By default, the Block (cinder) storage service installs on the host itself using the LVM backend.
Note
While this is the default for cinder, using the LVM backend results in a Single Point of Failure.
The LVM back end needs to run on the host, however most of the other back ends can be deployed inside a container. If the storage back ends deployed within your environment are able to run inside containers, then it is recommended to set is_metal: False in the env.d/cinder.yml file.
Note
Due to a limitation of the container system, you must deploy the volume service directly onto the host when using back ends depending on iSCSI. That is the case, for example, for storage appliances configured to use the iSCSI protocol.
Edit /etc/openstack_deploy/openstack_user_config.yml and configure the NFS client on each storage node if the NetApp backend is configured to use an NFS storage protocol.
For each storage node, add one cinder_backends block underneath the a new container_vars section. container_vars are used to allow container/host individualized configuration. Each cinder back end is defined with a unique key. For example, nfs-volume1. This later represents a unique cinder backend and volume type.
container_vars:
cinder_backends:
nfs-volume1:
Configure the appropriate cinder volume backend name:
volume_backend_name: NFS_VOLUME1
Configure the appropriate cinder NFS driver:
volume_driver: cinder.volume.drivers.nfs.NfsDriver
Configure the location of the file that lists shares available to the block storage service. This configuration file must include nfs_shares_config:
nfs_shares_config: FILENAME_NFS_SHARES
Replace FILENAME_NFS_SHARES with the location of the share configuration file. For example, /etc/cinder/nfs_shares_volume1.
Define mount options for the NFS mount. For example:
nfs_mount_options: "rsize=65535,wsize=65535,timeo=1200,actimeo=120"
Configure one or more NFS shares:
shares:
- { ip: "HOSTNAME", share: "PATH_TO_NFS_VOLUME" }
Replace HOSTNAME with the IP address or hostname of the NFS server, and the PATH_TO_NFS_VOLUME with the absolute path to an existing and accessible NFS share (excluding the IP address or hostname).
The following is a full configuration example of a cinder NFS backend named NFS1. The cinder playbooks will automatically add a custom volume-type and nfs-volume1 as in this example:
container_vars: cinder_backends: nfs-volume1: volume_backend_name: NFS_VOLUME1 volume_driver: cinder.volume.drivers.nfs.NfsDriver nfs_shares_config: /etc/cinder/nfs_shares_volume1 nfs_mount_options: "rsize=65535,wsize=65535,timeo=1200,actimeo=120" shares: - { ip: "1.2.3.4", share: "/vol1" }
You can configure cinder to backup volumes to Object Storage (swift). Enable the default configuration to back up volumes to a swift installation accessible within your environment. Alternatively, you can set cinder_service_backup_swift_url and other variables to back up to an external swift installation.
Add or edit the following line in the /etc/openstack_deploy/user_variables.yml file and set the value to True:
cinder_service_backup_program_enabled: True
By default, cinder uses the access credentials of the user initiating the backup. Default values are set in the /opt/openstack-ansible/playbooks/roles/os_cinder/defaults/main.yml file. You can override those defaults by setting variables in /etc/openstack_deploy/user_variables.yml to change how cinder performs backups. Add and edit any of the following variables to the /etc/openstack_deploy/user_variables.yml file:
...
cinder_service_backup_swift_auth: per_user
# Options include 'per_user' or 'single_user'. We default to
# 'per_user' so that backups are saved to a user's swift
# account.
cinder_service_backup_swift_url:
# This is your swift storage url when using 'per_user', or keystone
# endpoint when using 'single_user'. When using 'per_user', you
# can leave this as empty or as None to allow cinder-backup to
# obtain a storage url from environment.
cinder_service_backup_swift_url:
cinder_service_backup_swift_auth_version: 2
cinder_service_backup_swift_user:
cinder_service_backup_swift_tenant:
cinder_service_backup_swift_key:
cinder_service_backup_swift_container: volumebackups
cinder_service_backup_swift_object_size: 52428800
cinder_service_backup_swift_retry_attempts: 3
cinder_service_backup_swift_retry_backoff: 2
cinder_service_backup_compression_algorithm: zlib
cinder_service_backup_metadata_version: 2
During installation of cinder, the backup service is configured.
You can deploy Ceph to hold cinder volume backups. To get started, set the cinder_service_backup_driver Ansible variable:
cinder_service_backup_driver: cinder.backup.drivers.ceph
Configure the Ceph user and the pool to use for backups. The defaults are shown here:
cinder_service_backup_ceph_user: cinder-backup
cinder_service_backup_ceph_pool: backups
Create multiple availability zones to manage cinder storage hosts. Edit the /etc/openstack_deploy/openstack_user_config.yml and /etc/openstack_deploy/user_variables.yml files to set up availability zones.
