Change-Id: Icdd7eafac412982e5770f9a8a7b7d57c91ad6cea
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CephFS driver
The CephFS driver enables manila to export shared filesystems backed by Ceph's File System (CephFS) using either the Ceph network protocol or NFS protocol. Guests require a native Ceph client or an NFS client in order to mount the filesystem.
When guests access CephFS using the native Ceph protocol, access is controlled via Ceph's cephx authentication system. If a user requests share access for an ID, Ceph creates a corresponding Ceph auth ID and a secret key, if they do not already exist, and authorizes the ID to access the share. The client can then mount the share using the ID and the secret key. To learn more about configuring Ceph clients to access the shares created using this driver, please see the Ceph documentation (http://docs.ceph.com/docs/master/cephfs/). If you choose to use the kernel client rather than the FUSE client, the share size limits set in manila may not be obeyed.
And when guests access CephFS through NFS, an NFS-Ganesha server mediates access to CephFS. The driver enables access control by managing the NFS-Ganesha server's exports.
Supported Operations
The following operations are supported with CephFS backend:
Create/delete share
Allow/deny CephFS native protocol access to share
- Only
cephx
access type is supported for CephFS native protocol. read-only
access level is supported in Newton or later versions of manila.read-write
access level is supported in Mitaka or later versions of manila.
(or)
Allow/deny NFS access to share
- Only
ip
access type is supported for NFS protocol. read-only
andread-write
access levels are supported in Pike or later versions of manila.
- Only
Extend/shrink share
Create/delete snapshot
Create/delete consistency group (CG)
Create/delete CG snapshot
Warning
CephFS currently supports snapshots as an experimental feature, therefore the snapshot support with the CephFS Native driver is also experimental and should not be used in production environments. For more information, see (http://docs.ceph.com/docs/master/cephfs/experimental-features/#snapshots).
Prerequisites
Important
A manila share backed by CephFS is only as good as the underlying filesystem. Take care when configuring your Ceph cluster, and consult the latest guidance on the use of CephFS in the Ceph documentation ( http://docs.ceph.com/docs/master/cephfs/)
For CephFS native shares
- Mitaka or later versions of manila.
- Jewel or later versions of Ceph.
- A Ceph cluster with a filesystem configured ( http://docs.ceph.com/docs/master/cephfs/createfs/)
ceph-common
package installed in the servers running themanila-share
service.- Ceph client installed in the guest, preferably the FUSE based
client,
ceph-fuse
. - Network connectivity between your Ceph cluster's public network and
the servers running the
manila-share
service. - Network connectivity between your Ceph cluster's public network and
guests. See
security_cephfs_native
.
For CephFS NFS shares
- Pike or later versions of manila.
- Kraken or later versions of Ceph.
- 2.5 or later versions of NFS-Ganesha.
- A Ceph cluster with a filesystem configured ( http://docs.ceph.com/docs/master/cephfs/createfs/)
ceph-common
package installed in the servers running themanila-share
service.- NFS client installed in the guest.
- Network connectivity between your Ceph cluster's public network and
the servers running the
manila-share
service. - Network connectivity between your Ceph cluster's public network and NFS-Ganesha server.
- Network connectivity between your NFS-Ganesha server and the manila guest.
Authorizing the driver to communicate with Ceph
Run the following commands to create a Ceph identity for a driver instance to use:
read -d '' MON_CAPS << EOF
allow r,
allow command "auth del",
allow command "auth caps",
allow command "auth get",
allow command "auth get-or-create"
EOF
ceph auth get-or-create client.manila -o manila.keyring \
mds 'allow *' \
osd 'allow rw' \
mon "$MON_CAPS"
manila.keyring
, along with your ceph.conf
file, will then need to be placed on the server running the manila-share
service.
Important
To communicate with the Ceph backend, a CephFS driver instance (represented as a backend driver section in manila.conf) requires its own Ceph auth ID that is not used by other CephFS driver instances running in the same controller node.
In the server running the manila-share
service, you can place the
ceph.conf
and manila.keyring
files in the
/etc/ceph directory. Set the same owner for the manila-share
process and the
manila.keyring
file. Add the following section to the
ceph.conf
file.
[client.manila]
client mount uid = 0
client mount gid = 0
log file = /opt/stack/logs/ceph-client.manila.log
admin socket = /opt/stack/status/stack/ceph-$name.$pid.asok
keyring = /etc/ceph/manila.keyring
It is advisable to modify the Ceph client's admin socket file and log file locations so that they are co-located with manila services's pid files and log files respectively.
Enabling snapshot support in Ceph backend
Enable snapshots in Ceph if you want to use them in manila:
ceph mds set allow_new_snaps true --yes-i-really-mean-it
Warning
Note that the snapshot support for the CephFS driver is experimental
and is known to have several caveats for use. Only enable this and the
equivalent manila.conf
option if you understand these
risks. See (http://docs.ceph.com/docs/master/cephfs/experimental-features/#snapshots)
for more details.
