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1 [[chapter_pveceph]]
2 ifdef::manvolnum[]
3 pveceph(1)
4 ==========
5 :pve-toplevel:
6
7 NAME
8 ----
9
10 pveceph - Manage Ceph Services on Proxmox VE Nodes
11
12 SYNOPSIS
13 --------
14
15 include::pveceph.1-synopsis.adoc[]
16
17 DESCRIPTION
18 -----------
19 endif::manvolnum[]
20 ifndef::manvolnum[]
21 Manage Ceph Services on Proxmox VE Nodes
22 ========================================
23 :pve-toplevel:
24 endif::manvolnum[]
25
26 [thumbnail="screenshot/gui-ceph-status.png"]
27
28 {pve} unifies your compute and storage systems, i.e. you can use the same
29 physical nodes within a cluster for both computing (processing VMs and
30 containers) and replicated storage. The traditional silos of compute and
31 storage resources can be wrapped up into a single hyper-converged appliance.
32 Separate storage networks (SANs) and connections via network attached storages
33 (NAS) disappear. With the integration of Ceph, an open source software-defined
34 storage platform, {pve} has the ability to run and manage Ceph storage directly
35 on the hypervisor nodes.
36
37 Ceph is a distributed object store and file system designed to provide
38 excellent performance, reliability and scalability.
39
40 .Some advantages of Ceph on {pve} are:
41 - Easy setup and management with CLI and GUI support
42 - Thin provisioning
43 - Snapshots support
44 - Self healing
45 - Scalable to the exabyte level
46 - Setup pools with different performance and redundancy characteristics
47 - Data is replicated, making it fault tolerant
48 - Runs on economical commodity hardware
49 - No need for hardware RAID controllers
50 - Open source
51
52 For small to mid sized deployments, it is possible to install a Ceph server for
53 RADOS Block Devices (RBD) directly on your {pve} cluster nodes, see
54 xref:ceph_rados_block_devices[Ceph RADOS Block Devices (RBD)]. Recent
55 hardware has plenty of CPU power and RAM, so running storage services
56 and VMs on the same node is possible.
57
58 To simplify management, we provide 'pveceph' - a tool to install and
59 manage {ceph} services on {pve} nodes.
60
61 .Ceph consists of a couple of Daemons footnote:[Ceph intro http://docs.ceph.com/docs/luminous/start/intro/], for use as a RBD storage:
62 - Ceph Monitor (ceph-mon)
63 - Ceph Manager (ceph-mgr)
64 - Ceph OSD (ceph-osd; Object Storage Daemon)
65
66 TIP: We highly recommend to get familiar with Ceph's architecture
67 footnote:[Ceph architecture http://docs.ceph.com/docs/luminous/architecture/]
68 and vocabulary
69 footnote:[Ceph glossary http://docs.ceph.com/docs/luminous/glossary].
70
71
72 Precondition
73 ------------
74
75 To build a hyper-converged Proxmox + Ceph Cluster there should be at least
76 three (preferably) identical servers for the setup.
77
78 Check also the recommendations from
79 http://docs.ceph.com/docs/luminous/start/hardware-recommendations/[Ceph's website].
80
81 .CPU
82 Higher CPU core frequency reduce latency and should be preferred. As a simple
83 rule of thumb, you should assign a CPU core (or thread) to each Ceph service to
84 provide enough resources for stable and durable Ceph performance.
85
86 .Memory
87 Especially in a hyper-converged setup, the memory consumption needs to be
88 carefully monitored. In addition to the intended workload from virtual machines
89 and container, Ceph needs enough memory available to provide good and stable
90 performance. As a rule of thumb, for roughly 1 TiB of data, 1 GiB of memory
91 will be used by an OSD. OSD caching will use additional memory.
