cinder/doc/source/configuration/block-storage/drivers/netapp-volume-driver.rst

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NetApp unified driver

The NetApp unified driver is a Block Storage driver that supports multiple storage families and protocols. Currently, the only storage family supported by this driver is the clustered Data ONTAP. The storage protocol refers to the protocol used to initiate data storage and access operations on those storage systems like NVMe, iSCSI and NFS. The NetApp unified driver can be configured to provision and manage OpenStack volumes on a given storage family using a specified storage protocol.

Also, the NetApp unified driver supports over subscription or over provisioning when thin provisioned Block Storage volumes are in use. The OpenStack volumes can then be used for accessing and storing data using the storage protocol on the storage family system. The NetApp unified driver is an extensible interface that can support new storage families and protocols.

Note

With the Juno release of OpenStack, Block Storage has introduced the concept of storage pools, in which a single Block Storage back end may present one or more logical storage resource pools from which Block Storage will select a storage location when provisioning volumes.

In releases prior to Juno, the NetApp unified driver contained some scheduling logic that determined which NetApp storage container (namely, a FlexVol volume for Data ONTAP) that a new Block Storage volume would be placed into.

With the introduction of pools, all scheduling logic is performed completely within the Block Storage scheduler, as each NetApp storage container is directly exposed to the Block Storage scheduler as a storage pool. Previously, the NetApp unified driver presented an aggregated view to the scheduler and made a final placement decision as to which NetApp storage container the Block Storage volume would be provisioned into.

NetApp clustered Data ONTAP storage family

The NetApp clustered Data ONTAP storage family represents a configuration group which provides Compute instances access to clustered Data ONTAP storage systems. At present it can be configured in Block Storage to work with NVme, iSCSI and NFS storage protocols.

NetApp iSCSI configuration for clustered Data ONTAP

The NetApp iSCSI configuration for clustered Data ONTAP is an interface from OpenStack to clustered Data ONTAP storage systems. It provisions and manages the SAN block storage entity, which is a NetApp LUN that can be accessed using the iSCSI protocol.

The iSCSI configuration for clustered Data ONTAP is a direct interface from Block Storage to the clustered Data ONTAP instance and as such does not require additional management software to achieve the desired functionality. It uses NetApp APIs to interact with the clustered Data ONTAP instance.

Configuration options

Configure the volume driver, storage family, and storage protocol to the NetApp unified driver, clustered Data ONTAP, and iSCSI respectively by setting the volume_driver, netapp_storage_family and netapp_storage_protocol options in the cinder.conf file as follows:

volume_driver = cinder.volume.drivers.netapp.common.NetAppDriver
netapp_storage_family = ontap_cluster
netapp_storage_protocol = iscsi
netapp_vserver = openstack-vserver
netapp_server_hostname = myhostname
netapp_server_port = port
netapp_login = username
netapp_password = password

Note

To use the iSCSI protocol, you must override the default value of netapp_storage_protocol with iscsi. Note that this is not the same value that is reported by the driver to the scheduler as storage_protocol, which is always iSCSI (case sensitive).

Note

If you specify an account in the netapp_login that only has virtual storage server (Vserver) administration privileges (rather than cluster-wide administration privileges), some advanced features of the NetApp unified driver will not work and you may see warnings in the Block Storage logs.

Note

The driver supports iSCSI CHAP uni-directional authentication. To enable it, set the use_chap_auth option to True.

Tip

For more information on these options and other deployment and operational scenarios, visit the NetApp OpenStack website.

NetApp NVMe/TCP configuration for clustered Data ONTAP

The NetApp NVMe/TCP configuration for clustered Data ONTAP is an interface from OpenStack to clustered Data ONTAP storage systems. It provisions and manages the SAN block storage entity, which is a NetApp namespace that can be accessed using the NVMe/TCP protocol.

The NVMe/TCP configuration for clustered Data ONTAP is a direct interface from Block Storage to the clustered Data ONTAP instance and as such does not require additional management software to achieve the desired functionality. It uses NetApp APIs to interact with the clustered Data ONTAP instance.

Configuration options

Configure the volume driver, storage family, and storage protocol to the NetApp unified driver, clustered Data ONTAP, and NVMe respectively by setting the volume_driver, netapp_storage_family and netapp_storage_protocol options in the cinder.conf file as follows:

volume_driver = cinder.volume.drivers.netapp.common.NetAppDriver
netapp_storage_family = ontap_cluster
netapp_storage_protocol = nvme
netapp_vserver = openstack-vserver
netapp_server_hostname = myhostname
netapp_server_port = port
netapp_login = username
netapp_password = password

Note

To use the NVMe/TCP protocol, you must override the default value of netapp_storage_protocol with nvme. Note that this is not the same value that is reported by the driver to the scheduler as storage_protocol, which is always NVMe (case sensitive).

