Add back-end QoS support for Pure Storage. Two parameters are supported: maxIOPS - maximum IOPS per volume - range 100 -100M maxBWS - maximum I/O bandwidth in MB/s - range 1 - 524288 DocImpact Implements: blueprint pure-backend-qos Change-Id: I7f548b1aa1285499b5835fc2ebba3b6e55d8fb15
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Pure Storage iSCSI and Fibre Channel volume drivers
The Pure Storage FlashArray volume drivers for OpenStack Block Storage interact with configured Pure Storage arrays and support various operations.
Support for iSCSI storage protocol is available with the PureISCSIDriver Volume Driver class, and Fibre Channel with PureFCDriver.
All drivers are compatible with Purity FlashArrays that support the REST API version 1.2, 1.3, 1.4, 1.5, 1.13, and 1.14 (Purity 4.0.0 and newer). Some features may require newer versions of Purity.
Limitations and known issues
If you do not set up the nodes hosting instances to use multipathing, all network connectivity will use a single physical port on the array. In addition to significantly limiting the available bandwidth, this means you do not have the high-availability and non-disruptive upgrade benefits provided by FlashArray. Multipathing must be used to take advantage of these benefits.
Supported operations
- Create, delete, attach, detach, retype, clone, and extend volumes.
- Create a volume from snapshot.
- Create, list, and delete volume snapshots.
- Create, list, update, and delete consistency groups.
- Create, list, and delete consistency group snapshots.
- Revert a volume to a snapshot.
- Manage and unmanage a volume.
- Manage and unmanage a snapshot.
- Get volume statistics.
- Create a thin provisioned volume.
- Replicate volumes to remote Pure Storage array(s).
QoS support for the Pure Storage drivers include the ability to set
the following capabilities in the OpenStack Block Storage API
cinder.api.contrib.qos_spec_manage
qos specs extension
module:
- maxIOPS - Maximum number of IOPs allowed for volume. Range: 100 - 100M
- maxBWS - Maximum bandwidth limit in MB/s. Range: 1 - 524288 (512GB/s)
The qos keys above must be created and asscoiated to a volume type. For information on how to set the key-value pairs and associate them with a volume type see the volume qos section in the OpenStack Client command list.
Configure OpenStack and Purity
You need to configure both your Purity array and your OpenStack cluster.
Note
These instructions assume that the cinder-api
and
cinder-scheduler
services are installed and configured in
your OpenStack cluster.
Configure the OpenStack Block Storage service
In these steps, you will edit the cinder.conf
file to
configure the OpenStack Block Storage service to enable multipathing and
to use the Pure Storage FlashArray as back-end storage.
Install Pure Storage PyPI module. A requirement for the Pure Storage driver is the installation of the Pure Storage Python SDK version 1.4.0 or later from PyPI.
$ pip install purestorage
Retrieve an API token from Purity. The OpenStack Block Storage service configuration requires an API token from Purity. Actions performed by the volume driver use this token for authorization. Also, Purity logs the volume driver's actions as being performed by the user who owns this API token.
If you created a Purity user account that is dedicated to managing your OpenStack Block Storage volumes, copy the API token from that user account.
Use the appropriate create or list command below to display and copy the Purity API token:
To create a new API token:
$ pureadmin create --api-token USER
The following is an example output:
$ pureadmin create --api-token pureuser Name API Token Created pureuser 902fdca3-7e3f-d2e4-d6a6-24c2285fe1d9 2014-08-04 14:50:30
To list an existing API token:
$ pureadmin list --api-token --expose USER
The following is an example output:
$ pureadmin list --api-token --expose pureuser Name API Token Created pureuser 902fdca3-7e3f-d2e4-d6a6-24c2285fe1d9 2014-08-04 14:50:30
Copy the API token retrieved (
902fdca3-7e3f-d2e4-d6a6-24c2285fe1d9
from the examples above) to use in the next step.Edit the OpenStack Block Storage service configuration file. The following sample
/etc/cinder/cinder.conf
configuration lists the relevant settings for a typical Block Storage service using a single Pure Storage array:[DEFAULT] enabled_backends = puredriver-1 default_volume_type = puredriver-1 [puredriver-1] volume_backend_name = puredriver-1 volume_driver = PURE_VOLUME_DRIVER san_ip = IP_PURE_MGMT pure_api_token = PURE_API_TOKEN use_multipath_for_image_xfer = True
Replace the following variables accordingly:
- PURE_VOLUME_DRIVER
-
Use either
cinder.volume.drivers.pure.PureISCSIDriver
for iSCSI orcinder.volume.drivers.pure.PureFCDriver
for Fibre Channel connectivity. - IP_PURE_MGMT
-
The IP address of the Pure Storage array's management interface or a domain name that resolves to that IP address.
- PURE_API_TOKEN
-
The Purity Authorization token that the volume driver uses to perform volume management on the Pure Storage array.
Note
The volume driver automatically creates Purity host objects for
initiators as needed. If CHAP authentication is enabled via the
use_chap_auth
setting, you must ensure there are no
manually created host objects with IQN's that will be used by the
OpenStack Block Storage service. The driver will only modify credentials
on hosts that it manages.
