Author: | OpenStack Glance Project Team |
---|---|
Contact: | glance@lists.launchpad.net |
Date: | 2018-02-28 |
Copyright: | OpenStack Foundation |
Version: | 16.0.0 |
Manual section: | 1 |
Manual group: | cloud computing |
glance-scrubber [options]
glance-scrubber is a utility that allows an operator to configure Glance for the asynchronous deletion of images. Whether this makes sense for your deployment depends upon the storage backend you are using and the size of typical images handled by your Glance installation.
An image in glance is really a combination of an image record (stored in the database) and a file of image data (stored in a storage backend). Under normal operation, the image-delete call is synchronous, that is, Glance receives the DELETE request, deletes the image data from the storage backend, then deletes the image record from the database, and finally returns a 204 as the result of the call. If the backend is fast and deletion time is not a function of data size, these operations occur very quickly. For backends where deletion time is a function of data size, however, the image-delete operation can take a significant amount of time to complete, to the point where a client may timeout waiting for the response. This in turn leads to user dissatisfaction.
To avoid this problem, Glance has a delayed_delete
configuration option
(False by default) that may be set in the glance-api.conf file. With this
option enabled, when Glance receives a DELETE request, it does only the
database part of the request, marking the image’s status as pending_delete
,
and returns immediately. (The pending_delete
status is not visible to
users; an image-show request for such an image will return 404.) However, it
is important to note that when delayed_delete
is enabled, Glance does not
delete image data from the storage backend. That’s where the glance-scrubber
comes in.
The glance-scrubber cleans up images that have been deleted. If you run Glance
with delayed_delete
enabled, you must run the glance-scrubber
occasionally or your storage backend will eventually fill up with “deleted”
image data.
Configuration of glance-scrubber is done in the glance-scrubber.conf file. Options are explained in detail in comments in the sample configuration file, so we only point out a few of them here.
scrub_time
pending_delete
status (default is 0)scrub_pool_size
daemon
wakeup_time
metadata_encryption_key
[database]
[glance_store]
The usual situation is that whatever your glance-api.conf has for the
[database]
and [glance_store]
configuration groups should go into your
glance-scrubber.conf, too. Of course, if you have heavily customized your
setup, you know better than we do what you are doing. The key thing is that
the scrubber needs to be able to access the Glance database to determine what
images need to be scrubbed (and to mark them as deleted once their associated
data has been removed from the storage backend), and it needs the glance_store
information so it can delete the image data.
General options
- -h, –help
- Show the help message and exit
- –version
- Print the version number and exit
- -v, –verbose
- Print more verbose output
- –noverbose
- Disable verbose output
- -d, –debug
- Print debugging output (set logging level to DEBUG instead of default WARNING level)
- –nodebug
- Disable debugging output
- –use-syslog
- Use syslog for logging
- –nouse-syslog
- Disable the use of syslog for logging
- –syslog-log-facility SYSLOG_LOG_FACILITY
- syslog facility to receive log lines
- –config-dir DIR
- Path to a config directory to pull *.conf files from. This file set is sorted, to provide a predictable parse order if individual options are over-ridden. The set is parsed after the file(s) specified via previous –config-file, arguments hence over-ridden options in the directory take precedence. This means that configuration from files in a specified config-dir will always take precedence over configuration from files specified by –config-file, regardless to argument order.
- –config-file PATH
- Path to a config file to use. Multiple config files can be specified by using this flag multiple times, for example, –config-file <file1> –config-file <file2>. Values in latter files take precedence.
- –log-config-append PATH –log-config PATH
- The name of logging configuration file. It does not disable existing loggers, but just appends specified logging configuration to any other existing logging options. Please see the Python logging module documentation for details on logging configuration files. The log-config name for this option is deprecated.
- –log-format FORMAT
- A logging.Formatter log message format string which may use any of the available logging.LogRecord attributes. Default: None
- –log-date-format DATE_FORMAT
- Format string for %(asctime)s in log records. Default: None
- –log-file PATH, –logfile PATH
- (Optional) Name of log file to output to. If not set, logging will go to stdout.
- –log-dir LOG_DIR, –logdir LOG_DIR
- (Optional) The directory to keep log files in (will be prepended to –log-file)
- -D, –daemon
- Run as a long-running process. When not specified (the default) run the scrub operation once and then exits. When specified do not exit and run scrub on wakeup_time interval as specified in the config.
- –nodaemon
- The inverse of –daemon. Runs the scrub operation once and then exits. This is the default.
- /etc/glance/glance-scrubber.conf
- Default configuration file for the Glance Scrubber
Except where otherwise noted, this document is licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License. See all OpenStack Legal Documents.