Some docs links have changed. We should update the wrong links in our codes. Change-Id: Id45d9f96abad7c6b5163e45ed7f1b1c2608ef022 Signed-off-by: yanghuichan <yanghc@fiberhome.com>
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Hitachi NAS (HNAS) driver
The HNAS driver provides NFS Shared File Systems to OpenStack.
Requirements
- Hitachi NAS Platform Models 3080, 3090, 4040, 4060, 4080, and 4100.
- HNAS/SMU software version is 12.2 or higher.
- HNAS configuration and management utilities to create a storage pool
(span) and an EVS.
- GUI (SMU).
- SSC CLI.
Supported shared filesystems and operations
The driver supports NFS and CIFS shares.
The following operations are supported:
- Create a share.
- Delete a share.
- Allow share access.
- Deny share access.
- Create a snapshot.
- Delete a snapshot.
- Create a share from a snapshot.
- Revert a share to a snapshot.
- Extend a share.
- Manage a share.
- Unmanage a share.
- Shrink a share.
- Mount snapshots.
- Allow snapshot access.
- Deny snapshot access.
- Manage a snapshot.
- Unmanage a snapshot.
Driver options
This table contains the configuration options specific to the share driver.
Pre-configuration on OpenStack deployment
Install the OpenStack environment with manila. See the OpenStack installation guide.
Configure the OpenStack networking so it can reach HNAS Management interface and HNAS EVS Data interface.
In the driver mode used by HNAS Driver (DHSS =
False
), the driver does not handle network configuration, it is up to the administrator to configure it.Configure the network of the manila-share node network to reach HNAS management interface through the admin network.
Configure the network of the Compute and Networking nodes to reach HNAS EVS data interface through the data network.
Example of networking architecture:
Edit the
/etc/neutron/plugins/ml2/ml2_conf.ini
file and update the following settings in their respective tags. In case you use linuxbridge, update bridge mappings at linuxbridge section:
It is mandatory that HNAS management interface is reachable from the Shared File System node through the admin network, while the selected EVS data interface is reachable from OpenStack Cloud, such as through Neutron flat networking.
[ml2] type_drivers = flat,vlan,vxlan,gre mechanism_drivers = openvswitch [ml2_type_flat] flat_networks = physnet1,physnet2 [ml2_type_vlan] network_vlan_ranges = physnet1:1000:1500,physnet2:2000:2500 [ovs] bridge_mappings = physnet1:br-ex,physnet2:br-eth1
You may have to repeat the last line above in another file on the Compute node, if it exists it is located in:
/etc/neutron/plugins/openvswitch/ovs_neutron_plugin.ini
.In case openvswitch for neutron agent, run in network node:
# ifconfig eth1 0 # ovs-vsctl add-br br-eth1 # ovs-vsctl add-port br-eth1 eth1 # ifconfig eth1 up
Restart all neutron processes.
Create the data HNAS network in OpenStack:
List the available projects:
$ openstack project list
Create a network to the given project (DEMO), providing the project name, a name for the network, the name of the physical network over which the virtual network is implemented, and the type of the physical mechanism by which the virtual network is implemented:
$ openstack network create --project DEMO \ --provider-network-type flat \ --provider-physical-network physnet2 hnas_network
Optional: List available networks:
$ openstack network list
Create a subnet to the same project (DEMO), the gateway IP of this subnet, a name for the subnet, the network name created before, and the CIDR of subnet:
$ openstack subnet create --project DEMO --gateway GATEWAY \ --subnet-range SUBNET_CIDR --network NETWORK HNAS_SUBNET
Optional: List available subnets:
$ openstack subnet list
Add the subnet interface to a router, providing the router name and subnet name created before:
$ openstack router add subnet SUBNET ROUTER
Pre-configuration on HNAS
Create a file system on HNAS. See the Hitachi HNAS reference.
Important
Make sure that the filesystem is not created as a replication target. For more information, refer to the official HNAS administration guide.
Prepare the HNAS EVS network.
