Ceph: Difference between revisions

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imported>C4lliope
Make example only single-node.
imported>Nh2
nixpkgs Ceph has had current versions for a while; soften SeaweedFS plug
 
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The Ceph Nix package has been hard-pressed to keep up with Ceph, as filesystem concerns are a larger challenge on NixOS than on other Linux lineages. This is a problem seeking a solution; read ahead to see some of the remaining issues this guide should address. Please make a Wiki account and add your experiences, if you made progress running a modern Ceph version.
The below wiki instructions still have some troubles; read ahead to see some of the remaining issues this guide should address. Please make a Wiki account and add your experiences.
 
Another distributed filesystem alternative you may evaluate is [https://github.com/seaweedfs/seaweedfs SeaweedFS].


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Many users aspire to run Ceph on NixOS, and recommend varying approaches in different forums online.
Many users aspire to run Ceph on NixOS, and recommend varying approaches in different forums online.
Here is a collection of links that can lead you along, though please consider; these experiences come from older versions of Ceph, such as v10, while (as of 2023-12) Ceph is on v19.
Here is a collection of links that can lead you along, though please consider; these experiences come from older versions of Ceph, such as v10, while (as of 2023-12) Ceph is on v18.


* https://d.moonfire.us/blog/2022/12/10/ceph-and-nixos/
* https://d.moonfire.us/blog/2022/12/10/ceph-and-nixos/
* https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/147801
* https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/147801
* https://www.reddit.com/r/ceph/comments/14otjyo/ceph_on_nixos/
* https://www.reddit.com/r/ceph/comments/14otjyo/ceph_on_nixos/

Latest revision as of 04:57, 17 February 2024

The below wiki instructions still have some troubles; read ahead to see some of the remaining issues this guide should address. Please make a Wiki account and add your experiences.

Another distributed filesystem alternative you may evaluate is SeaweedFS.


Here is a quick collection of commands I used on a 3-node Ceph mesh. The examples have been reduced to a single node, `mesh-a`, for simplicity.

Describe your ceph user, alongside your normal login user:

  users.users = {
    mesh = { isNormalUser = true; extraGroups = [ "wheel" "docker" ]; };
    ceph = { isNormalUser = true; extraGroups = [ "wheel" "ceph" ]; };
  };
  users.groups.ceph = {};

Be sure you rebuild so you can assign some paths to the ceph user.

Run uuidgen and assign the response as your fsid; describe your Ceph nodes:

  services.ceph = {
    global.fsid = "4b687c5c-5a20-4a77-8774-487989fd0bc7";
    osd = {
      enable = true;
      daemons = ["0"];
    };
    mon = {
      enable = false;
      extraConfig = {
        "mon initial members" = "mesh-a";
        "mon host" = "10.0.0.11";
      };
    };
  };

Some preparation is needed so Ceph can run the monitors. You'll need to run these commands on each node (based on https://docs.ceph.com/en/quincy/install/manual-deployment/ ):

export IP=<your-node-IP-on-local-LAN>
export FSID=4b687c5c-5a20-4a77-8774-487989fd0bc7

# Make your paths!
sudo -u ceph mkdir -p /etc/ceph
sudo -u ceph mkdir -p /var/lib/ceph/bootstrap-osd
sudo -u ceph mkdir -p /tmp/monmap
sudo -u ceph mkdir -p /var/lib/ceph/mon/ceph-$(hostname)
sudo -u ceph mkdir /var/lib/ceph/mon/ceph-mon-$(hostname)

# Make a keyring!
sudo ceph-authtool --create-keyring /etc/ceph/ceph.client.admin.keyring --gen-key -n client.admin --cap mon 'allow *' --cap osd 'allow *' --cap mds 'allow *' --cap mgr 'allow *'
sudo mkdir -p /var/lib/ceph/bootstrap-osd && sudo ceph-authtool --create-keyring /var/lib/ceph/bootstrap-osd/ceph.keyring --gen-key -n client.bootstrap-osd --cap mon 'profile bootstrap-osd' --cap mgr 'allow r'
sudo ceph-authtool /tmp/ceph.mon.keyring --import-keyring /etc/ceph/ceph.client.admin.keyring sudo ceph-authtool /tmp/ceph.mon.keyring --import-keyring /var/lib/ceph/bootstrap-osd/ceph.keyring
sudo chown ceph:ceph /tmp/ceph.mon.keyring