For each cinder storage host, configure the availability zone under the container_vars stanza:
cinder_storage_availability_zone: CINDERAZ
Replace CINDERAZ with a suitable name. For example cinderAZ_2.
If more than one availability zone is created, configure the default availability zone for all the hosts by creating a cinder_default_availability_zone in your /etc/openstack_deploy/user_variables.yml
cinder_default_availability_zone: CINDERAZ_DEFAULT
Replace CINDERAZ_DEFAULT with a suitable name. For example, cinderAZ_1. The default availability zone should be the same for all cinder hosts.
You can configure variables to set the behavior for cinder volume management in OpenStack Dashboard (horizon). By default, no horizon configuration is set.
List the container_vars that contain the storage options for the target host.
Note
The vars related to the cinder availability zone and the limit_container_types are optional.
To configure an LVM, utilize the following example:
storage_hosts:
Infra01:
ip: 172.29.236.16
container_vars:
cinder_storage_availability_zone: cinderAZ_1
cinder_default_availability_zone: cinderAZ_1
cinder_backends:
lvm:
volume_backend_name: LVM_iSCSI
volume_driver: cinder.volume.drivers.lvm.LVMVolumeDriver
volume_group: cinder-volumes
iscsi_ip_address: "{{ cinder_storage_address }}"
limit_container_types: cinder_volume
To use another backend in a container instead of bare metal, copy the env.d/cinder.yml to /etc/openstack_deploy/env.d/cinder.yml file and change the is_metal: true stanza under the cinder_volumes_container properties to is_metal: false.
Alternatively, you can also selectively override, like this:
container_skel:
cinder_volumes_container:
properties:
is_metal: false
In order for cinder to use Ceph, it is necessary to configure for both the API and backend. When using any forms of network storage (iSCSI, NFS, Ceph) for cinder, the API containers can be considered as backend servers. A separate storage host is not required.
Copy the env.d/cinder.yml to /etc/openstack_deploy/env.d/cinder.yml file and change the is_metal: true stanza under the cinder_volumes_container properties to is_metal: false.
Alternatively, you can also selectively override, like this:
container_skel:
cinder_volumes_container:
properties:
is_metal: false
List of target hosts on which to deploy the cinder API. We recommend that a minimum of three target hosts are used for this service.
storage-infra_hosts:
infra1:
ip: 172.29.236.101
infra2:
ip: 172.29.236.102
infra3:
ip: 172.29.236.103
To configure an RBD backend, utilize the following example:
container_vars:
cinder_storage_availability_zone: cinderAZ_3
cinder_default_availability_zone: cinderAZ_1
cinder_backends:
limit_container_types: cinder_volume
volumes_hdd:
volume_driver: cinder.volume.drivers.rbd.RBDDriver
rbd_pool: volumes_hdd
rbd_ceph_conf: /etc/ceph/ceph.conf
rbd_flatten_volume_from_snapshot: 'false'
rbd_max_clone_depth: 5
rbd_store_chunk_size: 4
rados_connect_timeout: -1
volume_backend_name: volumes_hdd
rbd_user: "{{ cinder_ceph_client }}"
rbd_secret_uuid: "{{ cinder_ceph_client_uuid }}"
The following example sets cinder to use the cinder_volumes pool. The example uses cephx authentication and requires existing cinder account for cinder_volumes pool.
In user_variables.yml:
ceph_mons: - 172.29.244.151 - 172.29.244.152 - 172.29.244.153
In openstack_user_config.yml:
storage_hosts: infra1: ip: 172.29.236.101 container_vars: cinder_backends: limit_container_types: cinder_volume rbd: volume_group: cinder-volumes volume_driver: cinder.volume.drivers.rbd.RBDDriver volume_backend_name: rbd rbd_pool: cinder-volumes rbd_ceph_conf: /etc/ceph/ceph.conf rbd_user: cinder infra2: ip: 172.29.236.102 container_vars: cinder_backends: limit_container_types: cinder_volume rbd: volume_group: cinder-volumes volume_driver: cinder.volume.drivers.rbd.RBDDriver volume_backend_name: rbd rbd_pool: cinder-volumes rbd_ceph_conf: /etc/ceph/ceph.conf rbd_user: cinder infra3: ip: 172.29.236.103 container_vars: cinder_backends: limit_container_types: cinder_volume rbd: volume_group: cinder-volumes volume_driver: cinder.volume.drivers.rbd.RBDDriver volume_backend_name: rbd rbd_pool: cinder-volumes rbd_ceph_conf: /etc/ceph/ceph.conf rbd_user: cinder
This link provides a complete working example of Ceph setup and integration with cinder (nova and glance included):
To use the Dell EqualLogic volume driver as a back end, edit the /etc/openstack_deploy/openstack_user_config.yml file and configure the storage nodes that will use it.
