======================= Config Settings ======================= See `Block Device`_ for additional details. Generic IO Settings =================== .. confval:: rbd_compression_hint .. confval:: rbd_read_from_replica_policy .. confval:: rbd_default_order Cache Settings ======================= .. sidebar:: Kernel Caching The kernel driver for Ceph block devices can use the Linux page cache to improve performance. The user space implementation of the Ceph block device (i.e., ``librbd``) cannot take advantage of the Linux page cache, so it includes its own in-memory caching, called "RBD caching." RBD caching behaves just like well-behaved hard disk caching. When the OS sends a barrier or a flush request, all dirty data is written to the OSDs. This means that using write-back caching is just as safe as using a well-behaved physical hard disk with a VM that properly sends flushes (i.e. Linux kernel >= 2.6.32). The cache uses a Least Recently Used (LRU) algorithm, and in write-back mode it can coalesce contiguous requests for better throughput. The librbd cache is enabled by default and supports three different cache policies: write-around, write-back, and write-through. Writes return immediately under both the write-around and write-back policies, unless there are more than ``rbd_cache_max_dirty`` unwritten bytes to the storage cluster. The write-around policy differs from the write-back policy in that it does not attempt to service read requests from the cache, unlike the write-back policy, and is therefore faster for high performance write workloads. Under the write-through policy, writes return only when the data is on disk on all replicas, but reads may come from the cache. Prior to receiving a flush request, the cache behaves like a write-through cache to ensure safe operation for older operating systems that do not send flushes to ensure crash consistent behavior. If the librbd cache is disabled, writes and reads go directly to the storage cluster, and writes return only when the data is on disk on all replicas. .. note:: The cache is in memory on the client, and each RBD image has its own. Since the cache is local to the client, there's no coherency if there are others accessing the image. Running GFS or OCFS on top of RBD will not work with caching enabled. Option settings for RBD should be set in the ``[client]`` section of your configuration file or the central config store. These settings include: .. confval:: rbd_cache .. confval:: rbd_cache_policy .. confval:: rbd_cache_writethrough_until_flush .. confval:: rbd_cache_size .. confval:: rbd_cache_max_dirty .. confval:: rbd_cache_target_dirty .. confval:: rbd_cache_max_dirty_age .. _Block Device: ../../rbd Read-ahead Settings ======================= librbd supports read-ahead/prefetching to optimize small, sequential reads. This should normally be handled by the guest OS in the case of a VM, but boot loaders may not issue efficient reads. Read-ahead is automatically disabled if caching is disabled or if the policy is write-around. .. confval:: rbd_readahead_trigger_requests .. confval:: rbd_readahead_max_bytes .. confval:: rbd_readahead_disable_after_bytes Image Features ============== RBD supports advanced features which can be specified via the command line when creating images or the default features can be configured via ``rbd_default_features = `` or ``rbd_default_features = ``. ``Layering`` :Description: Layering enables cloning. :Internal value: 1 :CLI value: layering :Added in: v0.52 (Bobtail) :KRBD support: since v3.10 :Default: yes ``Striping v2`` :Description: Striping spreads data across multiple objects. Striping helps with parallelism for sequential read/write workloads. :Internal value: 2 :CLI value: striping :Added in: v0.55 (Bobtail) :KRBD support: since v3.10 (default striping only, "fancy" striping added in v4.17) :Default: yes ``Exclusive locking`` :Description: When enabled, it requires a client to acquire a lock on an object before making a write. Exclusive lock should only be enabled when a single client is accessing an image at any given time. :Internal value: 4 :CLI value: exclusive-lock :Added in: v0.92 (Hammer) :KRBD support: since v4.9 :Default: yes ``Object map`` :Description: Object map support depends on exclusive lock support. Block devices are thin provisioned, which means that they only store data that actually has been written, ie. they are *sparse*. Object map support helps track which objects actually exist (have data stored on a device). Enabling object map support speeds up I/O operations for cloning, importing