92
93 .Network
94 We recommend a network bandwidth of at least 10 GbE or more, which is used
95 exclusively for Ceph. A meshed network setup
96 footnote:[Full Mesh Network for Ceph {webwiki-url}Full_Mesh_Network_for_Ceph_Server]
97 is also an option if there are no 10 GbE switches available.
98
99 The volume of traffic, especially during recovery, will interfere with other
100 services on the same network and may even break the {pve} cluster stack.
101
102 Further, estimate your bandwidth needs. While one HDD might not saturate a 1 Gb
103 link, multiple HDD OSDs per node can, and modern NVMe SSDs will even saturate
104 10 Gbps of bandwidth quickly. Deploying a network capable of even more bandwith
105 will ensure that it isn't your bottleneck and won't be anytime soon, 25, 40 or
106 even 100 GBps are possible.
107
108 .Disks
109 When planning the size of your Ceph cluster, it is important to take the
110 recovery time into consideration. Especially with small clusters, the recovery
111 might take long. It is recommended that you use SSDs instead of HDDs in small
112 setups to reduce recovery time, minimizing the likelihood of a subsequent
113 failure event during recovery.
114
115 In general SSDs will provide more IOPs than spinning disks. This fact and the
116 higher cost may make a xref:pve_ceph_device_classes[class based] separation of
117 pools appealing. Another possibility to speedup OSDs is to use a faster disk
118 as journal or DB/WAL device, see xref:pve_ceph_osds[creating Ceph OSDs]. If a
119 faster disk is used for multiple OSDs, a proper balance between OSD and WAL /
120 DB (or journal) disk must be selected, otherwise the faster disk becomes the
121 bottleneck for all linked OSDs.
122
123 Aside from the disk type, Ceph best performs with an even sized and distributed
124 amount of disks per node. For example, 4 x 500 GB disks with in each node is
125 better than a mixed setup with a single 1 TB and three 250 GB disk.
126
127 One also need to balance OSD count and single OSD capacity. More capacity
128 allows to increase storage density, but it also means that a single OSD
129 failure forces ceph to recover more data at once.
130
131 .Avoid RAID
132 As Ceph handles data object redundancy and multiple parallel writes to disks
133 (OSDs) on its own, using a RAID controller normally doesn’t improve
134 performance or availability. On the contrary, Ceph is designed to handle whole
135 disks on it's own, without any abstraction in between. RAID controller are not
136 designed for the Ceph use case and may complicate things and sometimes even
137 reduce performance, as their write and caching algorithms may interfere with
138 the ones from Ceph.
139
140 WARNING: Avoid RAID controller, use host bus adapter (HBA) instead.
141
142 NOTE: Above recommendations should be seen as a rough guidance for choosing
143 hardware. Therefore, it is still essential to adapt it to your specific needs,
144 test your setup and monitor health and performance continuously.
145
146 [[pve_ceph_install_wizard]]
147 Initial Ceph installation & configuration
148 -----------------------------------------
149
150 [thumbnail="screenshot/gui-node-ceph-install.png"]
151
152 With {pve} you have the benefit of an easy to use installation wizard
153 for Ceph. Click on one of your cluster nodes and navigate to the Ceph
154 section in the menu tree. If Ceph is not already installed you will be
155 offered to do so now.
156
157 The wizard is divided into different sections, where each needs to be
158 finished successfully in order to use Ceph. After starting the installation
159 the wizard will download and install all required packages from {pve}'s ceph
160 repository.
161
162 After finishing the first step, you will need to create a configuration.
163 This step is only needed once per cluster, as this configuration is distributed
164 automatically to all remaining cluster members through {pve}'s clustered
165 xref:chapter_pmxcfs[configuration file system (pmxcfs)].
166
167 The configuration step includes the following settings:
168
169 * *Public Network:* You should setup a dedicated network for Ceph, this
170 setting is required. Separating your Ceph traffic is highly recommended,
171 because it could lead to troubles with other latency dependent services,
172 e.g., cluster communication may decrease Ceph's performance, if not done.