Note
If using the PureFCDriver it is recommended to use the OpenStack Block Storage Fibre Channel Zone Manager.
Volume auto-eradication
To enable auto-eradication of deleted volumes, snapshots, and
consistency groups on deletion, modify the following option in the
cinder.conf
file:
pure_eradicate_on_delete = true
By default, auto-eradication is disabled and all deleted volumes, snapshots, and consistency groups are retained on the Pure Storage array in a recoverable state for 24 hours from time of deletion.
Setting host personality
The host personality determines how the Purity system tunes the protocol used between the array and the initiator. To ensure the array works optimally with the host, set the personality to the name of the host operating or virtual memory system. Valid values are aix, esxi, hitachi-vsp, hpux, oracle-vm-server, solaris, and vms. If your system is not listed as one of the valid host personalities, do not set the option. By default, the host personality is not set.
To set the host personality, modify the following option in the
cinder.conf
file:
pure_host_personality = <personality>
Note
pure_host_personality
is available from Purity REST API
version 1.14, and affects only newly-created hosts.
SSL certification
To enable SSL certificate validation, modify the following option in
the cinder.conf
file:
driver_ssl_cert_verify = true
By default, SSL certificate validation is disabled.
To specify a non-default path to CA_Bundle
file or
directory with certificates of trusted CAs:
driver_ssl_cert_path = Certificate path
Note
This requires the use of Pure Storage Python SDK > 1.4.0.
Replication configuration
Add the following to the back-end specification to specify another Flash Array to replicate to:
[puredriver-1]
replication_device = backend_id:PURE2_NAME,san_ip:IP_PURE2_MGMT,api_token:PURE2_API_TOKEN,type:REPLICATION_TYPE
Where PURE2_NAME
is the name of the remote Pure Storage
system, IP_PURE2_MGMT
is the management IP address of the
remote array, and PURE2_API_TOKEN
is the Purity
Authorization token of the remote array.
The REPLICATION_TYPE
value for the type
key
can be either sync
or async
If the type
is sync
volumes will be created
in a stretched Pod. This requires two arrays pre-configured with Active
Cluster enabled. You can optionally specify uniform
as
true
or false
, this will instruct the driver
that data paths are uniform between arrays in the cluster and data
connections should be made to both upon attaching.
Note that more than one replication_device
line can be
added to allow for multi-target device replication.
A volume is only replicated if the volume is of a volume-type that
has the extra spec replication_enabled
set to
<is> True
. You can optionally specify the
replication_type
key to specify
<in> sync
or <in> async
to choose
the type of replication for that volume. If not specified it will
default to async
.
To create a volume type that specifies replication to remote back ends with async replication:
$ openstack volume type create ReplicationType
$ openstack volume type set --property replication_enabled='<is> True' ReplicationType
$ openstack volume type set --property replication_type='<in> async' ReplicationType
The following table contains the optional configuration parameters available for async replication configuration with the Pure Storage array.
Option | Description | Default |
---|---|---|
pure_replica_interval_default |
Snapshot replication interval in seconds. | 3600 |
pure_replica_retention_short_term_default |
Retain all snapshots on target for this time (in seconds). | 14400 |
pure_replica_retention_long_term_per_day_default |
Retain how many snapshots for each day. | 3 |
pure_replica_retention_long_term_default |
Retain snapshots per day on target for this time (in days). | 7 |
pure_replication_pg_name |
Pure Protection Group name to use for async replication (will be created if it does not exist). | cinder-group |
pure_replication_pod_name |
Pure Pod name to use for sync replication (will be created if it does not exist). | cinder-pod |
Note
failover-host
is only supported from the primary array
to any of the multiple secondary arrays, but subsequent
failover-host
is only supported back to the original
primary array.
Note
pure_replication_pg_name
and
pure_replication_pod_name
should not be changed after
volumes have been created in the Cinder backend, as this could have
unexpected results in both replication and failover.
Automatic thin-provisioning/oversubscription ratio
This feature allows the driver to calculate the array oversubscription ratio as (total provisioned/actual used). By default this feature is enabled.
To disable this feature and honor the hard-coded configuration option
max_over_subscription_ratio
add the following option in the
cinder.conf
file:
[puredriver-1]
pure_automatic_max_oversubscription_ratio = False
Note
Arrays with very good data reduction rates (compression/data deduplication/thin provisioning) can get very large oversubscription rates applied.
Scheduling metrics
A large number of metrics are reported by the volume driver which can be useful in implementing more control over volume placement in multi-backend environments using the driver filter and weighter methods.
Metrics reported include, but are not limited to:
total_capacity_gb
free_capacity_gb
provisioned_capacity
total_volumes
total_snapshots
total_hosts
total_pgroups
writes_per_sec
reads_per_sec
input_per_sec
output_per_sec
usec_per_read_op
usec_per_read_op
queue_depth
replication_type
Note
All total metrics include non-OpenStack managed objects on the array.
In conjunction with QOS extra-specs, you can create very complex algorithms to manage volume placement. More detailed documentation on this is available in other external documentation.
Configuration Options
The following list all Pure driver specific configuration options that can be set in `cinder.conf`:
cinder.volume.drivers.pure