and exporting a sparsely populated image, and deleting. :Internal value: 8 :CLI value: object-map :Added in: v0.93 (Hammer) :KRBD support: since v5.3 :Default: yes ``Fast-diff`` :Description: Fast-diff support depends on object map support and exclusive lock support. It adds another property to the object map, which makes it much faster to generate diffs between snapshots of an image. It is also much faster to calculate the actual data usage of a snapshot or volume (``rbd du``). :Internal value: 16 :CLI value: fast-diff :Added in: v9.0.1 (Infernalis) :KRBD support: since v5.3 :Default: yes ``Deep-flatten`` :Description: Deep-flatten enables ``rbd flatten`` to work on all snapshots of an image, in addition to the image itself. Without it, snapshots of an image will still rely on the parent, so the parent cannot be deleted until the snapshots are first deleted. Deep-flatten makes a parent independent of its clones, even if they have snapshots, at the expense of using additional OSD device space. :Internal value: 32 :CLI value: deep-flatten :Added in: v9.0.2 (Infernalis) :KRBD support: since v5.1 :Default: yes ``Journaling`` :Description: Journaling support depends on exclusive lock support. Journaling records all modifications to an image in the order they occur. RBD mirroring can utilize the journal to replicate a crash-consistent image to a remote cluster. It is best to let ``rbd-mirror`` manage this feature only as needed, as enabling it long term may result in substantial additional OSD space consumption. :Internal value: 64 :CLI value: journaling :Added in: v10.0.1 (Jewel) :KRBD support: no :Default: no ``Data pool`` :Description: On erasure-coded pools, the image data block objects need to be stored on a separate pool from the image metadata. :Internal value: 128 :Added in: v11.1.0 (Kraken) :KRBD support: since v4.11 :Default: no ``Operations`` :Description: Used to restrict older clients from performing certain maintenance operations against an image (e.g. clone, snap create). :Internal value: 256 :Added in: v13.0.2 (Mimic) :KRBD support: since v4.16 ``Migrating`` :Description: Used to restrict older clients from opening an image when it is in migration state. :Internal value: 512 :Added in: v14.0.1 (Nautilus) :KRBD support: no ``Non-primary`` :Description: Used to restrict changes to non-primary images using snapshot-based mirroring. :Internal value: 1024 :Added in: v15.2.0 (Octopus) :KRBD support: no QoS Settings ============ librbd supports limiting per-image IO in several ways. These all apply to a given image within a given process - the same image used in multiple places, e.g. two separate VMs, would have independent limits. * **IOPS:** number of I/Os per second (any type of I/O) * **read IOPS:** number of read I/Os per second * **write IOPS:** number of write I/Os per second * **bps:** bytes per second (any type of I/O) * **read bps:** bytes per second read * **write bps:** bytes per second written Each of these limits operates independently of each other. They are all off by default. Every type of limit throttles I/O using a token bucket algorithm, with the ability to configure the limit (average speed over time) and potential for a higher rate (a burst) for a short period of time (burst_seconds). When any of these limits is reached, and there is no burst capacity left, librbd reduces the rate of that type of I/O to the limit. For example, if a read bps limit of 100MB was configured, but writes were not limited, writes could proceed as quickly as possible, while reads would be throttled to 100MB/s on average. If a read bps burst of 150MB was set, and read burst seconds was set to five seconds, reads could proceed at 150MB/s for up to five seconds before dropping back to the 100MB/s limit. The following options configure these throttles: .. confval:: rbd_qos_iops_limit .. confval:: rbd_qos_iops_burst .. confval:: rbd_qos_iops_burst_seconds .. confval:: rbd_qos_read_iops_limit .. confval:: rbd_qos_read_iops_burst .. confval:: rbd_qos_read_iops_burst_seconds .. confval:: rbd_qos_write_iops_limit .. confval:: rbd_qos_write_iops_burst .. confval:: rbd_qos_write_iops_burst_seconds .. confval:: rbd_qos_bps_limit .. confval:: rbd_qos_bps_burst .. confval:: rbd_qos_bps_burst_seconds .. confval:: rbd_qos_read_bps_limit .. confval:: rbd_qos_read_bps_burst .. confval:: rbd_qos_read_bps_burst_seconds .. confval:: rbd_qos_write_bps_limit .. confval:: rbd_qos_write_bps_burst .. confval:: rbd_qos_write_bps_burst_seconds .. confval:: rbd_qos_schedule_tick_min .. confval:: rbd_qos_exclude_ops