ceph-volume – Ceph OSD deployment and inspection tool

Synopsis

ceph-volume [-h] [–cluster CLUSTER] [–log-level LOG_LEVEL]
[–log-path LOG_PATH]
ceph-volume inventory
ceph-volume lvm [ trigger | create | activate | prepare
zap | list | batch]
ceph-volume simple [ trigger | scan | activate ]

Description

ceph-volume is a single purpose command line tool to deploy logical volumes as OSDs, trying to maintain a similar API to ceph-disk when preparing, activating, and creating OSDs.

It deviates from ceph-disk by not interacting or relying on the udev rules that come installed for Ceph. These rules allow automatic detection of previously setup devices that are in turn fed into ceph-disk to activate them.

Commands

inventory

This subcommand provides information about a host’s physical disc inventory and reports metadata about these discs. Among this metadata one can find disc specific data items (like model, size, rotational or solid state) as well as data items specific to ceph using a device, such as if it is available for use with ceph or if logical volumes are present.

Examples:

ceph-volume inventory
ceph-volume inventory /dev/sda
ceph-volume inventory --format json-pretty

Optional arguments:

  • [-h, –help] show the help message and exit

  • [–format] report format, valid values are plain (default),

    json and json-pretty

lvm

By making use of LVM tags, the lvm sub-command is able to store and later re-discover and query devices associated with OSDs so that they can later activated.

Subcommands:

batch Creates OSDs from a list of devices using a filestore or bluestore (default) setup. It will create all necessary volume groups and logical volumes required to have a working OSD.

Example usage with three devices:

ceph-volume lvm batch --bluestore /dev/sda /dev/sdb /dev/sdc

Optional arguments:

  • [-h, –help] show the help message and exit

  • [–bluestore] Use the bluestore objectstore (default)

  • [–filestore] Use the filestore objectstore

  • [–yes] Skip the report and prompt to continue provisioning

  • [–prepare] Only prepare OSDs, do not activate

  • [–dmcrypt] Enable encryption for the underlying OSD devices

  • [–crush-device-class] Define a CRUSH device class to assign the OSD to

  • [–no-systemd] Do not enable or create any systemd units

  • [–osds-per-device] Provision more than 1 (the default) OSD per device

  • [–report] Report what the potential outcome would be for the current input (requires devices to be passed in)

  • [–format] Output format when reporting (used along with –report), can be one of ‘pretty’ (default) or ‘json’

  • [–block-db-size] Set (or override) the “bluestore_block_db_size” value, in bytes

  • [–journal-size] Override the “osd_journal_size” value, in megabytes

Required positional arguments:

  • <DEVICE> Full path to a raw device, like /dev/sda. Multiple

    <DEVICE> paths can be passed in.

activate Enables a systemd unit that persists the OSD ID and its UUID (also called fsid in Ceph CLI tools), so that at boot time it can understand what OSD is enabled and needs to be mounted.

Usage:

ceph-volume lvm activate --bluestore <osd id> <osd fsid>

Optional Arguments:

  • [-h, –help] show the help message and exit

  • [–auto-detect-objectstore] Automatically detect the objectstore by inspecting the OSD

  • [–bluestore] bluestore objectstore (default)

  • [–filestore] filestore objectstore

  • [–all] Activate all OSDs found in the system

  • [–no-systemd] Skip creating and enabling systemd units and starting of OSD services

Multiple OSDs can be activated at once by using the (idempotent) --all flag:

ceph-volume lvm activate --all

prepare Prepares a logical volume to be used as an OSD and journal using a filestore or bluestore (default) setup. It will not create or modify the logical volumes except for adding extra metadata.

Usage:

ceph-volume lvm prepare --filestore --data <data lv> --journal <journal device>

Optional arguments:

  • [-h, –help] show the help message and exit

  • [–journal JOURNAL] A logical group name, path to a logical volume, or path to a device

  • [–bluestore] Use the bluestore objectstore (default)

  • [–block.wal] Path to a bluestore block.wal logical volume or partition

  • [–block.db] Path to a bluestore block.db logical volume or partition

  • [–filestore] Use the filestore objectstore

  • [–dmcrypt] Enable encryption for the underlying OSD devices

  • [–osd-id OSD_ID] Reuse an existing OSD id

  • [–osd-fsid OSD_FSID] Reuse an existing OSD fsid

  • [–crush-device-class] Define a CRUSH device class to assign the OSD to

Required arguments:

  • --data

    A logical group name or a path to a logical volume

For encrypting an OSD, the --dmcrypt flag must be added when preparing (also supported in the create sub-command).

create Wraps the two-step process to provision a new osd (calling prepare first and then activate) into a single one. The reason to prefer prepare and then activate is to gradually introduce new OSDs into a cluster, and avoiding large amounts of data being rebalanced.

