ceph-deploy – Ceph deployment tool¶
Synopsis¶
Description¶
ceph-deploy is a tool which allows easy and quick deployment of a
Ceph cluster without involving complex and detailed manual configuration. It
uses ssh to gain access to other Ceph nodes from the admin node, sudo for
administrator privileges on them and the underlying Python scripts automates
the manual process of Ceph installation on each node from the admin node itself.
It can be easily run on an workstation and doesn’t require servers, databases or
any other automated tools. With ceph-deploy, it is really easy to set
up and take down a cluster. However, it is not a generic deployment tool. It is
a specific tool which is designed for those who want to get Ceph up and running
quickly with only the unavoidable initial configuration settings and without the
overhead of installing other tools like Chef
, Puppet
or Juju
. Those
who want to customize security settings, partitions or directory locations and
want to set up a cluster following detailed manual steps, should use other tools
i.e, Chef
, Puppet
, Juju
or Crowbar
.
With ceph-deploy, you can install Ceph packages on remote nodes, create a cluster, add monitors, gather/forget keys, add OSDs and metadata servers, configure admin hosts or take down the cluster.
Commands¶
new¶
Start deploying a new cluster and write a configuration file and keyring for it.
It tries to copy ssh keys from admin node to gain passwordless ssh to monitor
node(s), validates host IP, creates a cluster with a new initial monitor node or
nodes for monitor quorum, a ceph configuration file, a monitor secret keyring and
a log file for the new cluster. It populates the newly created Ceph configuration
file with fsid
of cluster, hostnames and IP addresses of initial monitor
members under [global]
section.
Usage:
ceph-deploy new [MON][MON...]
Here, [MON] is the initial monitor hostname (short hostname i.e, hostname -s
).
Other options like --no-ssh-copykey
, --fsid
,
--cluster-network
and --public-network
can also be used with
this command.
If more than one network interface is used, public network
setting has to be
added under [global]
section of Ceph configuration file. If the public subnet
is given, new
command will choose the one IP from the remote host that exists
within the subnet range. Public network can also be added at runtime using
--public-network
option with the command as mentioned above.
install¶
Install Ceph packages on remote hosts. As a first step it installs
yum-plugin-priorities
in admin and other nodes using passwordless ssh and sudo
so that Ceph packages from upstream repository get more priority. It then detects
the platform and distribution for the hosts and installs Ceph normally by
downloading distro compatible packages if adequate repo for Ceph is already added.
--release
flag is used to get the latest release for installation. During
detection of platform and distribution before installation, if it finds the
distro.init
to be sysvinit
(Fedora, CentOS/RHEL etc), it doesn’t allow
installation with custom cluster name and uses the default name ceph
for the
cluster.
If the user explicitly specifies a custom repo url with --repo-url
for
installation, anything detected from the configuration will be overridden and
the custom repository location will be used for installation of Ceph packages.
If required, valid custom repositories are also detected and installed. In case
of installation from a custom repo a boolean is used to determine the logic
needed to proceed with a custom repo installation. A custom repo install helper
is used that goes through config checks to retrieve repos (and any extra repos
defined) and installs them. cd_conf
is the object built from argparse
that holds the flags and information needed to determine what metadata from the
configuration is to be used.
A user can also opt to install only the repository without installing Ceph and
its dependencies by using --repo
option.
Usage:
ceph-deploy install [HOST][HOST...]
Here, [HOST] is/are the host node(s) where Ceph is to be installed.
An option --release
is used to install a release known as CODENAME
(default: firefly).
Other options like --testing
, --dev
, --adjust-repos
,
--no-adjust-repos
, --repo
, --local-mirror
,
--repo-url
and --gpg-url
can also be used with this command.
mds¶
Deploy Ceph mds on remote hosts. A metadata server is needed to use CephFS and
the mds
command is used to create one on the desired host node. It uses the
subcommand create
to do so. create
first gets the hostname and distro
information of the desired mds host. It then tries to read the bootstrap-mds
key for the cluster and deploy it in the desired host. The key generally has a
format of {cluster}.bootstrap-mds.keyring
. If it doesn’t finds a keyring,
it runs gatherkeys
to get the keyring. It then creates a mds on the desired
host under the path /var/lib/ceph/mds/
in /var/lib/ceph/mds/{cluster}-{name}
format and a bootstrap keyring under /var/lib/ceph/bootstrap-mds/
in
/var/lib/ceph/bootstrap-mds/{cluster}.keyring
format. It then runs appropriate
commands based on distro.init
to start the mds
. To remove the mds,
subcommand destroy
is used.
