.. _fs-volumes-and-subvolumes: FS volumes and subvolumes ========================= A single source of truth for CephFS exports is implemented in the volumes module of the :term:`Ceph Manager` daemon (ceph-mgr). The OpenStack shared file system service (manila_), Ceph Container Storage Interface (CSI_), storage administrators among others can use the common CLI provided by the ceph-mgr volumes module to manage the CephFS exports. The ceph-mgr volumes module implements the following file system export abstactions: * FS volumes, an abstraction for CephFS file systems * FS subvolumes, an abstraction for independent CephFS directory trees * FS subvolume groups, an abstraction for a directory level higher than FS subvolumes to effect policies (e.g., :doc:`/cephfs/file-layouts`) across a set of subvolumes Some possible use-cases for the export abstractions: * FS subvolumes used as manila shares or CSI volumes * FS subvolume groups used as manila share groups Requirements ------------ * Nautilus (14.2.x) or a later version of Ceph * Cephx client user (see :doc:`/rados/operations/user-management`) with the following minimum capabilities:: mon 'allow r' mgr 'allow rw' FS Volumes ---------- Create a volume using:: $ ceph fs volume create [] This creates a CephFS file system and its data and metadata pools. It can also try to create MDSes for the filesystem using the enabled ceph-mgr orchestrator module (see :doc:`/mgr/orchestrator`), e.g. rook. is the volume name (an arbitrary string), and is an optional string signifying which hosts should have NFS Ganesha daemon containers running on them and, optionally, the total number of NFS Ganesha daemons the cluster (should you want to have more than one NFS Ganesha daemon running per node). For example, the following placement string means "deploy NFS Ganesha daemons on nodes host1 and host2 (one daemon per host): "host1,host2" and this placement specification says to deploy two NFS Ganesha daemons each on nodes host1 and host2 (for a total of four NFS Ganesha daemons in the cluster): "4 host1,host2" For more details on placement specification refer to the `orchestrator doc `_ but keep in mind that specifying the placement via a YAML file is not supported. Remove a volume using:: $ ceph fs volume rm [--yes-i-really-mean-it] This removes a file system and its data and metadata pools. It also tries to remove MDSes using the enabled ceph-mgr orchestrator module. List volumes using:: $ ceph fs volume ls Fetch the information of a CephFS volume using:: $ ceph fs volume info vol_name [--human_readable] The ``--human_readable`` flag shows used and available pool capacities in KB/MB/GB. The output format is JSON and contains fields as follows: * pools: Attributes of data and metadata pools * avail: The amount of free space available in bytes * used: The amount of storage consumed in bytes * name: Name of the pool * mon_addrs: List of monitor addresses * used_size: Current used size of the CephFS volume in bytes * pending_subvolume_deletions: Number of subvolumes pending deletion Sample output of volume info command:: $ ceph fs volume info vol_name { "mon_addrs": [ "192.168.1.7:40977" ], "pending_subvolume_deletions": 0, "pools": { "data": [ { "avail": 106288709632, "name": "cephfs.vol_name.data", "used": 4096 } ], "metadata": [ { "avail": 106288709632, "name": "cephfs.vol_name.meta", "used": 155648 } ] }, "used_size": 0 } FS Subvolume groups ------------------- Create a subvolume group using:: $ ceph fs subvolumegroup create [--size ] [--pool_layout ] [--uid ] [--gid ] [--mode ] The command succeeds even if the subvolume group already exists. When creating a subvolume group you can specify its data pool layout (see :doc:`/cephfs/file-layouts`), uid, gid, file mode in octal numerals and size in bytes. The size of the subvolume group is specified by setting a quota on it (see :doc:`/cephfs/quota`). By default, the subvolume group is created with an octal file mode '755', uid '0', gid '0' and the data pool layout of its parent directory. Remove a subvolume group using:: $ ceph fs subvolumegroup rm [--force] The removal of a subvolume group fails if it is not empty or non-existent. '--force' flag allows the non-existent subvolume group remove command to succeed. Fetch the absolute path of a subvolume group