrubbed in time; 54 slow ops, oldest one blocked for 212 sec, daemons [osd.0,osd.1,osd.2,osd.5,osd.9,mon.lmt-vm-05] have slow ops.

Health details:

osd health detail
# good health:
HEALTH_OK
# bad health:
HEALTH_WARN 1 osds down; 1 host (1 osds) down; Reduced data availability: 47 pgs inactive, 47 pgs peering; 47 pgs not deep-scrubbed in time; 47 pgs not scrubbed in time; 49 slow ops, oldest one blocked for 306 sec, daemons [osd.0,osd.1,osd.2,osd.5,osd.9,mon.prox-05] have slow ops.
[WRN] OSD_DOWN: 1 osds down
    osd.5 (root=default,host=prox-06) is down
[WRN] OSD_HOST_DOWN: 1 host (1 osds) down
    host prox-06 (root=default) (1 osds) is down
[WRN] PG_AVAILABILITY: Reduced data availability: 47 pgs inactive, 47 pgs peering
    pg 3.0 is stuck peering for 6m, current state peering, last acting [3,5,4]
    pg 3.3 is stuck peering for 7w, current state peering, last acting [5,1,0]
...

Watch

Watch live changes:

ceph -w

OSD

List OSDs

volume lvm list

Note: only shows local OSDs..

ceph-volume lvm list

Example:

====== osd.0 =======

  [block]       /dev/ceph-64fda9eb-2342-43e3-bc3e-78e5c1bcda31/osd-block-ff991dbd-7698-44ab-ad90-102340ec05c7

      block device              /dev/ceph-64fda9eb-2342-43e3-bc3e-78e5c1bcda31/osd-block-ff991dbd-7698-44ab-ad90-102340ec05c7
      block uuid                uvsm7p-c9KU-iaVe-GJGv-NBRM-xGrr-XPf3eB
      cephx lockbox secret
      cluster fsid              ff74f760-84b2-4dc4-b518-8408e3f10779
      cluster name              ceph
      crush device class
      encrypted                 0
      osd fsid                  ff991dbd-7698-44ab-ad90-102340ec05c7
      osd id                    0
      osdspec affinity
      type                      block
      vdo                       0
      devices                   /dev/fioa

[1]

osd tree

ceph osd tree

Example:

ID  CLASS  WEIGHT   TYPE NAME           STATUS  REWEIGHT  PRI-AFF
-1         3.69246  root default
-3         1.09589      host vm-05
 0    ssd  1.09589          osd.0           up   1.00000  1.00000
-7         1.09589      host vm-06
 2    ssd  1.09589          osd.2         down         0  1.00000
-5         1.50069      host vm-07
 1    ssd  1.50069          osd.1           up   1.00000  1.00000

List down tree OSD nodes: [2]

ceph osd tree down

osd stat

ceph osd stat

osd dump

ceph osd dump

Mark OSD Online (In)

 ceph osd in [OSD-NUM]

Mark OSD Offline (Out)

 ceph osd out [OSD-NUM]

Deleted OSD

First mark it out:

ceph osd out osd.{osd-num}

Mark it down:

ceph osd down osd.{osd-num}

Remove it:

ceph osd rm osd.{osd-num}

Check tree for removal:

ceph osd tree

---

If you get an error that it is busy.. [3]

Go to host that has the OSD and stop the service:

systemctl stop ceph-osd@{osd-num}

Remove it again:

ceph osd rm osd.{osd-num}

Check tree for removal:

ceph osd tree

If 'ceph osd tree' reports 'DNE (do not exist), then do the following...

Remove from the CRUSH:

ceph osd crush rm osd.{osd-num}

Clear auth:

ceph auth del osd.{osd-num}.

ref: [4]

Create OSD

Create OSD:[5]

pveceph osd create /dev/sd[X]

If the disk was in use before (for example, for ZFS or as an OSD) you first need to zap all traces of that usage:

ceph-volume lvm zap /dev/sd[X] --destroy

Create OSD ID:

ceph osd create
 # will generate the next ID in sequence

Create directory:

mount -o user_xattr /dev/{hdd} /var/lib/ceph/osd/ceph-{osd-number}

Init data directory:

ceph-osd -i {osd-num} --mkfs --mkkey

Register:

ceph auth add osd.{osd-num} osd 'allow *' mon 'allow rwx' -i /var/lib/ceph/osd/ceph-{osd-num}/keyring

Add to CRUSH map:

ceph osd crush add {id-or-name} {weight}  [{bucket-type}={bucket-name} ...]

File System

ceph fs ls

Get fsid for mount:

sudo ceph fsid
sudo mount.ceph client.admin@8fc87072-5946-466f-a10a-6fa9bd6fa925.cephfs=/ /mnt

POOL

Pool Stats

ceph osd pool stats

Mouting Ceph

Mount CephFS using Kernel Driver — Ceph Documentation
https://docs.ceph.com/en/quincy/cephfs/mount-using-kernel-driver/
mount -t ceph {device-string}={path-to-mounted} {mount-point} -o {key-value-args} {other-args}
mkdir /mnt/mycephfs
mount -t ceph <name>@<fsid>.<fs_name>=/ /mnt/mycephfs
name is the username of the CephX user we are using to mount CephFS. fsid is the FSID of the ceph cluster which can be found using ceph fsid command. fs_name is the file system to mount.

example:

mount -t ceph cephuser@b3acfc0d-575f-41d3-9c91-0e7ed3dbb3fa.cephfs=/ -o mon_addr=192.168.0.1:6789,secret=AQATSKdNGBnwLhAAnNDKnH65FmVKpXZJVasUeQ==

When using the mount helper, monitor hosts and FSID are optional. mount.ceph helper figures out these details automatically by finding and reading ceph conf file, .e.g:

mount -t ceph cephuser@.cephfs=/ -o secret=AQATSKdNGBnwLhAAnNDKnH65FmVKpXZJVasUeQ==

Note that the dot (.) still needs to be a part of the device string.

A potential problem with the above command is that the secret key is left in your shell’s command history. To prevent that you can copy the secret key inside a file and pass the file by using the option secretfile instead of secret:

mount -t ceph cephuser@.cephfs=/ /mnt/mycephfs -o secretfile=/etc/ceph/cephuser.secret

References

keywords