Configuring CephFS backend in manila.conf
Configure CephFS native share backend in manila.conf
Add CephFS to enabled_share_protocols
(enforced at
manila api layer). In this example we leave NFS and CIFS enabled,
although you can remove these if you will only use CephFS:
enabled_share_protocols = NFS,CIFS,CEPHFS
Create a section like this to define a CephFS native backend:
[cephfsnative1]
driver_handles_share_servers = False
share_backend_name = CEPHFSNATIVE1
share_driver = manila.share.drivers.cephfs.driver.CephFSDriver
cephfs_conf_path = /etc/ceph/ceph.conf
cephfs_protocol_helper_type = CEPHFS
cephfs_auth_id = manila
cephfs_cluster_name = ceph
cephfs_enable_snapshots = False
Set driver-handles-share-servers
to False
as the driver does not manage the lifecycle of
share-servers
. To let the driver perform snapshot related
operations, set cephfs_enable_snapshots
to True. For the
driver backend to expose shares via the native Ceph protocol, set
cephfs_protocol_helper_type
to CEPHFS
.
Then edit enabled_share_backends
to point to the
driver's backend section using the section name. In this example we are
also including another backend ("generic1"), you would include whatever
other backends you have configured.
Note
For Mitaka, Newton, and Ocata releases, the share_driver
path was
manila.share.drivers.cephfs.cephfs_native.CephFSNativeDriver
enabled_share_backends = generic1, cephfsnative1
Configure CephFS NFS share backend in manila.conf
Add NFS to enabled_share_protocols
if it's not already
there:
enabled_share_protocols = NFS,CIFS,CEPHFS
Create a section to define a CephFS NFS share backend:
[cephfsnfs1]
driver_handles_share_servers = False
share_backend_name = CEPHFSNFS1
share_driver = manila.share.drivers.cephfs.driver.CephFSDriver
cephfs_protocol_helper_type = NFS
cephfs_conf_path = /etc/ceph/ceph.conf
cephfs_auth_id = manila
cephfs_cluster_name = ceph
cephfs_enable_snapshots = False
cephfs_ganesha_server_is_remote= False
cephfs_ganesha_server_ip = 172.24.4.3
The following options are set in the driver backend section above:
driver-handles-share-servers
toFalse
as the driver does not manage the lifecycle ofshare-servers
.cephfs_protocol_helper_type
toNFS
to allow NFS protocol access to the CephFS backed shares.ceph_auth_id
to the ceph auth ID created inauthorize_ceph_driver
.cephfs_ganesha_server_is_remote
to False if the NFS-ganesha server is co-located with themanila-share
service. If the NFS-Ganesha server is remote, then set the options toTrue
, and set other options such ascephfs_ganesha_server_ip
,cephfs_ganesha_server_username
, andcephfs_ganesha_server_password
(orcephfs_ganesha_path_to_private_key
) to allow the driver to manage the NFS-Ganesha export entries over SSH.cephfs_ganesha_server_ip
to the ganesha server IP address. It is recommended to set this option even if the ganesha server is co-located with themanila-share
service.
With NFS-Ganesha (v2.5.4 or later), Ceph (v12.2.2 or later), the driver (Queens or later) can store NFS-Ganesha exports and export counter in Ceph RADOS objects. This is useful for highly available NFS-Ganesha deployments to store its configuration efficiently in an already available distributed storage system. Set additional options in the NFS driver section to enable the driver to do this.
[cephfsnfs1]
ganesha_rados_store_enable = True
ganesha_rados_store_pool_name = cephfs_data
driver_handles_share_servers = False
share_backend_name = CEPHFSNFS1
share_driver = manila.share.drivers.cephfs.driver.CephFSDriver
cephfs_protocol_helper_type = NFS
cephfs_conf_path = /etc/ceph/ceph.conf
cephfs_auth_id = manila
cephfs_cluster_name = ceph
cephfs_enable_snapshots = False
cephfs_ganesha_server_is_remote= False
cephfs_ganesha_server_ip = 172.24.4.3
The following ganesha library (See manila's ganesha library documentation for more details) related options are set in the driver backend section above:
ganesha_rados_store_enable
to True for persisting Ganesha exports and export counter in Ceph RADOS objects.ganesha_rados_store_pool_name
to the Ceph RADOS pool that stores Ganesha exports and export counter objects. If you want to use one of the backend CephFS's RADOS pools, then using CephFS's data pool is preferred over using its metadata pool.