using:: $ ceph fs subvolumegroup getpath List subvolume groups using:: $ ceph fs subvolumegroup ls .. note:: Subvolume group snapshot feature is no longer supported in mainline CephFS (existing group snapshots can still be listed and deleted) Fetch the metadata of a subvolume group using:: $ ceph fs subvolumegroup info The output format is JSON and contains fields as follows. * atime: access time of subvolume group path in the format "YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS" * mtime: modification time of subvolume group path in the format "YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS" * ctime: change time of subvolume group path in the format "YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS" * uid: uid of subvolume group path * gid: gid of subvolume group path * mode: mode of subvolume group path * mon_addrs: list of monitor addresses * bytes_pcent: quota used in percentage if quota is set, else displays "undefined" * bytes_quota: quota size in bytes if quota is set, else displays "infinite" * bytes_used: current used size of the subvolume group in bytes * created_at: time of creation of subvolume group in the format "YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS" * data_pool: data pool the subvolume group belongs to Check the presence of any subvolume group using:: $ ceph fs subvolumegroup exist The strings returned by the 'exist' command: * "subvolumegroup exists": if any subvolumegroup is present * "no subvolumegroup exists": if no subvolumegroup is present .. note:: It checks for the presence of custom groups and not the default one. To validate the emptiness of the volume, subvolumegroup existence check alone is not sufficient. The subvolume existence also needs to be checked as there might be subvolumes in the default group. Resize a subvolume group using:: $ ceph fs subvolumegroup resize [--no_shrink] The command resizes the subvolume group quota using the size specified by 'new_size'. The '--no_shrink' flag prevents the subvolume group to shrink below the current used size of the subvolume group. The subvolume group can be resized to an unlimited size by passing 'inf' or 'infinite' as the new_size. Remove a snapshot of a subvolume group using:: $ ceph fs subvolumegroup snapshot rm [--force] Using the '--force' flag allows the command to succeed that would otherwise fail if the snapshot did not exist. List snapshots of a subvolume group using:: $ ceph fs subvolumegroup snapshot ls FS Subvolumes ------------- Create a subvolume using:: $ ceph fs subvolume create [--size ] [--group_name ] [--pool_layout ] [--uid ] [--gid ] [--mode ] [--namespace-isolated] The command succeeds even if the subvolume already exists. When creating a subvolume you can specify its subvolume group, data pool layout, uid, gid, file mode in octal numerals, and size in bytes. The size of the subvolume is specified by setting a quota on it (see :doc:`/cephfs/quota`). The subvolume can be created in a separate RADOS namespace by specifying --namespace-isolated option. By default a subvolume is created within the default subvolume group, and with an octal file mode '755', uid of its subvolume group, gid of its subvolume group, data pool layout of its parent directory and no size limit. Remove a subvolume using:: $ ceph fs subvolume rm [--group_name ] [--force] [--retain-snapshots] The command removes the subvolume and its contents. It does this in two steps. First, it moves the subvolume to a trash folder, and then asynchronously purges its contents. The removal of a subvolume fails if it has snapshots, or is non-existent. '--force' flag allows the non-existent subvolume remove command to succeed. A subvolume can be removed retaining existing snapshots of the subvolume using the '--retain-snapshots' option. If snapshots are retained, the subvolume is considered empty for all operations not involving the retained snapshots. .. note:: Snapshot retained subvolumes can be recreated using 'ceph fs subvolume create' .. note:: Retained snapshots can be used as a clone source to recreate the subvolume, or clone to a newer subvolume. Resize a subvolume using:: $ ceph fs subvolume resize [--group_name ] [--no_shrink] The command resizes the subvolume quota using the size specified by 'new_size'. '--no_shrink' flag prevents