173
174 [thumbnail="screenshot/gui-node-ceph-install-wizard-step2.png"]
175
176 * *Cluster Network:* As an optional step you can go even further and
177 separate the xref:pve_ceph_osds[OSD] replication & heartbeat traffic
178 as well. This will relieve the public network and could lead to
179 significant performance improvements especially in big clusters.
180
181 You have two more options which are considered advanced and therefore
182 should only changed if you are an expert.
183
184 * *Number of replicas*: Defines the how often a object is replicated
185 * *Minimum replicas*: Defines the minimum number of required replicas
186 for I/O to be marked as complete.
187
188 Additionally you need to choose your first monitor node, this is required.
189
190 That's it, you should see a success page as the last step with further
191 instructions on how to go on. You are now prepared to start using Ceph,
192 even though you will need to create additional xref:pve_ceph_monitors[monitors],
193 create some xref:pve_ceph_osds[OSDs] and at least one xref:pve_ceph_pools[pool].
194
195 The rest of this chapter will guide you on how to get the most out of
196 your {pve} based Ceph setup, this will include aforementioned and
197 more like xref:pveceph_fs[CephFS] which is a very handy addition to your
198 new Ceph cluster.
199
200 [[pve_ceph_install]]
201 Installation of Ceph Packages
202 -----------------------------
203 Use {pve} Ceph installation wizard (recommended) or run the following
204 command on each node:
205
206 [source,bash]
207 ----
208 pveceph install
209 ----
210
211 This sets up an `apt` package repository in
212 `/etc/apt/sources.list.d/ceph.list` and installs the required software.
213
214
215 Creating initial Ceph configuration
216 -----------------------------------
217
218 [thumbnail="screenshot/gui-ceph-config.png"]
219
220 Use the {pve} Ceph installation wizard (recommended) or run the
221 following command on one node:
222
223 [source,bash]
224 ----
225 pveceph init --network 10.10.10.0/24
226 ----
227
228 This creates an initial configuration at `/etc/pve/ceph.conf` with a
229 dedicated network for ceph. That file is automatically distributed to
230 all {pve} nodes by using xref:chapter_pmxcfs[pmxcfs]. The command also
231 creates a symbolic link from `/etc/ceph/ceph.conf` pointing to that file.
232 So you can simply run Ceph commands without the need to specify a
233 configuration file.
234
235
236 [[pve_ceph_monitors]]
237 Creating Ceph Monitors
238 ----------------------
239
240 [thumbnail="screenshot/gui-ceph-monitor.png"]
241
242 The Ceph Monitor (MON)
243 footnote:[Ceph Monitor http://docs.ceph.com/docs/luminous/start/intro/]
244 maintains a master copy of the cluster map. For high availability you need to
245 have at least 3 monitors. One monitor will already be installed if you
246 used the installation wizard. You wont need more than 3 monitors as long
247 as your cluster is small to midsize, only really large clusters will
248 need more than that.
249
250 On each node where you want to place a monitor (three monitors are recommended),
251 create it by using the 'Ceph -> Monitor' tab in the GUI or run.
252
253
254 [source,bash]
255 ----
256 pveceph createmon
257 ----
258
259 This will also install the needed Ceph Manager ('ceph-mgr') by default. If you
260 do not want to install a manager, specify the '-exclude-manager' option.
261
262
263 [[pve_ceph_manager]]
264 Creating Ceph Manager
265 ----------------------
266
267 The Manager daemon runs alongside the monitors, providing an interface for
268 monitoring the cluster. Since the Ceph luminous release the
269 ceph-mgr footnote:[Ceph Manager http://docs.ceph.com/docs/luminous/mgr/] daemon
270 is required. During monitor installation the ceph manager will be installed as
271 well.
272
273 NOTE: It is recommended to install the Ceph Manager on the monitor nodes. For
274 high availability install more then one manager.
