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Linux/Documentation/filesystems/ceph.rst

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  1 .. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
  2 
  3 ============================
  4 Ceph Distributed File System
  5 ============================
  6 
  7 Ceph is a distributed network file system designed to provide good
  8 performance, reliability, and scalability.
  9 
 10 Basic features include:
 11 
 12  * POSIX semantics
 13  * Seamless scaling from 1 to many thousands of nodes
 14  * High availability and reliability.  No single point of failure.
 15  * N-way replication of data across storage nodes
 16  * Fast recovery from node failures
 17  * Automatic rebalancing of data on node addition/removal
 18  * Easy deployment: most FS components are userspace daemons
 19 
 20 Also,
 21 
 22  * Flexible snapshots (on any directory)
 23  * Recursive accounting (nested files, directories, bytes)
 24 
 25 In contrast to cluster filesystems like GFS, OCFS2, and GPFS that rely
 26 on symmetric access by all clients to shared block devices, Ceph
 27 separates data and metadata management into independent server
 28 clusters, similar to Lustre.  Unlike Lustre, however, metadata and
 29 storage nodes run entirely as user space daemons.  File data is striped
 30 across storage nodes in large chunks to distribute workload and
 31 facilitate high throughputs.  When storage nodes fail, data is
 32 re-replicated in a distributed fashion by the storage nodes themselves
 33 (with some minimal coordination from a cluster monitor), making the
 34 system extremely efficient and scalable.
 35 
 36 Metadata servers effectively form a large, consistent, distributed
 37 in-memory cache above the file namespace that is extremely scalable,
 38 dynamically redistributes metadata in response to workload changes,
 39 and can tolerate arbitrary (well, non-Byzantine) node failures.  The
 40 metadata server takes a somewhat unconventional approach to metadata
 41 storage to significantly improve performance for common workloads.  In
 42 particular, inodes with only a single link are embedded in
 43 directories, allowing entire directories of dentries and inodes to be
 44 loaded into its cache with a single I/O operation.  The contents of
 45 extremely large directories can be fragmented and managed by
 46 independent metadata servers, allowing scalable concurrent access.
 47 
 48 The system offers automatic data rebalancing/migration when scaling
 49 from a small cluster of just a few nodes to many hundreds, without
 50 requiring an administrator carve the data set into static volumes or
 51 go through the tedious process of migrating data between servers.
 52 When the file system approaches full, new nodes can be easily added
 53 and things will "just work."
 54 
 55 Ceph includes flexible snapshot mechanism that allows a user to create
 56 a snapshot on any subdirectory (and its nested contents) in the
 57 system.  Snapshot creation and deletion are as simple as 'mkdir
 58 .snap/foo' and 'rmdir .snap/foo'.
 59 
 60 Snapshot names have two limitations:
 61 
 62 * They can not start with an underscore ('_'), as these names are reserved
 63   for internal usage by the MDS.
 64 * They can not exceed 240 characters in size.  This is because the MDS makes
 65   use of long snapshot names internally, which follow the format:
 66   `_<SNAPSHOT-NAME>_<INODE-NUMBER>`.  Since filenames in general can't have
 67   more than 255 characters, and `<node-id>` takes 13 characters, the long
 68   snapshot names can take as much as 255 - 1 - 1 - 13 = 240.
 69 
 70 Ceph also provides some recursive accounting on directories for nested files
 71 and bytes.  You can run the commands::
 72 
 73  getfattr -n ceph.dir.rfiles /some/dir
 74  getfattr -n ceph.dir.rbytes /some/dir
 75 
 76 to get the total number of nested files and their combined size, respectively.
 77 This makes the identification of large disk space consumers relatively quick,
 78 as no 'du' or similar recursive scan of the file system is required.
 79 
 80 Finally, Ceph also allows quotas to be set on any directory in the system.
 81 The quota can restrict the number of bytes or the number of files stored
 82 beneath that point in the directory hierarchy.  Quotas can be set using
 83 extended attributes 'ceph.quota.max_files' and 'ceph.quota.max_bytes', eg::
 84 
 85  setfattr -n ceph.quota.max_bytes -v 100000000 /some/dir
 86  getfattr -n ceph.quota.max_bytes /some/dir
 87 
 88 A limitation of the current quotas implementation is that it relies on the
 89 cooperation of the client mounting the file system to stop writers when a
 90 limit is reached.  A modified or adversarial client cannot be prevented
 91 from writing as much data as it needs.