the subvolume to shrink below the current used size of the subvolume. The subvolume can be resized to an infinite size by passing 'inf' or 'infinite' as the new_size. Authorize cephx auth IDs, the read/read-write access to fs subvolumes:: $ ceph fs subvolume authorize [--group_name=] [--access_level=] The 'access_level' takes 'r' or 'rw' as value. Deauthorize cephx auth IDs, the read/read-write access to fs subvolumes:: $ ceph fs subvolume deauthorize [--group_name=] List cephx auth IDs authorized to access fs subvolume:: $ ceph fs subvolume authorized_list [--group_name=] Evict fs clients based on auth ID and subvolume mounted:: $ ceph fs subvolume evict [--group_name=] Fetch the absolute path of a subvolume using:: $ ceph fs subvolume getpath [--group_name ] Fetch the information of a subvolume using:: $ ceph fs subvolume info [--group_name ] The output format is json and contains fields as follows. * atime: access time of subvolume path in the format "YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS" * mtime: modification time of subvolume path in the format "YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS" * ctime: change time of subvolume path in the format "YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS" * uid: uid of subvolume path * gid: gid of subvolume path * mode: mode of subvolume path * mon_addrs: list of monitor addresses * bytes_pcent: quota used in percentage if quota is set, else displays "undefined" * bytes_quota: quota size in bytes if quota is set, else displays "infinite" * bytes_used: current used size of the subvolume in bytes * created_at: time of creation of subvolume in the format "YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS" * data_pool: data pool the subvolume belongs to * path: absolute path of a subvolume * type: subvolume type indicating whether it's clone or subvolume * pool_namespace: RADOS namespace of the subvolume * features: features supported by the subvolume * state: current state of the subvolume If a subvolume has been removed retaining its snapshots, the output only contains fields as follows. * type: subvolume type indicating whether it's clone or subvolume * features: features supported by the subvolume * state: current state of the subvolume The subvolume "features" are based on the internal version of the subvolume and is a list containing a subset of the following features, * "snapshot-clone": supports cloning using a subvolumes snapshot as the source * "snapshot-autoprotect": supports automatically protecting snapshots, that are active clone sources, from deletion * "snapshot-retention": supports removing subvolume contents, retaining any existing snapshots The subvolume "state" is based on the current state of the subvolume and contains one of the following values. * "complete": subvolume is ready for all operations * "snapshot-retained": subvolume is removed but its snapshots are retained List subvolumes using:: $ ceph fs subvolume ls [--group_name ] .. note:: subvolumes that are removed but have snapshots retained, are also listed. Check the presence of any subvolume using:: $ ceph fs subvolume exist [--group_name ] The strings returned by the 'exist' command: * "subvolume exists": if any subvolume of given group_name is present * "no subvolume exists": if no subvolume of given group_name is present Set custom metadata on the subvolume as a key-value pair using:: $ ceph fs subvolume metadata set [--group_name ] .. note:: If the key_name already exists then the old value will get replaced by the new value. .. note:: key_name and value should be a string of ASCII characters (as specified in python's string.printable). key_name is case-insensitive and always stored in lower case. .. note:: Custom metadata on a subvolume is not preserved when snapshotting the subvolume, and hence, is also not preserved when cloning the subvolume snapshot. Get custom metadata set on the subvolume using the metadata key:: $ ceph fs subvolume metadata get [--group_name ] List custom metadata (key-value pairs) set on the subvolume using:: $ ceph fs subvolume metadata ls [--group_name ] Remove custom metadata set on the subvolume using the metadata key:: $ ceph fs subvolume metadata rm [--group_name ] [--force] Using the '--force' flag allows the command to succeed