275
276 [source,bash]
277 ----
278 pveceph createmgr
279 ----
280
281
282 [[pve_ceph_osds]]
283 Creating Ceph OSDs
284 ------------------
285
286 [thumbnail="screenshot/gui-ceph-osd-status.png"]
287
288 via GUI or via CLI as follows:
289
290 [source,bash]
291 ----
292 pveceph createosd /dev/sd[X]
293 ----
294
295 TIP: We recommend a Ceph cluster size, starting with 12 OSDs, distributed evenly
296 among your, at least three nodes (4 OSDs on each node).
297
298 If the disk was used before (eg. ZFS/RAID/OSD), to remove partition table, boot
299 sector and any OSD leftover the following commands should be sufficient.
300
301 [source,bash]
302 ----
303 dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/sd[X] bs=1M count=200
304 ceph-disk zap /dev/sd[X]
305 ----
306
307 WARNING: The above commands will destroy data on the disk!
308
309 Ceph Bluestore
310 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
311
312 Starting with the Ceph Kraken release, a new Ceph OSD storage type was
313 introduced, the so called Bluestore
314 footnote:[Ceph Bluestore http://ceph.com/community/new-luminous-bluestore/].
315 This is the default when creating OSDs in Ceph luminous.
316
317 [source,bash]
318 ----
319 pveceph createosd /dev/sd[X]
320 ----
321
322 NOTE: In order to select a disk in the GUI, to be more fail-safe, the disk needs
323 to have a GPT footnoteref:[GPT, GPT partition table
324 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GUID_Partition_Table] partition table. You can
325 create this with `gdisk /dev/sd(x)`. If there is no GPT, you cannot select the
326 disk as DB/WAL.
327
328 If you want to use a separate DB/WAL device for your OSDs, you can specify it
329 through the '-journal_dev' option. The WAL is placed with the DB, if not
330 specified separately.
331
332 [source,bash]
333 ----
334 pveceph createosd /dev/sd[X] -journal_dev /dev/sd[Y]
335 ----
336
337 NOTE: The DB stores BlueStore’s internal metadata and the WAL is BlueStore’s
338 internal journal or write-ahead log. It is recommended to use a fast SSD or
339 NVRAM for better performance.
340
341
342 Ceph Filestore
343 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~
344 Till Ceph luminous, Filestore was used as storage type for Ceph OSDs. It can
345 still be used and might give better performance in small setups, when backed by
346 an NVMe SSD or similar.
347
348 [source,bash]
349 ----
350 pveceph createosd /dev/sd[X] -bluestore 0
351 ----
352
353 NOTE: In order to select a disk in the GUI, the disk needs to have a
354 GPT footnoteref:[GPT] partition table. You can
355 create this with `gdisk /dev/sd(x)`. If there is no GPT, you cannot select the
356 disk as journal. Currently the journal size is fixed to 5 GB.
357
358 If you want to use a dedicated SSD journal disk:
359
360 [source,bash]
361 ----
362 pveceph createosd /dev/sd[X] -journal_dev /dev/sd[Y] -bluestore 0
363 ----
364
365 Example: Use /dev/sdf as data disk (4TB) and /dev/sdb is the dedicated SSD
366 journal disk.
367
368 [source,bash]
369 ----
370 pveceph createosd /dev/sdf -journal_dev /dev/sdb -bluestore 0
371 ----
372
373 This partitions the disk (data and journal partition), creates
374 filesystems and starts the OSD, afterwards it is running and fully
375 functional.
376
377 NOTE: This command refuses to initialize disk when it detects existing data. So
378 if you want to overwrite a disk you should remove existing data first. You can
379 do that using: 'ceph-disk zap /dev/sd[X]'
380
381 You can create OSDs containing both journal and data partitions or you
382 can place the journal on a dedicated SSD. Using a SSD journal disk is
383 highly recommended to achieve good performance.
