1 Ceph for Microsoft Windows #
1.1 Introduction #
Ceph is a highly-resilient software-defined-storage offering, which has only been available to Microsoft Windows environments through the use of iSCSI or CIFS gateways. This gateway architecture introduces a single point of contact and limits fault-tolerance and bandwidth, in comparison to the native I/O paths of Ceph with RADOS.
In order to bring the benefits of native Ceph to Microsoft Windows environments, SUSE partnered with Cloudbase Solutions to port Ceph to the Microsoft Windows platform. This work is nearing completion, and provides the following functionality:
RADOS Block Device (RBD)
CephFS
You can find additional information on the background of this effort through the following SUSECON Digital session:
Ceph in a Windows World (TUT-1121) Presenters: Mike Latimer (SUSE) Alessandro Pilotti (Cloudbase Solutions)
1.2 Technology preview #
SUSE Enterprise Storage Driver for Windows is currently being offered as a technology preview. This is a necessary step toward full support as we continue work to ensure this driver performs well in all environments and workloads. You can contribute to this effort by reporting any issues you may encounter to SUSE Support.
CephFS functionality requires a third party FUSE wrapper provided through the Dokany project. This functionality should be considered experimental, and is not recommended for production use.
1.3 Supported platforms #
Microsoft Windows Server 2016 and 2019 are supported. Previous Microsoft Windows Server versions, including Microsoft Windows client versions such as Microsoft Windows 10, may work, but for the purpose of this document have not been thoroughly tested.
Early builds of Microsoft Windows Server 2016 do not provide UNIX sockets, in which case the Ceph admin socket feature is unavailable.
1.4 Compatibility #
RADOS Block Device images can be exposed to the OS and host Microsoft Windows partitions or they can be attached to Hyper-V VMs in the same way as iSCSI disks.
At the moment, the Microsoft Failover Cluster refuses to use Windows Block Device (WNBD) driver disks as Cluster Shared Volumes (CSVs) underlying storage.
OpenStack integration has been proposed and may be included in the next OpenStack release. This will allow RBD images managed by OpenStack Cinder to be attached to Hyper-V VMs managed by OpenStack Nova.
1.5 Installing and configuring #
Ceph for Microsoft Windows can be easily installed through the
SES4Win.msi
setup wizard. You can download this from
SES4Win.
This wizard performs the following functions:
Installs Ceph-related code to the
C:\Program Files\Ceph
directory.Adds
C:\Program Files\Ceph\bin
to the %PATH% environment variable.Creates a Ceph RBD Mapping Service to automatically map RBD devices upon machine restart (using
rbd-wnbd.exe
).
After installing Ceph for Microsoft Windows, manual modifications are required to provide access to a Ceph cluster. The files which must be created or modified are as follows:
C:\ProgramData\ceph\ceph.conf C:\ProgramData\ceph\keyring
These files can be copied directly from an existing OSD node in the cluster. Sample configuration files are provided in Apéndice A, Sample configuration files.
1.6 RADOS Block Device (RBD) #
Support for RBD devices is possible through a combination of Ceph tools and Microsoft Windows WNBD. This driver is in the process of being certified by the Windows Hardware Quality Labs (WHQL).
Once installed, the WNBD SCSI Virtual Adapter driver can be seen in the
Device Manager
as a storage controller. Multiple adapters
may be seen, in order to handle multiple RBD connections.
The rbd
command is used to create, remove, import,
export, map, or unmap images, exactly like it is used on Linux.
1.6.1 Mapping images #
The behavior of the rbd
command is similar to its Linux
counterpart, with a few notable differences:
Device paths cannot be requested. The disk number and path is picked by Microsoft Windows. If a device path is provided by the user when mapping an image, it is used as an identifier. This can also be used when unmapping the image.
The
show
command was added, which describes a specific mapping. This can be used for retrieving the disk path.The
service
command was added, allowingrbd-wnbd
to run as a Microsoft Windows service. All mappings are currently persistent and will be recreated when the service stops, unless they are explicitly unmapped. The service disconnects the mappings when being stopped.The
list
command also includes astatus
column.
The mapped images can either be consumed by the host directly or exposed to Hyper-V VMs.
1.6.2 Hyper-V VM disks #
The following sample imports an RBD image and boots a Hyper-V VM using it.