Note

If you specify an account in the netapp_login that only has virtual storage server (Vserver) administration privileges (rather than cluster-wide administration privileges), some advanced features of the NetApp unified driver will not work and you may see warnings in the Block Storage logs.

Note

The driver only supports the minimal Cinder driver features: create/delete volume and snapshots, extend volume, attack/detach volume, create volume from volume and create volume from image/snapshot.

Tip

For more information on these options and other deployment and operational scenarios, visit the NetApp OpenStack website.

NetApp NFS configuration for clustered Data ONTAP

The NetApp NFS configuration for clustered Data ONTAP is an interface from OpenStack to a clustered Data ONTAP system for provisioning and managing OpenStack volumes on NFS exports provided by the clustered Data ONTAP system that are accessed using the NFS protocol.

The NFS configuration for clustered Data ONTAP is a direct interface from Block Storage to the clustered Data ONTAP instance and as such does not require any additional management software to achieve the desired functionality. It uses NetApp APIs to interact with the clustered Data ONTAP instance.

Configuration options

Configure the volume driver, storage family, and storage protocol to NetApp unified driver, clustered Data ONTAP, and NFS respectively by setting the volume_driver, netapp_storage_family, and netapp_storage_protocol options in the cinder.conf file as follows:

volume_driver = cinder.volume.drivers.netapp.common.NetAppDriver
netapp_storage_family = ontap_cluster
netapp_storage_protocol = nfs
netapp_vserver = openstack-vserver
netapp_server_hostname = myhostname
netapp_server_port = port
netapp_login = username
netapp_password = password
nfs_shares_config = /etc/cinder/nfs_shares

Note

Additional NetApp NFS configuration options are shared with the generic NFS driver. These options can be found here: cinder-storage_nfs.

Note

If you specify an account in the netapp_login that only has virtual storage server (Vserver) administration privileges (rather than cluster-wide administration privileges), some advanced features of the NetApp unified driver will not work and you may see warnings in the Block Storage logs.

NetApp NFS Copy Offload client

A feature was added in the Icehouse release of the NetApp unified driver that enables Image service images to be efficiently copied to a destination Block Storage volume. When the Block Storage and Image service are configured to use the NetApp NFS Copy Offload client, a controller-side copy will be attempted before reverting to downloading the image from the Image service. This improves image provisioning times while reducing the consumption of bandwidth and CPU cycles on the host(s) running the Image and Block Storage services. This is due to the copy operation being performed completely within the storage cluster.

The NetApp NFS Copy Offload client can be used in either of the following scenarios:

  • The Image service is configured to store images in an NFS share that is exported from a NetApp FlexVol volume and the destination for the new Block Storage volume will be on an NFS share exported from a different FlexVol volume than the one used by the Image service. Both FlexVols must be located within the same cluster.
  • The source image from the Image service has already been cached in an NFS image cache within a Block Storage back end. The cached image resides on a different FlexVol volume than the destination for the new Block Storage volume. Both FlexVols must be located within the same cluster.

To use this feature, you must configure the Image service, as follows:

  • Set the default_store configuration option to file.
  • Set the filesystem_store_datadir configuration option to the path to the Image service NFS export.
  • Set the show_image_direct_url configuration option to True.
  • Set the show_multiple_locations configuration option to True.
  • Set the filesystem_store_metadata_file configuration option to a metadata file. The metadata file should contain a JSON object that contains the correct information about the NFS export used by the Image service.

To use this feature, you must configure the Block Storage service, as follows:

  • Set the netapp_copyoffload_tool_path configuration option to the path to the NetApp Copy Offload binary.

    Important

    This feature requires that:

    • The storage system must have Data ONTAP v8.2 or greater installed.
    • The vStorage feature must be enabled on each storage virtual machine (SVM, also known as a Vserver) that is permitted to interact with the copy offload client.
    • To configure the copy offload workflow, enable NFS v4.0 or greater and export it from the SVM.

Tip

To download the NetApp copy offload binary to be utilized in conjunction with the netapp_copyoffload_tool_path configuration option, please visit the Utility Toolchest page at the NetApp Support portal (login is required).

Tip

For more information on these options and other deployment and operational scenarios, visit the NetApp OpenStack website.

NetApp-supported extra specs for clustered Data ONTAP

Extra specs enable vendors to specify extra filter criteria. The Block Storage scheduler uses the specs when the scheduler determines which volume node should fulfill a volume provisioning request. When you use the NetApp unified driver with a clustered Data ONTAP storage system, you can leverage extra specs with Block Storage volume types to ensure that Block Storage volumes are created on storage back ends that have certain properties. An example of this is when you configure QoS, mirroring, or compression for a storage back end.

Extra specs are associated with Block Storage volume types. When users request volumes of a particular volume type, the volumes are created on storage back ends that meet the list of requirements. An example of this is the back ends that have the available space or extra specs. Use the specs in the following table to configure volumes. Define Block Storage volume types by using the openstack volume type set command.