that would otherwise fail if the metadata key did not exist. Create a snapshot of a subvolume using:: $ ceph fs subvolume snapshot create [--group_name ] Remove a snapshot of a subvolume using:: $ ceph fs subvolume snapshot rm [--group_name ] [--force] Using the '--force' flag allows the command to succeed that would otherwise fail if the snapshot did not exist. .. note:: if the last snapshot within a snapshot retained subvolume is removed, the subvolume is also removed List snapshots of a subvolume using:: $ ceph fs subvolume snapshot ls [--group_name ] Fetch the information of a snapshot using:: $ ceph fs subvolume snapshot info [--group_name ] The output format is JSON and contains fields as follows. * created_at: time of creation of snapshot in the format "YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS:ffffff" * data_pool: data pool the snapshot belongs to * has_pending_clones: "yes" if snapshot clone is in progress otherwise "no" * pending_clones: list of in progress or pending clones and their target group if exist otherwise this field is not shown * orphan_clones_count: count of orphan clones if snapshot has orphan clones otherwise this field is not shown Sample output when snapshot clones are in progress or pending state:: $ ceph fs subvolume snapshot info cephfs subvol snap { "created_at": "2022-06-14 13:54:58.618769", "data_pool": "cephfs.cephfs.data", "has_pending_clones": "yes", "pending_clones": [ { "name": "clone_1", "target_group": "target_subvol_group" }, { "name": "clone_2" }, { "name": "clone_3", "target_group": "target_subvol_group" } ] } Sample output when no snapshot clone is in progress or pending state:: $ ceph fs subvolume snapshot info cephfs subvol snap { "created_at": "2022-06-14 13:54:58.618769", "data_pool": "cephfs.cephfs.data", "has_pending_clones": "no" } Set custom metadata on the snapshot as a key-value pair using:: $ ceph fs subvolume snapshot metadata set [--group_name ] .. note:: If the key_name already exists then the old value will get replaced by the new value. .. note:: The key_name and value should be a string of ASCII characters (as specified in python's string.printable). The key_name is case-insensitive and always stored in lower case. .. note:: Custom metadata on a snapshots is not preserved when snapshotting the subvolume, and hence, is also not preserved when cloning the subvolume snapshot. Get custom metadata set on the snapshot using the metadata key:: $ ceph fs subvolume snapshot metadata get [--group_name ] List custom metadata (key-value pairs) set on the snapshot using:: $ ceph fs subvolume snapshot metadata ls [--group_name ] Remove custom metadata set on the snapshot using the metadata key:: $ ceph fs subvolume snapshot metadata rm [--group_name ] [--force] Using the '--force' flag allows the command to succeed that would otherwise fail if the metadata key did not exist. Cloning Snapshots ----------------- Subvolumes can be created by cloning subvolume snapshots. Cloning is an asynchronous operation involving copying data from a snapshot to a subvolume. Due to this bulk copy nature, cloning is currently inefficient for very huge data sets. .. note:: Removing a snapshot (source subvolume) would fail if there are pending or in progress clone operations. Protecting snapshots prior to cloning was a pre-requisite in the Nautilus release, and the commands to protect/unprotect snapshots were introduced for this purpose. This pre-requisite, and hence the commands to protect/unprotect, is being deprecated in mainline CephFS, and may be removed from a future release. The commands being deprecated are: $ ceph fs subvolume snapshot protect [--group_name ] $ ceph fs subvolume snapshot unprotect [--group_name ] .. note:: Using the above commands would not result in an error, but they serve no useful function. .. note:: Use subvolume info command to fetch subvolume metadata regarding supported "features" to help decide if protect/unprotect of snapshots is required, based on the "snapshot-autoprotect" feature availability. To initiate a clone operation use:: $ ceph fs subvolume snapshot clone If a snapshot (source subvolume) is a part of non-default group, the group name needs to be specified as per:: $ ceph fs subvolume snapshot clone --group_name Cloned subvolumes can be a part