 92 
 93 Mount Syntax
 94 ============
 95 
 96 The basic mount syntax is::
 97 
 98  # mount -t ceph user@fsid.fs_name=/[subdir] mnt -o mon_addr=monip1[:port][/monip2[:port]]
 99 
100 You only need to specify a single monitor, as the client will get the
101 full list when it connects.  (However, if the monitor you specify
102 happens to be down, the mount won't succeed.)  The port can be left
103 off if the monitor is using the default.  So if the monitor is at
104 1.2.3.4::
105 
106  # mount -t ceph cephuser@07fe3187-00d9-42a3-814b-72a4d5e7d5be.cephfs=/ /mnt/ceph -o mon_addr=1.2.3.4
107 
108 is sufficient.  If /sbin/mount.ceph is installed, a hostname can be
109 used instead of an IP address and the cluster FSID can be left out
110 (as the mount helper will fill it in by reading the ceph configuration
111 file)::
112 
113   # mount -t ceph cephuser@cephfs=/ /mnt/ceph -o mon_addr=mon-addr
114 
115 Multiple monitor addresses can be passed by separating each address with a slash (`/`)::
116 
117   # mount -t ceph cephuser@cephfs=/ /mnt/ceph -o mon_addr=192.168.1.100/192.168.1.101
118 
119 When using the mount helper, monitor address can be read from ceph
120 configuration file if available. Note that, the cluster FSID (passed as part
121 of the device string) is validated by checking it with the FSID reported by
122 the monitor.
123 
124 Mount Options
125 =============
126 
127   mon_addr=ip_address[:port][/ip_address[:port]]
128         Monitor address to the cluster. This is used to bootstrap the
129         connection to the cluster. Once connection is established, the
130         monitor addresses in the monitor map are followed.
131 
132   fsid=cluster-id
133         FSID of the cluster (from `ceph fsid` command).
134 
135   ip=A.B.C.D[:N]
136         Specify the IP and/or port the client should bind to locally.
137         There is normally not much reason to do this.  If the IP is not
138         specified, the client's IP address is determined by looking at the
139         address its connection to the monitor originates from.
140 
141   wsize=X
142         Specify the maximum write size in bytes.  Default: 64 MB.
143 
144   rsize=X
145         Specify the maximum read size in bytes.  Default: 64 MB.
146 
147   rasize=X
148         Specify the maximum readahead size in bytes.  Default: 8 MB.
149 
150   mount_timeout=X
151         Specify the timeout value for mount (in seconds), in the case
152         of a non-responsive Ceph file system.  The default is 60
153         seconds.
154 
155   caps_max=X
156         Specify the maximum number of caps to hold. Unused caps are released
157         when number of caps exceeds the limit. The default is 0 (no limit)
158 
159   rbytes
160         When stat() is called on a directory, set st_size to 'rbytes',
161         the summation of file sizes over all files nested beneath that
162         directory.  This is the default.
163 
164   norbytes
165         When stat() is called on a directory, set st_size to the
166         number of entries in that directory.
167 
168   nocrc
169         Disable CRC32C calculation for data writes.  If set, the storage node
170         must rely on TCP's error correction to detect data corruption
171         in the data payload.
172 
173   dcache
174         Use the dcache contents to perform negative lookups and
175         readdir when the client has the entire directory contents in
176         its cache.  (This does not change correctness; the client uses
177         cached metadata only when a lease or capability ensures it is
178         valid.)
179 
180   nodcache
181         Do not use the dcache as above.  This avoids a significant amount of
182         complex code, sacrificing performance without affecting correctness,
183         and is useful for tracking down bugs.
184 
185   noasyncreaddir
186         Do not use the dcache as above for readdir.
187 
188   noquotadf
189         Report overall filesystem usage in statfs instead of using the root
190         directory quota.
191 
192   nocopyfrom
193         Don't use the RADOS 'copy-from' operation to perform remote object
194         copies.  Currently, it's only used in copy_file_range, which will revert
195         to the default VFS implementation if this option is used.
196 
197   recover_session=<no|clean>
198         Set auto reconnect mode in the case where the client is blocklisted. The
199         available modes are "no" and "clean". The default is "no".
200 
201         * no: never attempt to reconnect when client detects that it has been
202           blocklisted. Operations will generally fail after being blocklisted.
203 
204         * clean: client reconnects to the ceph cluster automatically when it
205           detects that it has been blocklisted. During reconnect, client drops
206           dirty data/metadata, invalidates page caches and writable file handles.
207           After reconnect, file locks become stale because the MDS loses track
208           of them. If an inode contains any stale file locks, read/write on the
209           inode is not allowed until applications release all stale file locks.
210 
211 More Information
212 ================
213 
214 For more information on Ceph, see the home page at
215         https://ceph.com/
216 
217 The Linux kernel client source tree is available at
218         - https://github.com/ceph/ceph-client.git
219 
220 and the source for the full system is at
221         https://github.com/ceph/ceph.git

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