Usage:
ceph-deploy mds create [HOST[:DAEMON-NAME]] [HOST[:DAEMON-NAME]...]
ceph-deploy mds destroy [HOST[:DAEMON-NAME]] [HOST[:DAEMON-NAME]...]
The [DAEMON-NAME] is optional.
mon¶
Deploy Ceph monitor on remote hosts. mon
makes use of certain subcommands
to deploy Ceph monitors on other nodes.
Subcommand create-initial
deploys for monitors defined in
mon initial members
under [global]
section in Ceph configuration file,
wait until they form quorum and then gatherkeys, reporting the monitor status
along the process. If monitors don’t form quorum the command will eventually
time out.
Usage:
ceph-deploy mon create-initial
Subcommand create
is used to deploy Ceph monitors by explicitly specifying
the hosts which are desired to be made monitors. If no hosts are specified it
will default to use the mon initial members
defined under [global]
section of Ceph configuration file. create
first detects platform and distro
for desired hosts and checks if hostname is compatible for deployment. It then
uses the monitor keyring initially created using new
command and deploys the
monitor in desired host. If multiple hosts were specified during new
command
i.e, if there are multiple hosts in mon initial members
and multiple keyrings
were created then a concatenated keyring is used for deployment of monitors. In
this process a keyring parser is used which looks for [entity]
sections in
monitor keyrings and returns a list of those sections. A helper is then used to
collect all keyrings into a single blob that will be used to inject it to monitors
with --mkfs
on remote nodes. All keyring files are concatenated to be
in a directory ending with .keyring
. During this process the helper uses list
of sections returned by keyring parser to check if an entity is already present
in a keyring and if not, adds it. The concatenated keyring is used for deployment
of monitors to desired multiple hosts.
Usage:
ceph-deploy mon create [HOST] [HOST...]
Here, [HOST] is hostname of desired monitor host(s).
Subcommand add
is used to add a monitor to an existing cluster. It first
detects platform and distro for desired host and checks if hostname is compatible
for deployment. It then uses the monitor keyring, ensures configuration for new
monitor host and adds the monitor to the cluster. If the section for the monitor
exists and defines a mon addr that will be used, otherwise it will fallback by
resolving the hostname to an IP. If --address
is used it will override
all other options. After adding the monitor to the cluster, it gives it some time
to start. It then looks for any monitor errors and checks monitor status. Monitor
errors arise if the monitor is not added in mon initial members
, if it doesn’t
exist in monmap
and if neither public_addr
nor public_network
keys
were defined for monitors. Under such conditions, monitors may not be able to
form quorum. Monitor status tells if the monitor is up and running normally. The
status is checked by running ceph daemon mon.hostname mon_status
on remote
end which provides the output and returns a boolean status of what is going on.
False
means a monitor that is not fine even if it is up and running, while
True
means the monitor is up and running correctly.
Usage:
ceph-deploy mon add [HOST]
ceph-deploy mon add [HOST] --address [IP]
Here, [HOST] is the hostname and [IP] is the IP address of the desired monitor
node. Please note, unlike other mon
subcommands, only one node can be
specified at a time.
Subcommand destroy
is used to completely remove monitors on remote hosts.
It takes hostnames as arguments. It stops the monitor, verifies if ceph-mon
daemon really stopped, creates an archive directory mon-remove
under
/var/lib/ceph/
, archives old monitor directory in
{cluster}-{hostname}-{stamp}
format in it and removes the monitor from
cluster by running ceph remove...
command.
Usage:
ceph-deploy mon destroy [HOST] [HOST...]
Here, [HOST] is hostname of monitor that is to be removed.
gatherkeys¶
Gather authentication keys for provisioning new nodes. It takes hostnames as
arguments. It checks for and fetches client.admin
keyring, monitor keyring
and bootstrap-mds/bootstrap-osd
keyring from monitor host. These
authentication keys are used when new monitors/OSDs/MDS
are added to the
cluster.
Usage:
ceph-deploy gatherkeys [HOST] [HOST...]
Here, [HOST] is hostname of the monitor from where keys are to be pulled.
disk¶
Manage disks on a remote host. It actually triggers the ceph-disk
utility
and it’s subcommands to manage disks.
Subcommand list
lists disk partitions and Ceph OSDs.
Usage:
ceph-deploy disk list [HOST:[DISK]]
Here, [HOST] is hostname of the node and [DISK] is disk name or path.
Subcommand prepare
prepares a directory, disk or drive for a Ceph OSD. It
creates a GPT partition, marks the partition with Ceph type uuid, creates a
file system, marks the file system as ready for Ceph consumption, uses entire
partition and adds a new partition to the journal disk.