384
385
386 [[pve_ceph_pools]]
387 Creating Ceph Pools
388 -------------------
389
390 [thumbnail="screenshot/gui-ceph-pools.png"]
391
392 A pool is a logical group for storing objects. It holds **P**lacement
393 **G**roups (`PG`, `pg_num`), a collection of objects.
394
395 When no options are given, we set a default of **128 PGs**, a **size of 3
396 replicas** and a **min_size of 2 replicas** for serving objects in a degraded
397 state.
398
399 NOTE: The default number of PGs works for 2-5 disks. Ceph throws a
400 'HEALTH_WARNING' if you have too few or too many PGs in your cluster.
401
402 It is advised to calculate the PG number depending on your setup, you can find
403 the formula and the PG calculator footnote:[PG calculator
404 http://ceph.com/pgcalc/] online. While PGs can be increased later on, they can
405 never be decreased.
406
407
408 You can create pools through command line or on the GUI on each PVE host under
409 **Ceph -> Pools**.
410
411 [source,bash]
412 ----
413 pveceph createpool <name>
414 ----
415
416 If you would like to automatically get also a storage definition for your pool,
417 active the checkbox "Add storages" on the GUI or use the command line option
418 '--add_storages' on pool creation.
419
420 Further information on Ceph pool handling can be found in the Ceph pool
421 operation footnote:[Ceph pool operation
422 http://docs.ceph.com/docs/luminous/rados/operations/pools/]
423 manual.
424
425 [[pve_ceph_device_classes]]
426 Ceph CRUSH & device classes
427 ---------------------------
428 The foundation of Ceph is its algorithm, **C**ontrolled **R**eplication
429 **U**nder **S**calable **H**ashing
430 (CRUSH footnote:[CRUSH https://ceph.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/weil-crush-sc06.pdf]).
431
432 CRUSH calculates where to store to and retrieve data from, this has the
433 advantage that no central index service is needed. CRUSH works with a map of
434 OSDs, buckets (device locations) and rulesets (data replication) for pools.
435
436 NOTE: Further information can be found in the Ceph documentation, under the
437 section CRUSH map footnote:[CRUSH map http://docs.ceph.com/docs/luminous/rados/operations/crush-map/].
438
439 This map can be altered to reflect different replication hierarchies. The object
440 replicas can be separated (eg. failure domains), while maintaining the desired
441 distribution.
442
443 A common use case is to use different classes of disks for different Ceph pools.
444 For this reason, Ceph introduced the device classes with luminous, to
445 accommodate the need for easy ruleset generation.
446
447 The device classes can be seen in the 'ceph osd tree' output. These classes
448 represent their own root bucket, which can be seen with the below command.
449
450 [source, bash]
451 ----
452 ceph osd crush tree --show-shadow
453 ----
454
455 Example output form the above command:
456
457 [source, bash]
458 ----
459 ID CLASS WEIGHT TYPE NAME
460 -16 nvme 2.18307 root default~nvme
461 -13 nvme 0.72769 host sumi1~nvme
462 12 nvme 0.72769 osd.12
463 -14 nvme 0.72769 host sumi2~nvme
464 13 nvme 0.72769 osd.13
465 -15 nvme 0.72769 host sumi3~nvme
466 14 nvme 0.72769 osd.14
467 -1 7.70544 root default
468 -3 2.56848 host sumi1
469 12 nvme 0.72769 osd.12
470 -5 2.56848 host sumi2
471 13 nvme 0.72769 osd.13
472 -7 2.56848 host sumi3
473 14 nvme 0.72769 osd.14
474 ----
475
476 To let a pool distribute its objects only on a specific device class, you need
477 to create a ruleset with the specific class first.
