Ceph
PLEASE NOTE: This document applies to v1.1 version and not to the latest stable release v1.9
Configuration
For most any Ceph cluster, the user will want to–and may need to–change some Ceph configurations. These changes often may be warranted in order to alter performance to meet SLAs or to update default data resiliency settings.
WARNING: Modify Ceph settings carefully, and review the Ceph configuration documentation before making any changes. Changing the settings could result in unhealthy daemons or even data loss if used incorrectly.
Required configurations
Rook and Ceph both strive to make configuration as easy as possible, but there are some configuration options which users are well advised to consider for any production cluster.
Default PG and PGP counts
The number of PGs and PGPs can be
configured on a per-pool basis, but it is highly advised to set default values that are appropriate
for your Ceph cluster. Appropriate values depend on the number of OSDs the user expects to have
backing each pool. The Ceph
OSD and Pool config docs
provide detailed information about how to tune these parameters: osd_pool_default_pg_num
and osd_pool_default_pgp_num
.
Pools created prior to v1.1 will have a default PG count of 100. Pools created after v1.1 will have a default PG count of 8.
An easier option exists for Rook-Ceph clusters running Ceph Nautilus (v14.2.x) or newer. Nautilus introduced the PG auto-scaler mgr module capable of automatically managing PG and PGP values for pools. This module is not enabled by default but can be enabled by the following setting in the CephCluster CR:
mgr:
modules:
- name: pg_autoscaler
enabled: true
With that setting, the autoscaler will be enabled for all new pools. If you do not desire to have the autoscaler enabled for all pools, you will need to use the Rook toolbox to enable the module and enable the autoscaling on individual pools.
Specifying configuration options
Toolbox + Ceph CLI
The most recommended way of configuring Ceph is to set Ceph’s configuration directly. The first method for doing so is to use Ceph’s CLI from the Rook-Ceph toolbox pod. Using the toolbox pod is detailed here. From the toolbox, the user can change Ceph configurations, enable manager modules, create users and pools, and much more.
Ceph Dashboard
The Ceph Dashboard, examined in more detail here, is another way of setting some of Ceph’s configuration directly. Configuration by the Ceph dashboard is recommended with the same priority as configuration via the Ceph CLI (above).
Advanced configuration via ceph.conf override ConfigMap
Setting configs via Ceph’s CLI requires that at least one mon be available for the configs to be set, and setting configs via dashboard requires at least one mgr to be available. Ceph may also have a small number of very advanced settings that aren’t able to be modified easily via CLI or dashboard. The least recommended method for configuring Ceph is intended as a last-resort fallback in situations like these. This is covered in detail here.