Create a route in HNAS to the project network:
$ console-context --evs <EVS_ID_IN_USE> route-net-add \ --gateway <FLAT_NETWORK_GATEWAY> <TENANT_PRIVATE_NETWORK>
Important
Make sure multi-tenancy is enabled and routes are configured per EVS.
$ console-context --evs 3 route-net-add --gateway 192.168.1.1 \ 10.0.0.0/24
Configure the CIFS security.
- Before using CIFS shares with the HNAS driver, make sure to configure a security service in the back end. For details, refer to the Hitachi HNAS reference.
Back end configuration
Configure HNAS driver.
Configure HNAS driver according to your environment. This example shows a minimal HNAS driver configuration:
[DEFAULT] enabled_share_backends = hnas1 enabled_share_protocols = NFS,CIFS [hnas1] share_backend_name = HNAS1 share_driver = manila.share.drivers.hitachi.hnas.driver.HitachiHNASDriver driver_handles_share_servers = False hitachi_hnas_ip = 172.24.44.15 hitachi_hnas_user = supervisor hitachi_hnas_password = supervisor hitachi_hnas_evs_id = 1 hitachi_hnas_evs_ip = 10.0.1.20 hitachi_hnas_file_system_name = FS-Manila hitachi_hnas_cifs_snapshot_while_mounted = True
Note
The
hds_hnas_cifs_snapshot_while_mounted
parameter allows snapshots to be taken while CIFS shares are mounted. This parameter is set toFalse
by default, which prevents a snapshot from being taken if the share is mounted or in use.
Optional. HNAS multi-backend configuration.
Update the
enabled_share_backends
flag with the names of the back ends separated by commas.Add a section for every back end according to the example bellow:
[DEFAULT] enabled_share_backends = hnas1,hnas2 enabled_share_protocols = NFS,CIFS [hnas1] share_backend_name = HNAS1 share_driver = manila.share.drivers.hitachi.hnas.driver.HitachiHNASDriver driver_handles_share_servers = False hitachi_hnas_ip = 172.24.44.15 hitachi_hnas_user = supervisor hitachi_hnas_password = supervisor hitachi_hnas_evs_id = 1 hitachi_hnas_evs_ip = 10.0.1.20 hitachi_hnas_file_system_name = FS-Manila1 hitachi_hnas_cifs_snapshot_while_mounted = True [hnas2] share_backend_name = HNAS2 share_driver = manila.share.drivers.hitachi.hnas.driver.HitachiHNASDriver driver_handles_share_servers = False hitachi_hnas_ip = 172.24.44.15 hitachi_hnas_user = supervisor hitachi_hnas_password = supervisor hitachi_hnas_evs_id = 1 hitachi_hnas_evs_ip = 10.0.1.20 hitachi_hnas_file_system_name = FS-Manila2 hitachi_hnas_cifs_snapshot_while_mounted = True
Disable DHSS for HNAS share type configuration:
Note
Shared File Systems requires that the share type includes the
driver_handles_share_servers
extra-spec. This ensures that the share will be created on a back end that supports the requesteddriver_handles_share_servers
capability.$ manila type-create hitachi False
Optional: Add extra-specs for enabling HNAS-supported features:
These commands will enable various snapshot-related features that are supported in HNAS.
$ manila type-key hitachi set snapshot_support=True $ manila type-key hitachi set mount_snapshot_support=True $ manila type-key hitachi set revert_to_snapshot_support=True $ manila type-key hitachi set create_share_from_snapshot_support=True
To specify which HNAS back end will be created by the share, in case of multiple back end setups, add an extra-spec for each share-type to match a specific back end. Therefore, it is possible to specify which back end the Shared File System service will use when creating a share.
$ manila type-key hitachi set share_backend_name=hnas1 $ manila type-key hitachi2 set share_backend_name=hnas2
Restart all Shared File Systems services (
manila-share
,manila-scheduler
andmanila-api
).