478
479 [source, bash]
480 ----
481 ceph osd crush rule create-replicated <rule-name> <root> <failure-domain> <class>
482 ----
483
484 [frame="none",grid="none", align="left", cols="30%,70%"]
485 |===
486 |<rule-name>|name of the rule, to connect with a pool (seen in GUI & CLI)
487 |<root>|which crush root it should belong to (default ceph root "default")
488 |<failure-domain>|at which failure-domain the objects should be distributed (usually host)
489 |<class>|what type of OSD backing store to use (eg. nvme, ssd, hdd)
490 |===
491
492 Once the rule is in the CRUSH map, you can tell a pool to use the ruleset.
493
494 [source, bash]
495 ----
496 ceph osd pool set <pool-name> crush_rule <rule-name>
497 ----
498
499 TIP: If the pool already contains objects, all of these have to be moved
500 accordingly. Depending on your setup this may introduce a big performance hit on
501 your cluster. As an alternative, you can create a new pool and move disks
502 separately.
503
504
505 Ceph Client
506 -----------
507
508 [thumbnail="screenshot/gui-ceph-log.png"]
509
510 You can then configure {pve} to use such pools to store VM or
511 Container images. Simply use the GUI too add a new `RBD` storage (see
512 section xref:ceph_rados_block_devices[Ceph RADOS Block Devices (RBD)]).
513
514 You also need to copy the keyring to a predefined location for a external Ceph
515 cluster. If Ceph is installed on the Proxmox nodes itself, then this will be
516 done automatically.
517
518 NOTE: The file name needs to be `<storage_id> + `.keyring` - `<storage_id>` is
519 the expression after 'rbd:' in `/etc/pve/storage.cfg` which is
520 `my-ceph-storage` in the following example:
521
522 [source,bash]
523 ----
524 mkdir /etc/pve/priv/ceph
525 cp /etc/ceph/ceph.client.admin.keyring /etc/pve/priv/ceph/my-ceph-storage.keyring
526 ----
527
528 [[pveceph_fs]]
529 CephFS
530 ------
531
532 Ceph provides also a filesystem running on top of the same object storage as
533 RADOS block devices do. A **M**eta**d**ata **S**erver (`MDS`) is used to map
534 the RADOS backed objects to files and directories, allowing to provide a
535 POSIX-compliant replicated filesystem. This allows one to have a clustered
536 highly available shared filesystem in an easy way if ceph is already used. Its
537 Metadata Servers guarantee that files get balanced out over the whole Ceph
538 cluster, this way even high load will not overload a single host, which can be
539 an issue with traditional shared filesystem approaches, like `NFS`, for
540 example.
541
542 {pve} supports both, using an existing xref:storage_cephfs[CephFS as storage]
543 to save backups, ISO files or container templates and creating a
544 hyper-converged CephFS itself.
545
546
547 [[pveceph_fs_mds]]
548 Metadata Server (MDS)
549 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
550
551 CephFS needs at least one Metadata Server to be configured and running to be
552 able to work. One can simply create one through the {pve} web GUI's `Node ->
553 CephFS` panel or on the command line with:
554
555 ----
556 pveceph mds create
557 ----
558
559 Multiple metadata servers can be created in a cluster. But with the default
560 settings only one can be active at any time. If an MDS, or its node, becomes
561 unresponsive (or crashes), another `standby` MDS will get promoted to `active`.
562 One can speed up the hand-over between the active and a standby MDS up by using
563 the 'hotstandby' parameter option on create, or if you have already created it
564 you may set/add:
565
566 ----
567 mds standby replay = true
568 ----
569
570 in the ceph.conf respective MDS section. With this enabled, this specific MDS
571 will always poll the active one, so that it can take over faster as it is in a
572 `warm` state. But naturally, the active polling will cause some additional
573 performance impact on your system and active `MDS`.
