vfs_ceph
8
Samba
System Administration tools
&doc.version;
vfs_ceph
Utilize features provided by CephFS
vfs objects = ceph
DESCRIPTION
This VFS module is part of the
samba
8 suite.
The vfs_ceph VFS module exposes
CephFS specific features for use by Samba.
Ceph is a distributed network file system designed to provide
excellent performance, reliability, and scalability. This is a
shared library allowing applications to access a Ceph
distributed file system via a POSIX-like interface.
This module can be combined with other modules, but it
should be the last module in the vfs objects
list. Modules added to this list to the right of the ceph
entry may not have any effect at all.
vfs_ceph performs mapping between Windows and
POSIX Access Control Lists (ACLs). To ensure correct processing
and enforcement of POSIX ACLs, the following Ceph configuration
parameters are automatically applied:
client acl type = posix_acl
fuse default permissions = false
CONFIGURATION
vfs_ceph requires that the underlying share
path is a Ceph filesystem.
ceph
/non-mounted/cephfs/path
no
Since vfs_ceph does not require a filesystem
mount, the share path is treated differently:
it is interpreted as an absolute path within the Ceph filesystem
on the attached Ceph cluster.
In a ctdb cluster environment where ctdb manages Samba,
CTDB_SAMBA_SKIP_SHARE_CHECK=yes must be
configured to disable local share path checks, otherwise ctdb
will not reach a healthy state.
Note that currently kernel share modes have
to be disabled in a share running with the CephFS vfs module for
file serving to work properly.
OPTIONS
ceph:config_file = path
Allows one to define a ceph configfile to use. Empty by default.
Example: ceph:config_file =
/etc/ceph/ceph.conf
ceph:user_id = name
Allows one to explicitly set the client ID used for the
CephFS mount handle. Empty by default (CephFS uses the
process id).
Example: ceph:user_id = samba
VERSION
This man page is part of version &doc.version; of the Samba suite.
AUTHOR
The original Samba software and related utilities
were created by Andrew Tridgell. Samba is now developed
by the Samba Team as an Open Source project similar
to the way the Linux kernel is developed.