Share migration
Extra configuration is needed for allowing shares to be migrated from
or to HNAS. In the OpenStack deployment, the manila-share node needs an
additional connection to the EVS data interface. Furthermore, make sure
to add hitachi_hnas_admin_network_ip
to the configuration.
This should match the value of data_node_access_ip
. For
more in-depth documentation, refer to the share
migration documents
Manage and unmanage shares
Shared File Systems has the ability to manage and unmanage shares. If
there is a share in the storage and it is not in OpenStack, you can
manage that share and use it as a Shared File Systems share.
Administrators have to make sure the exports are under the
/shares
folder beforehand. HNAS drivers use virtual-volumes
(V-VOL) to create shares. Only V-VOL shares can be used by the driver,
and V-VOLs must have a quota limit. If the NFS export is an ordinary FS
export, it is not possible to use it in Shared File Systems. The
unmanage operation only unlinks the share from Shared File Systems, all
data is preserved. Both manage and unmanage operations are
non-disruptive by default, until access rules are modified.
To manage a share, use:
$ manila manage [--name <name>] [--description <description>]
[--share_type <share-type>]
[--driver_options [<key=value> [<key=value> ...]]]
[--public]
<service_host> <protocol> <export_path>
Where:
Parameter | Description |
---|---|
service_host |
Manila host, back end and share name. For example,
ubuntu@hitachi1#hsp1 . The available hosts can be listed
with the command: manila pool-list (admin only). |
|
Protocol of share to manage, such as NFS or CIFS. |
|
|
Note
For NFS exports, export_path
must
include /shares/
after the target address. Trying to
reference the share name directly or under another path will fail.
Note
For CIFS exports, although the shares will be created under the
/shares/
folder in the back end, only the share name is
needed in the export path. It should also be noted that the backslash
\
character has to be escaped when entered in Linux
terminals.
For additional details, refer to manila help manage
or
the OpenStack
Shared File Systems documentation.
To unmanage a share, use:
$ manila unmanage <share>
Where:
Parameter | Description |
---|---|
|
ID or name of the share to be unmanaged. A list of shares can be
fetched with manila list . |
Manage and unmanage snapshots
The Shared File Systems service also has the ability to manage share
snapshots. Existing HNAS snapshots can be managed, as long as the
snapshot directory is located in /snapshots/share_ID
. New
snapshots created through the Shared File Systems service are also
created according to this specific folder structure.
To manage a snapshot, use:
$ manila snapshot-manage [--name <name>] [--description <description>]
[--driver_options [<key=value> [<key=value> ...]]]
<share> <provider_location>
Where:
Parameter | Description |
---|---|
|
ID or name of the share to be managed. A list of shares can be
fetched with manila list . |
provider_location |
Location of the snapshot on the back end, such as
/snapshots/share_ID/snapshot_ID . |
--driver_options |
Driver-related configuration, passed such as
size=10 . |
Note
The mandatory provider_location
parameter uses the same
syntax for both NFS and CIFS shares. This is only the case for snapshot
management.
Note
The --driver_options
parameter size
is
required for the HNAS driver. Administrators need to
know the size of the to-be-managed snapshot beforehand.
Note
If the mount_snapshot_support=True
extra-spec is set in
the share type, the HNAS driver will automatically create an export when
managing a snapshot if one does not already exist.
To unmanage a snapshot, use:
$ manila snapshot-unmanage <snapshot>
Where:
Parameter | Description |
---|---|
snapshot |
Name or ID of the snapshot(s). |
Additional notes
- HNAS has some restrictions about the number of EVSs, filesystems, virtual-volumes, and simultaneous SSC connections. Check the manual specification for your system.
- Shares and snapshots are thin provisioned. It is reported to Shared File System only the real used space in HNAS. Also, a snapshot does not initially take any space in HNAS, it only stores the difference between the share and the snapshot, so it grows when share data is changed.
- Administrators should manage the project's quota (
manila quota-update
) to control the back end usage. - Shares will need to be remounted after a revert-to-snapshot operation.