Define the following parameters.
Add dellqlx stanza under the cinder_backends for each storage node:
cinder_backends:
delleqlx:
Specify volume back end name:
volume_backend_name: DellEQLX_iSCSI
Use Dell EQLX San ISCSI driver:
volume_driver: cinder.volume.drivers.eqlx.DellEQLSanISCSIDriver
Specify the SAN IP address:
san_ip: ip_of_dell_storage
Specify SAN username (Default: grpadmin):
san_login: grpadmin
Specify the SAN password:
san_password: password
Specify the group name for pools (Default: group-0):
eqlx_group_name: group-0
Specify the pool where Cinder will create volumes and snapshots (Default: default):
eqlx_pool: default
Ensure the openstack_user_config.yml configuration is accurate:
storage_hosts:
Infra01:
ip: infra_host_ip
container_vars:
cinder_backends:
limit_container_types: cinder_volume
delleqlx:
volume_backend_name: DellEQLX_iSCSI
volume_driver: cinder.volume.drivers.eqlx.DellEQLSanISCSIDriver
san_ip: ip_of_dell_storage
san_login: grpadmin
san_password: password
eqlx_group_name: group-0
eqlx_pool: default
Note
For more details about available configuration options, see http://docs.openstack.org/newton/config-reference/block-storage/drivers/dell-equallogic-driver.html
To use a NetApp storage appliance back end, edit the /etc/openstack_deploy/openstack_user_config.yml file and configure each storage node that will use it.
Note
Ensure that the NAS Team enables httpd.admin.access.
Add the netapp stanza under the cinder_backends stanza for each storage node:
cinder_backends:
netapp:
The options in subsequent steps fit under the netapp stanza.
The backend name is arbitrary and becomes a volume type within cinder.
Configure the storage family:
netapp_storage_family: STORAGE_FAMILY
Replace STORAGE_FAMILY with ontap_7mode for Data ONTAP operating in 7-mode or ontap_cluster for Data ONTAP operating as a cluster.
Configure the storage protocol:
netapp_storage_protocol: STORAGE_PROTOCOL
Replace STORAGE_PROTOCOL with iscsi for iSCSI or nfs for NFS.
For the NFS protocol, specify the location of the configuration file that lists the shares available to cinder:
nfs_shares_config: FILENAME_NFS_SHARES
Replace FILENAME_NFS_SHARES with the location of the share configuration file. For example, /etc/cinder/nfs_shares.
Configure the server:
netapp_server_hostname: SERVER_HOSTNAME
Replace SERVER_HOSTNAME with the hostnames for both netapp controllers.
Configure the server API port:
netapp_server_port: PORT_NUMBER
Replace PORT_NUMBER with 80 for HTTP or 443 for HTTPS.
Configure the server credentials:
netapp_login: USER_NAME
netapp_password: PASSWORD
Replace USER_NAME and PASSWORD with the appropriate values.
Select the NetApp driver:
volume_driver: cinder.volume.drivers.netapp.common.NetAppDriver
Configure the volume back end name:
volume_backend_name: BACKEND_NAME
Replace BACKEND_NAME with a value that provides a hint for the cinder scheduler. For example, NETAPP_iSCSI.
Ensure the openstack_user_config.yml configuration is accurate:
storage_hosts:
Infra01:
ip: 172.29.236.16
container_vars:
cinder_backends:
limit_container_types: cinder_volume
netapp:
netapp_storage_family: ontap_7mode
netapp_storage_protocol: nfs
netapp_server_hostname: 111.222.333.444
netapp_server_port: 80
netapp_login: openstack_cinder
netapp_password: password
volume_driver: cinder.volume.drivers.netapp.common.NetAppDriver
volume_backend_name: NETAPP_NFS
For netapp_server_hostname, specify the IP address of the Data ONTAP server. Include iSCSI or NFS for the netapp_storage_family depending on the configuration. Add 80 if using HTTP or 443 if using HTTPS for netapp_server_port.
The cinder-volume.yml playbook will automatically install the nfs-common file across the hosts, transitioning from an LVM to a NetApp back end.
Deployers may optionally define the variable cinder_qos_specs to create qos specs. This variable is a list of dictionaries that contain the options for each qos spec. cinder volume-types may be assigned to a qos spec by defining the key cinder_volume_types in the desired qos spec dictionary.
- name: high-iops
options:
consumer: front-end
read_iops_sec: 2000
write_iops_sec: 2000
cinder_volume_types:
- volumes-1
- volumes-2
- name: low-iops
options:
consumer: front-end
write_iops_sec: 100