# Feel free to use any other image. This one is convenient to use for # testing purposes because it's very small (~15MB) and the login prompt # prints the pre-configured password. wget http://download.cirros-cloud.net/0.5.1/cirros-0.5.1-x86_64-disk.img ` -OutFile cirros-0.5.1-x86_64-disk.img # We'll need to make sure that the imported images are raw (so no qcow2 or vhdx). # You may get qemu-img from https://cloudbase.it/qemu-img-windows/ # You can add the extracted location to $env:Path or update the path accordingly. qemu-img convert -O raw cirros-0.5.1-x86_64-disk.img cirros-0.5.1-x86_64-disk.raw rbd import cirros-0.5.1-x86_64-disk.raw # Let's give it a hefty 100MB size. rbd resize cirros-0.5.1-x86_64-disk.raw --size=100MB rbd-wnbd map cirros-0.5.1-x86_64-disk.raw # Let's have a look at the mappings. rbd-wnbd list Get-Disk $mappingJson = rbd-wnbd show cirros-0.5.1-x86_64-disk.raw --format=json $mappingJson = $mappingJson | ConvertFrom-Json $diskNumber = $mappingJson.disk_number New-VM -VMName BootFromRBD -MemoryStartupBytes 512MB # The disk must be turned offline before it can be passed to Hyper-V VMs Set-Disk -Number $diskNumber -IsOffline $true Add-VMHardDiskDrive -VMName BootFromRBD -DiskNumber $diskNumber Start-VM -VMName BootFromRBD
1.6.3 Configuring Microsoft Windows partitions #
The following sample creates an empty RBD image, attaches it to the host and initializes a partition:
rbd create blank_image --size=1G rbd-wnbd map blank_image $mappingJson = rbd-wnbd show blank_image --format=json $mappingJson = $mappingJson | ConvertFrom-Json $diskNumber = $mappingJson.disk_number # The disk must be online before creating or accessing partitions. Set-Disk -Number $diskNumber -IsOffline $false # Initialize the disk, partition it and create a fileystem. Get-Disk -Number $diskNumber | ` Initialize-Disk -PassThru | ` New-Partition -AssignDriveLetter -UseMaximumSize | ` Format-Volume -Force -Confirm:$false
1.7 RBD Microsoft Windows service #
In order to ensure that rbd-wnbd
mappings survive host
reboots, a new Microsoft Windows service, called the Ceph RBD Mapping Service has
been created. This service automatically maintains mappings as they are
added using the Ceph tools. All mappings are currently persistent and are
recreated when the service starts, unless they are explicitly unmapped. The
service disconnects all mappings when stopped.
This service also adjusts the Microsoft Windows service start order so that RBD images can be mapped before starting any services that may depend on them. For example, VMs.
RBD maps are stored in the Microsoft Windows registry at the following location:
SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\rbd-wnbd
1.8 Configuring CephFS #
The following feature is experimental, and is not intended for use in production environments.
Ceph for Microsoft Windows provides CephFS support through the Dokany FUSE wrapper. In order to use CephFS, install Dokany v1.3.1 or newer using the installers available here: https://github.com/dokan-dev/dokany/releases
With Dokany installed, and ceph.conf
and
ceph.client.admin.keyring
configuration files in place,
CephFS can be mounted using the ceph-dokan.exe
command.
For example:
ceph-dokan.exe -l x
This command mounts the default Ceph file system using the drive letter
X
. If ceph.conf
is not placed at the
default location (C:\ProgramData\ceph\ceph.conf
), a
-c
parameter can be used to specify the location of
ceph.conf
.
The -l
argument also allows using an empty folder as a
mountpoint instead of a drive letter.
The UID and GID used for mounting the file system defaults to
0
and may be changed using the -u
and
-g
arguments. -n
can be used in order to
skip enforcing permissions on client side. Be aware that Microsoft Windows Access
Control Lists (ACLs) are ignored. Portable Operating System Interface
(POSIX) ACLs are supported but cannot be modified using the current CLI. In
the future, we may add some command actions to change file ownership or
permissions.
For debugging purposes, -d
and -s
may be
used. The former enables debug output and the latter enables
stderr
logging. By default, debug messages are sent to a
connected debugger.
You may use --help
to get the full list of available
options.