Usage:
ceph-deploy disk prepare [HOST:[DISK]]
Here, [HOST] is hostname of the node and [DISK] is disk name or path.
Subcommand activate
activates the Ceph OSD. It mounts the volume in a
temporary location, allocates an OSD id (if needed), remounts in the correct
location /var/lib/ceph/osd/$cluster-$id
and starts ceph-osd
. It is
triggered by udev
when it sees the OSD GPT partition type or on ceph service
start with ceph disk activate-all
.
Usage:
ceph-deploy disk activate [HOST:[DISK]]
Here, [HOST] is hostname of the node and [DISK] is disk name or path.
Subcommand zap
zaps/erases/destroys a device’s partition table and contents.
It actually uses sgdisk
and it’s option --zap-all
to destroy both GPT and
MBR data structures so that the disk becomes suitable for repartitioning.
sgdisk
then uses --mbrtogpt
to convert the MBR or BSD disklabel disk to a
GPT disk. The prepare
subcommand can now be executed which will create a new
GPT partition.
Usage:
ceph-deploy disk zap [HOST:[DISK]]
Here, [HOST] is hostname of the node and [DISK] is disk name or path.
osd¶
Manage OSDs by preparing data disk on remote host. osd
makes use of certain
subcommands for managing OSDs.
Subcommand prepare
prepares a directory, disk or drive for a Ceph OSD. It
first checks against multiple OSDs getting created and warns about the
possibility of more than the recommended which would cause issues with max
allowed PIDs in a system. It then reads the bootstrap-osd key for the cluster or
writes the bootstrap key if not found. It then uses ceph-disk
utility’s prepare
subcommand to prepare the disk, journal and deploy the OSD
on the desired host. Once prepared, it gives some time to the OSD to settle and
checks for any possible errors and if found, reports to the user.
Usage:
ceph-deploy osd prepare HOST:DISK[:JOURNAL] [HOST:DISK[:JOURNAL]...]
Subcommand activate
activates the OSD prepared using prepare
subcommand.
It actually uses ceph-disk utility’s activate
subcommand with
appropriate init type based on distro to activate the OSD. Once activated, it
gives some time to the OSD to start and checks for any possible errors and if
found, reports to the user. It checks the status of the prepared OSD, checks the
OSD tree and makes sure the OSDs are up and in.
Usage:
ceph-deploy osd activate HOST:DISK[:JOURNAL] [HOST:DISK[:JOURNAL]...]
Subcommand create
uses prepare
and activate
subcommands to create an
OSD.
Usage:
ceph-deploy osd create HOST:DISK[:JOURNAL] [HOST:DISK[:JOURNAL]...]
Subcommand list
lists disk partitions, Ceph OSDs and prints OSD metadata.
It gets the osd tree from a monitor host, uses the ceph-disk-list
output
and gets the mount point by matching the line where the partition mentions
the OSD name, reads metadata from files, checks if a journal path exists,
if the OSD is in a OSD tree and prints the OSD metadata.
Usage:
ceph-deploy osd list HOST:DISK[:JOURNAL] [HOST:DISK[:JOURNAL]...]
admin¶
Push configuration and client.admin
key to a remote host. It takes
the {cluster}.client.admin.keyring
from admin node and writes it under
/etc/ceph
directory of desired node.
Usage:
ceph-deploy admin [HOST] [HOST...]
Here, [HOST] is desired host to be configured for Ceph administration.
config¶
Push/pull configuration file to/from a remote host. It uses push
subcommand
to takes the configuration file from admin host and write it to remote host under
/etc/ceph
directory. It uses pull
subcommand to do the opposite i.e, pull
the configuration file under /etc/ceph
directory of remote host to admin node.
Usage:
ceph-deploy push [HOST] [HOST...]
ceph-deploy pull [HOST] [HOST...]
Here, [HOST] is the hostname of the node where config file will be pushed to or pulled from.
uninstall¶
Remove Ceph packages from remote hosts. It detects the platform and distro of
selected host and uninstalls Ceph packages from it. However, some dependencies
like librbd1
and librados2
will not be removed because they can cause
issues with qemu-kvm
.
Usage:
ceph-deploy uninstall [HOST] [HOST...]
Here, [HOST] is hostname of the node from where Ceph will be uninstalled.
purge¶
Remove Ceph packages from remote hosts and purge all data. It detects the
platform and distro of selected host, uninstalls Ceph packages and purges all
data. However, some dependencies like librbd1
and librados2
will not be
removed because they can cause issues with qemu-kvm
.
Usage:
ceph-deploy purge [HOST] [HOST...]
Here, [HOST] is hostname of the node from where Ceph will be purged.
purgedata¶
Purge (delete, destroy, discard, shred) any Ceph data from /var/lib/ceph
.