574
575 Multiple Active MDS
576 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
577
578 Since Luminous (12.2.x) you can also have multiple active metadata servers
579 running, but this is normally only useful for a high count on parallel clients,
580 as else the `MDS` seldom is the bottleneck. If you want to set this up please
581 refer to the ceph documentation. footnote:[Configuring multiple active MDS
582 daemons http://docs.ceph.com/docs/luminous/cephfs/multimds/]
583
584 [[pveceph_fs_create]]
585 Create a CephFS
586 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
587
588 With {pve}'s CephFS integration into you can create a CephFS easily over the
589 Web GUI, the CLI or an external API interface. Some prerequisites are required
590 for this to work:
591
592 .Prerequisites for a successful CephFS setup:
593 - xref:pve_ceph_install[Install Ceph packages], if this was already done some
594 time ago you might want to rerun it on an up to date system to ensure that
595 also all CephFS related packages get installed.
596 - xref:pve_ceph_monitors[Setup Monitors]
597 - xref:pve_ceph_monitors[Setup your OSDs]
598 - xref:pveceph_fs_mds[Setup at least one MDS]
599
600 After this got all checked and done you can simply create a CephFS through
601 either the Web GUI's `Node -> CephFS` panel or the command line tool `pveceph`,
602 for example with:
603
604 ----
605 pveceph fs create --pg_num 128 --add-storage
606 ----
607
608 This creates a CephFS named `'cephfs'' using a pool for its data named
609 `'cephfs_data'' with `128` placement groups and a pool for its metadata named
610 `'cephfs_metadata'' with one quarter of the data pools placement groups (`32`).
611 Check the xref:pve_ceph_pools[{pve} managed Ceph pool chapter] or visit the
612 Ceph documentation for more information regarding a fitting placement group
613 number (`pg_num`) for your setup footnote:[Ceph Placement Groups
614 http://docs.ceph.com/docs/luminous/rados/operations/placement-groups/].
615 Additionally, the `'--add-storage'' parameter will add the CephFS to the {pve}
616 storage configuration after it was created successfully.
617
618 Destroy CephFS
619 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
620
621 WARNING: Destroying a CephFS will render all its data unusable, this cannot be
622 undone!
623
624 If you really want to destroy an existing CephFS you first need to stop, or
625 destroy, all metadata server (`M̀DS`). You can destroy them either over the Web
626 GUI or the command line interface, with:
627
628 ----
629 pveceph mds destroy NAME
630 ----
631 on each {pve} node hosting a MDS daemon.
632
633 Then, you can remove (destroy) CephFS by issuing a:
634
635 ----
636 ceph fs rm NAME --yes-i-really-mean-it
637 ----
638 on a single node hosting Ceph. After this you may want to remove the created
639 data and metadata pools, this can be done either over the Web GUI or the CLI
640 with:
641
642 ----
643 pveceph pool destroy NAME
644 ----
645
646
647 Ceph monitoring and troubleshooting
648 -----------------------------------
649 A good start is to continuosly monitor the ceph health from the start of
650 initial deployment. Either through the ceph tools itself, but also by accessing
651 the status through the {pve} link:api-viewer/index.html[API].
652
653 The following ceph commands below can be used to see if the cluster is healthy
654 ('HEALTH_OK'), if there are warnings ('HEALTH_WARN'), or even errors
655 ('HEALTH_ERR'). If the cluster is in an unhealthy state the status commands
656 below will also give you an overview on the current events and actions take.
657
658 ----
659 # single time output
660 pve# ceph -s
661 # continuously output status changes (press CTRL+C to stop)
662 pve# ceph -w
663 ----
664
665 To get a more detailed view, every ceph service has a log file under
666 `/var/log/ceph/` and if there is not enough detail, the log level can be
667 adjusted footnote:[Ceph log and debugging http://docs.ceph.com/docs/luminous/rados/troubleshooting/log-and-debug/].
668
669 You can find more information about troubleshooting
670 footnote:[Ceph troubleshooting http://docs.ceph.com/docs/luminous/rados/troubleshooting/]
671 a Ceph cluster on its website.
672
673
674 ifdef::manvolnum[]
675 include::pve-copyright.adoc[]
676 endif::manvolnum[]