# Make a monitor!
sudo monmaptool --create --add mesh-a $IP --fsid $FSID /tmp/monmap
sudo -u ceph ceph-mon --mkfs -i mon-$(hostname) --monmap /tmp/monmap --keyring /tmp/ceph.mon.keyring

Prepare systemd to bind all Ceph OSD shares (based on u/imspacekitteh's example, see links):

  systemd.services.ceph-mesh = {
    enable = true;
    description = "Ceph OSD Bindings";
    unitConfig = {
      After = "local-fs.target";
      Wants = "local-fs.target";
    };
    serviceConfig = {
      Type = "oneshot";
      KillMode = "none";
      Environment = "CEPH_VOLUME_TIMEOUT=10000 PATH=$PATH:/run/current-system/sw/bin/";
      ExecStart = "/bin/sh -c 'timeout $CEPH_VOLUME_TIMEOUT /run/current-system/sw/bin/ceph-volume lvm activate --all --no-systemd'";
      TimeoutSec = 0;
    };
    wantedBy = ["multi-user.target"];
  };

Though these commands seem reliable enough, there are some issues...

mesh@mesh-c:~/.build/ > sudo ceph -s
Error initializing cluster client: ObjectNotFound('RADOS object not found (error calling conf_read_file)')

Clearly, Ceph is concerned that the `/etc/ceph/ceph.conf` file is missing. So am I! The Nixpkgs module should be upgraded to handle this someday, based on our supplied extraConfig options.

Bypass the error by making the necessary config; this should be minimally enough to load Ceph:

sudo su -c "echo '
[global]
fsid=$FSID
mon initial members = mesh-a
mon host = 10.0.0.11
cluster network = 10.0.0.0/24
' > /etc/ceph/ceph.conf" -

# Double-check!
cat /etc/ceph/ceph.conf

We can now see that Ceph is ready for us to make a volume!

mesh@mesh-a:~/.build/ > sudo systemctl restart ceph-mesh

mesh@mesh-a:~/.build/ > sudo systemctl status ceph-mesh
○ ceph-mesh.service - Ceph OSD Bindings
     Loaded: loaded (/etc/systemd/system/ceph-mesh.service; enabled; preset: enabled)
     Active: inactive (dead) since Tue 2023-12-19 16:12:51 EST; 4s ago
    Process: 37570 ExecStart=/bin/sh -c timeout $CEPH_VOLUME_TIMEOUT /run/current-system/sw/bin/ceph-volume lvm activate --all --no-systemd (code=exited, status=0/SUCCESS)
   Main PID: 37570 (code=exited, status=0/SUCCESS)
         IP: 0B in, 0B out
        CPU: 162ms

Dec 19 16:12:51 mesh-a systemd[1]: Starting Ceph OSD Bindings...
Dec 19 16:12:51 mesh-a sh[37571]: --> Was unable to find any OSDs to activate
Dec 19 16:12:51 mesh-a sh[37571]: --> Verify OSDs are present with "ceph-volume lvm list"
Dec 19 16:12:51 mesh-a systemd[1]: ceph-mesh.service: Deactivated successfully.
Dec 19 16:12:51 mesh-a systemd[1]: Finished Ceph OSD Bindings.

mesh@mesh-a:~/.build/ > sudo ceph-volume lvm list
No valid Ceph lvm devices found

Go ahead and make one.

mesh@mesh-a:~/.build/ > sudo ceph-volume lvm create --data /dev/nvme0n1p4 --no-systemd
Running command: /nix/store/x645fiz9vzkkwyf08agprl9h25fkqw7g-ceph-18.2.0/bin/ceph-authtool --gen-print-key
Running command: /nix/store/x645fiz9vzkkwyf08agprl9h25fkqw7g-ceph-18.2.0/bin/ceph --cluster ceph --name client.bootstrap-osd --keyring /var/lib/ceph/bootstrap-osd/ceph.keyring -i - osd new a0d4c3db-cc9c-416a-b209-72b9bad3be40

OOPS! This command hangs endlessly, as does sudo ceph -s.

Your help is needed to make more progress here!


Many users aspire to run Ceph on NixOS, and recommend varying approaches in different forums online. Here is a collection of links that can lead you along, though please consider; these experiences come from older versions of Ceph, such as v10, while (as of 2023-12) Ceph is on v18.