Once it detects the platform and distro of desired host, it first checks if Ceph
is still installed on the selected host and if installed, it won’t purge data
from it. If Ceph is already uninstalled from the host, it tries to remove the
contents of /var/lib/ceph
. If it fails then probably OSDs are still mounted
and needs to be unmounted to continue. It unmount the OSDs and tries to remove
the contents of /var/lib/ceph
again and checks for errors. It also removes
contents of /etc/ceph
. Once all steps are successfully completed, all the
Ceph data from the selected host are removed.
Usage:
ceph-deploy purgedata [HOST] [HOST...]
Here, [HOST] is hostname of the node from where Ceph data will be purged.
forgetkeys¶
Remove authentication keys from the local directory. It removes all the authentication keys i.e, monitor keyring, client.admin keyring, bootstrap-osd and bootstrap-mds keyring from the node.
Usage:
ceph-deploy forgetkeys
pkg¶
Manage packages on remote hosts. It is used for installing or removing packages
from remote hosts. The package names for installation or removal are to be
specified after the command. Two options --install
and
--remove
are used for this purpose.
Usage:
ceph-deploy pkg --install [PKGs] [HOST] [HOST...]
ceph-deploy pkg --remove [PKGs] [HOST] [HOST...]
Here, [PKGs] is comma-separated package names and [HOST] is hostname of the remote node where packages are to be installed or removed from.
calamari¶
Install and configure Calamari nodes. It first checks if distro is supported
for Calamari installation by ceph-deploy. An argument connect
is used for
installation and configuration. It checks for ceph-deploy
configuration
file (cd_conf) and Calamari release repo or calamari-minion
repo. It relies
on default for repo installation as it doesn’t install Ceph unless specified
otherwise. options
dictionary is also defined because ceph-deploy
pops items internally which causes issues when those items are needed to be
available for every host. If the distro is Debian/Ubuntu, it is ensured that
proxy is disabled for calamari-minion
repo. calamari-minion
package is
then installed and custom repository files are added. minion config is placed
prior to installation so that it is present when the minion first starts.
config directory, calamari salt config are created and salt-minion package
is installed. If the distro is Redhat/CentOS, the salt-minion service needs to
be started.
Usage:
ceph-deploy calamari {connect} [HOST] [HOST...]
Here, [HOST] is the hostname where Calamari is to be installed.
An option --release
can be used to use a given release from repositories
defined in ceph-deploy’s configuration. Defaults to calamari-minion
.
Another option --master
can also be used with this command.
Options¶
-
--version
¶
The current installed version of ceph-deploy.
-
--username
¶
The username to connect to the remote host.
-
--overwrite-conf
¶
Overwrite an existing conf file on remote host (if present).
-
--cluster
¶
Name of the cluster.
-
--ceph-conf
¶
Use (or reuse) a given
ceph.conf
file.
-
--no-ssh-copykey
¶
Do not attempt to copy ssh keys.
-
--fsid
¶
Provide an alternate FSID for
ceph.conf
generation.
-
--cluster-network
¶
Specify the (internal) cluster network.
-
--public-network
¶
Specify the public network for a cluster.
-
--testing
¶
Install the latest development release.
-
--dev
¶
Install a bleeding edge built from Git branch or tag (default: master).
-
--adjust-repos
¶
Install packages modifying source repos.
-
--no-adjust-repos
¶
Install packages without modifying source repos.
-
--repo
¶
Install repo files only (skips package installation).
-
--local-mirror
¶
Fetch packages and push them to hosts for a local repo mirror.
-
--repo-url
¶
Specify a repo url that mirrors/contains Ceph packages.
-
--gpg-url
¶
Specify a GPG key url to be used with custom repos (defaults to ceph.com).
-
--address
¶
IP address of the host node to be added to the cluster.
-
--keyrings
¶
Concatenate multiple keyrings to be seeded on new monitors.
-
--zap-disk
¶
Destroy the partition table and content of a disk.
-
--fs-type
¶
Filesystem to use to format disk (e.g.,
xfs
,btrfs
).
-
--dmcrypt
¶
Encrypt [data-path] and/or journal devices with
dm-crypt
.
-
--dmcrypt-key-dir
¶
Directory where
dm-crypt
keys are stored.
-
--install
¶
Comma-separated package(s) to install on remote hosts.
-
--remove
¶
Comma-separated package(s) to remove from remote hosts.
-
--master
¶
The domain for the Calamari master server.
Availability¶
ceph-deploy is part of Ceph, a massively scalable, open-source, distributed storage system. Please refer to the documentation at http://ceph.com/ceph-deploy/docs for more information.