Terminology¶
A Ceph cluster may have zero or more CephFS file systems. CephFS
file systems have a human readable name (set in fs new
)
and an integer ID. The ID is called the file system cluster ID,
or FSCID.
Each CephFS file system has a number of ranks, one by default, which start at zero. A rank may be thought of as a metadata shard. Controlling the number of ranks in a file system is described in Configuring multiple active MDS daemons
Each CephFS ceph-mds process (a daemon) initially starts up without a rank. It may be assigned one by the monitor cluster. A daemon may only hold one rank at a time. Daemons only give up a rank when the ceph-mds process stops.
If a rank is not associated with a daemon, the rank is considered failed. Once a rank is assigned to a daemon, the rank is considered up.
A daemon has a name that is set statically by the administrator when the daemon is first configured. Typical configurations use the hostname where the daemon runs as the daemon name.
Each time a daemon starts up, it is also assigned a GID, which is unique to this particular process lifetime of the daemon. The GID is an integer.
Referring to MDS daemons¶
Most of the administrative commands that refer to an MDS daemon accept a flexible argument format that may contain a rank, a GID or a name.
Where a rank is used, this may optionally be qualified with a leading file system name or ID. If a daemon is a standby (i.e. it is not currently assigned a rank), then it may only be referred to by GID or name.
For example, if we had an MDS daemon which was called ‘myhost’, had GID 5446, and was assigned rank 0 in the file system ‘myfs’ which had FSCID 3, then any of the following would be suitable forms of the ‘fail’ command:
ceph mds fail 5446 # GID
ceph mds fail myhost # Daemon name
ceph mds fail 0 # Unqualified rank
ceph mds fail 3:0 # FSCID and rank
ceph mds fail myfs:0 # File System name and rank
Managing failover¶
If an MDS daemon stops communicating with the monitor, the monitor will wait
mds_beacon_grace
seconds (default 15 seconds) before marking the daemon as
laggy. If a standby is available, the monitor will immediately replace the
laggy daemon.
Each file system may specify a number of standby daemons to be considered healthy. This number includes daemons in standby-replay waiting for a rank to fail (remember that a standby-replay daemon will not be assigned to take over a failure for another rank or a failure in a another CephFS file system). The pool of standby daemons not in replay count towards any file system count. Each file system may set the number of standby daemons wanted using:
ceph fs set <fs name> standby_count_wanted <count>
Setting count
to 0 will disable the health check.
Configuring standby-replay¶
Each CephFS file system may be configured to add standby-replay daemons. These standby daemons follow the active MDS’s metadata journal to reduce failover time in the event the active MDS becomes unavailable. Each active MDS may have only one standby-replay daemon following it.
Configuring standby-replay on a file system is done using:
ceph fs set <fs name> allow_standby_replay <bool>
Once set, the monitors will assign available standby daemons to follow the active MDSs in that file system.
Once an MDS has entered the standby-replay state, it will only be used as a standby for the rank that it is following. If another rank fails, this standby-replay daemon will not be used as a replacement, even if no other standbys are available. For this reason, it is advised that if standby-replay is used then every active MDS should have a standby-replay daemon.