Edit enabled_share_backends
to point to the driver's
backend section using the section name, cephfsnfs1
.
enabled_share_backends = generic1, cephfsnfs1
Creating shares
Create CephFS native share
The default share type may have
driver_handles_share_servers
set to True. Configure a share
type suitable for CephFS native share:
manila type-create cephfsnativetype false
manila type-key cephfsnativetype set vendor_name=Ceph storage_protocol=CEPHFS
Then create yourself a share:
manila create --share-type cephfsnativetype --name cephnativeshare1 cephfs 1
Note the export location of the share:
manila share-export-location-list cephnativeshare1
The export location of the share contains the Ceph monitor (mon)
addresses and ports, and the path to be mounted. It is of the form,
{mon ip addr:port}[,{mon ip addr:port}]:{path to be mounted}
Create CephFS NFS share
Configure a share type suitable for CephFS NFS share:
manila type-create cephfsnfstype false
manila type-key cephfsnfstype set vendor_name=Ceph storage_protocol=NFS
Then create a share:
manila create --share-type cephfsnfstype --name cephnfsshare1 nfs 1
Note the export location of the share:
manila share-export-location-list cephnfsshare1
The export location of the share contains the IP address of the
NFS-Ganesha server and the path to be mounted. It is of the form,
{NFS-Ganesha server address}:{path to be mounted}
Allowing access to shares
Allow access to CephFS native share
Allow Ceph auth ID alice
access to the share using
cephx
access type.
manila access-allow cephnativeshare1 cephx alice
Note the access status, and the access/secret key of
alice
.
manila access-list cephnativeshare1
Note
In Mitaka release, the secret key is not exposed by any manila API. The Ceph storage admin needs to pass the secret key to the guest out of band of manila. You can refer to the link below to see how the storage admin could obtain the secret key of an ID. http://docs.ceph.com/docs/jewel/rados/operations/user-management/#get-a-user
Alternatively, the cloud admin can create Ceph auth IDs for each of the tenants. The users can then request manila to authorize the pre-created Ceph auth IDs, whose secret keys are already shared with them out of band of manila, to access the shares.
Following is a command that the cloud admin could run from the server
running the manila-share
service to create a Ceph auth ID and get
its keyring file.
ceph --name=client.manila --keyring=/etc/ceph/manila.keyring auth \
get-or-create client.alice -o alice.keyring
For more details, please see the Ceph documentation. http://docs.ceph.com/docs/jewel/rados/operations/user-management/#add-a-user
Allow access to CephFS NFS share
Allow a guest access to the share using ip
access
type.
manila access-allow cephnfsshare1 ip 172.24.4.225
Mounting CephFS shares
Mounting CephFS native share using FUSE client
Using the secret key of the authorized ID alice
create a
keyring file, alice.keyring
like:
[client.alice]
key = AQA8+ANW/4ZWNRAAOtWJMFPEihBA1unFImJczA==
Using the mon IP addresses from the share's export location, create a
configuration file, ceph.conf
like:
[client]
client quota = true
mon host = 192.168.1.7:6789, 192.168.1.8:6789, 192.168.1.9:6789
Finally, mount the filesystem, substituting the filenames of the keyring and configuration files you just created, and substituting the path to be mounted from the share's export location:
sudo ceph-fuse ~/mnt \
--id=alice \
--conf=./ceph.conf \
--keyring=./alice.keyring \
--client-mountpoint=/volumes/_nogroup/4c55ad20-9c55-4a5e-9233-8ac64566b98c
Mount CephFS NFS share using NFS client
In the guest, mount the share using the NFS client and knowing the share's export location.
sudo mount -t nfs 172.24.4.3:/volumes/_nogroup/6732900b-32c1-4816-a529-4d6d3f15811e /mnt/nfs/
Known restrictions
- A CephFS driver instance, represented as a backend driver section in manila.conf, requires a Ceph auth ID unique to the backend Ceph Filesystem. Using a non-unique Ceph auth ID will result in the driver unintentionally evicting other CephFS clients using the same Ceph auth ID to connect to the backend.
- The snapshot support of the driver is disabled by default. The
cephfs_enable_snapshots
configuration option needs to be set toTrue
to allow snapshot operations. Snapshot support will also need to be enabled on the backend CephFS storage. - Snapshots are read-only. A user can read a snapshot's contents from
the
.snap/{manila-snapshot-id}_{unknown-id}
folder within the mounted share.
Restrictions with CephFS native share backend
- To restrict share sizes, CephFS uses quotas that are enforced in the client side. The CephFS FUSE clients are relied on to respect quotas.
Mitaka release only
- The secret-key of a Ceph auth ID required to mount a share is not exposed to an user by a manila API. To workaround this, the storage admin would need to pass the key out of band of manila, or the user would need to use the Ceph ID and key already created and shared with her by the cloud admin.
Security
Each share's data is mapped to a distinct Ceph RADOS namespace. A guest is restricted to access only that particular RADOS namespace. http://docs.ceph.com/docs/master/cephfs/file-layouts/
An additional level of resource isolation can be provided by mapping a share's contents to a separate RADOS pool. This layout would be preferred only for cloud deployments with a limited number of shares needing strong resource separation. You can do this by setting a share type specification,
cephfs:data_isolated
for the share type used by the cephfs driver.manila type-key cephfstype set cephfs:data_isolated=True
Security with CephFS native share backend
As the guests need direct access to Ceph's public network, CephFS native share backend is suitable only in private clouds where guests can be trusted.
The manila.share.drivers.cephfs.driver
Module
manila.share.drivers.cephfs.driver