of a different group than the source snapshot (by default, cloned subvolumes are created in default group). To clone to a particular group use:: $ ceph fs subvolume snapshot clone --target_group_name Similar to specifying a pool layout when creating a subvolume, pool layout can be specified when creating a cloned subvolume. To create a cloned subvolume with a specific pool layout use:: $ ceph fs subvolume snapshot clone --pool_layout Configure maximum number of concurrent clones. The default is set to 4:: $ ceph config set mgr mgr/volumes/max_concurrent_clones To check the status of a clone operation use:: $ ceph fs clone status [--group_name ] A clone can be in one of the following states: #. `pending` : Clone operation has not started #. `in-progress` : Clone operation is in progress #. `complete` : Clone operation has successfully finished #. `failed` : Clone operation has failed #. `canceled` : Clone operation is cancelled by user The reason for a clone failure is shown as below: #. `errno` : error number #. `error_msg` : failure error string Sample output of an `in-progress` clone operation:: $ ceph fs subvolume snapshot clone cephfs subvol1 snap1 clone1 $ ceph fs clone status cephfs clone1 { "status": { "state": "in-progress", "source": { "volume": "cephfs", "subvolume": "subvol1", "snapshot": "snap1" } } } .. note:: The `failure` section will be shown only if the clone is in failed or cancelled state Sample output of a `failed` clone operation:: $ ceph fs subvolume snapshot clone cephfs subvol1 snap1 clone1 $ ceph fs clone status cephfs clone1 { "status": { "state": "failed", "source": { "volume": "cephfs", "subvolume": "subvol1", "snapshot": "snap1" "size": "104857600" }, "failure": { "errno": "122", "errstr": "Disk quota exceeded" } } } (NOTE: since `subvol1` is in default group, `source` section in `clone status` does not include group name) .. note:: Cloned subvolumes are accessible only after the clone operation has successfully completed. For a successful clone operation, `clone status` would look like so:: $ ceph fs clone status cephfs clone1 { "status": { "state": "complete" } } or `failed` state when clone is unsuccessful. On failure of a clone operation, the partial clone needs to be deleted and the clone operation needs to be retriggered. To delete a partial clone use:: $ ceph fs subvolume rm [--group_name ] --force .. note:: Cloning only synchronizes directories, regular files and symbolic links. Also, inode timestamps (access and modification times) are synchronized upto seconds granularity. An `in-progress` or a `pending` clone operation can be canceled. To cancel a clone operation use the `clone cancel` command:: $ ceph fs clone cancel [--group_name ] On successful cancelation, the cloned subvolume is moved to `canceled` state:: $ ceph fs subvolume snapshot clone cephfs subvol1 snap1 clone1 $ ceph fs clone cancel cephfs clone1 $ ceph fs clone status cephfs clone1 { "status": { "state": "canceled", "source": { "volume": "cephfs", "subvolume": "subvol1", "snapshot": "snap1" } } } .. note:: The canceled cloned can be deleted by using --force option in `fs subvolume rm` command. .. _subvol-pinning: Pinning Subvolumes and Subvolume Groups --------------------------------------- Subvolumes and subvolume groups can be automatically pinned to ranks according to policies. This can help distribute load across MDS ranks in predictable and stable ways. Review :ref:`cephfs-pinning` and :ref:`cephfs-ephemeral-pinning` for details on how pinning works. Pinning is configured by:: $ ceph fs subvolumegroup pin or for subvolumes:: $ ceph fs subvolume pin Typically you will want to set subvolume group pins. The ``pin_type`` may be one of ``export``, ``distributed``, or ``random``. The ``pin_setting`` corresponds to the extended attributed "value" as in the pinning documentation referenced above. So, for example, setting a distributed pinning strategy on a subvolume group:: $ ceph fs subvolumegroup pin cephfilesystem-a csi distributed 1 Will enable distributed subtree partitioning policy for the "csi" subvolume group. This will cause every subvolume within the group to be automatically pinned to one of the available ranks on the file system. .. _manila: https://github.com/openstack/manila .. _CSI: https://github.com/ceph/ceph-csi