The single-call process unifies exactly what prepare and activate do, with the convenience of doing it all at once. Flags and general usage are equivalent to those of the prepare and activate subcommand.

trigger This subcommand is not meant to be used directly, and it is used by systemd so that it proxies input to ceph-volume lvm activate by parsing the input from systemd, detecting the UUID and ID associated with an OSD.

Usage:

ceph-volume lvm trigger <SYSTEMD-DATA>

The systemd “data” is expected to be in the format of:

<OSD ID>-<OSD UUID>

The lvs associated with the OSD need to have been prepared previously, so that all needed tags and metadata exist.

Positional arguments:

  • <SYSTEMD_DATA> Data from a systemd unit containing ID and UUID of the OSD.

list List devices or logical volumes associated with Ceph. An association is determined if a device has information relating to an OSD. This is verified by querying LVM’s metadata and correlating it with devices.

The lvs associated with the OSD need to have been prepared previously by ceph-volume so that all needed tags and metadata exist.

Usage:

ceph-volume lvm list

List a particular device, reporting all metadata about it:

ceph-volume lvm list /dev/sda1

List a logical volume, along with all its metadata (vg is a volume group, and lv the logical volume name):

ceph-volume lvm list {vg/lv}

Positional arguments:

  • <DEVICE> Either in the form of vg/lv for logical volumes, /path/to/sda1 or /path/to/sda for regular devices.

zap Zaps the given logical volume or partition. If given a path to a logical volume it must be in the format of vg/lv. Any file systems present on the given lv or partition will be removed and all data will be purged.

However, the lv or partition will be kept intact.

Usage, for logical volumes:

ceph-volume lvm zap {vg/lv}

Usage, for logical partitions:

ceph-volume lvm zap /dev/sdc1

For full removal of the device use the --destroy flag (allowed for all device types):

ceph-volume lvm zap --destroy /dev/sdc1

Multiple devices can be removed by specifying the OSD ID and/or the OSD FSID:

ceph-volume lvm zap --destroy --osd-id 1
ceph-volume lvm zap --destroy --osd-id 1 --osd-fsid C9605912-8395-4D76-AFC0-7DFDAC315D59

Positional arguments:

  • <DEVICE> Either in the form of vg/lv for logical volumes, /path/to/sda1 or /path/to/sda for regular devices.

simple

Scan legacy OSD directories or data devices that may have been created by ceph-disk, or manually.

Subcommands:

activate Enables a systemd unit that persists the OSD ID and its UUID (also called fsid in Ceph CLI tools), so that at boot time it can understand what OSD is enabled and needs to be mounted, while reading information that was previously created and persisted at /etc/ceph/osd/ in JSON format.

Usage:

ceph-volume simple activate --bluestore <osd id> <osd fsid>

Optional Arguments:

  • [-h, –help] show the help message and exit

  • [–bluestore] bluestore objectstore (default)

  • [–filestore] filestore objectstore

Note: It requires a matching JSON file with the following format:

/etc/ceph/osd/<osd id>-<osd fsid>.json

scan Scan a running OSD or data device for an OSD for metadata that can later be used to activate and manage the OSD with ceph-volume. The scan method will create a JSON file with the required information plus anything found in the OSD directory as well.

Optionally, the JSON blob can be sent to stdout for further inspection.

Usage on all running OSDs:

ceph-voume simple scan

Usage on data devices:

ceph-volume simple scan <data device>

Running OSD directories:

ceph-volume simple scan <path to osd dir>

Optional arguments:

  • [-h, –help] show the help message and exit

  • [–stdout] Send the JSON blob to stdout

  • [–force] If the JSON file exists at destination, overwrite it

Optional Positional arguments:

  • <DATA DEVICE or OSD DIR> Actual data partition or a path to the running OSD

trigger This subcommand is not meant to be used directly, and it is used by systemd so that it proxies input to ceph-volume simple activate by parsing the input from systemd, detecting the UUID and ID associated with an OSD.

Usage:

ceph-volume simple trigger <SYSTEMD-DATA>

The systemd “data” is expected to be in the format of:

<OSD ID>-<OSD UUID>

The JSON file associated with the OSD need to have been persisted previously by a scan (or manually), so that all needed metadata can be used.

Positional arguments:

  • <SYSTEMD_DATA> Data from a systemd unit containing ID and UUID of the OSD.

Availability

ceph-volume is part of Ceph, a massively scalable, open-source, distributed storage system. Please refer to the documentation at http://docs.ceph.com/ for more information.

See also

ceph-osd(8),