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authorJames Shubin <james@shubin.ca>2013-12-13 10:44:34 -0500
committerVijay Bellur <vbellur@redhat.com>2013-12-17 09:04:11 -0800
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parent99f9dedd5b0f817364deff7c2bd1a8401e067e40 (diff)
Added Puppet-Gluster documentation from Puppet-Gluster project.
Change-Id: I196d97fb446f5938671c4cde6c460334999679cf Signed-off-by: James Shubin <james@shubin.ca> Reviewed-on: http://review.gluster.org/6507 Reviewed-by: Vijay Bellur <vbellur@redhat.com> Tested-by: Vijay Bellur <vbellur@redhat.com>
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+#Puppet-Gluster
+<!---
+GlusterFS module by James
+Copyright (C) 2010-2013+ James Shubin
+Written by James Shubin <james@shubin.ca>
+
+This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
+it under the terms of the GNU Affero General Public License as published by
+the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
+(at your option) any later version.
+
+This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
+but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
+MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
+GNU Affero General Public License for more details.
+
+You should have received a copy of the GNU Affero General Public License
+along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
+-->
+##A GlusterFS Puppet module by [James](https://ttboj.wordpress.com/)
+####Available from:
+####[https://github.com/purpleidea/puppet-gluster/](https://github.com/purpleidea/puppet-gluster/)
+
+####Also available from:
+####[https://forge.gluster.org/puppet-gluster/](https://forge.gluster.org/puppet-gluster/)
+
+####Table of Contents
+
+1. [Overview](#overview)
+2. [Module description - What the module does](#module-description)
+3. [Setup - Getting started with Puppet-Gluster](#setup)
+ * [What can Puppet-Gluster manage?](#what-can-puppet-gluster-manage)
+ * [Simple setup](#simple-setup)
+ * [Elastic setup](#elastic-setup)
+ * [Advanced setup](#advanced-setup)
+4. [Usage/FAQ - Notes on management and frequently asked questions](#usage-and-frequently-asked-questions)
+5. [Reference - Class and type reference](#reference)
+ * [gluster::simple](#glustersimple)
+ * [gluster::elastic](#glusterelastic)
+ * [gluster::server](#glusterserver)
+ * [gluster::host](#glusterhost)
+ * [gluster::brick](#glusterbrick)
+ * [gluster::volume](#glustervolume)
+ * [gluster::volume::property](#glustervolumeproperty)
+6. [Examples - Example configurations](#examples)
+7. [Limitations - Puppet versions, OS compatibility, etc...](#limitations)
+8. [Development - Background on module development](#development)
+9. [Author - Author and contact information](#author)
+
+##Overview
+
+The Puppet-Gluster module installs, configures, and manages a GlusterFS cluster.
+
+##Module Description
+
+This Puppet-Gluster module handles installation, configuration, and management
+of GlusterFS across all of the hosts in the cluster.
+
+##Setup
+
+###What can Puppet-Gluster manage?
+
+Puppet-Gluster is designed to be able to manage as much or as little of your
+GlusterFS cluster as you wish. All features are optional. If there is a feature
+that doesn't appear to be optional, and you believe it should be, please let me
+know. Having said that, it makes good sense to me to have Puppet-Gluster manage
+as much of your GlusterFS infrastructure as it can. At the moment, it cannot
+rack new servers, but I am accepting funding to explore this feature ;) At the
+moment it can manage:
+
+* GlusterFS packages (rpm)
+* GlusterFS configuration files (/var/lib/glusterd/)
+* GlusterFS host peering (gluster peer probe)
+* GlusterFS storage partitioning (fdisk)
+* GlusterFS storage formatting (mkfs)
+* GlusterFS brick creation (mkdir)
+* GlusterFS services (glusterd)
+* GlusterFS firewalling (whitelisting)
+* GlusterFS volume creation (gluster volume create)
+* GlusterFS volume state (started/stopped)
+* GlusterFS volume properties (gluster volume set)
+* And much more...
+
+###Simple setup
+
+include '::gluster::simple' is enough to get you up and running. When using the
+gluster::simple class, or with any other Puppet-Gluster configuration,
+identical definitions must be used on all hosts in the cluster. The simplest
+way to accomplish this is with a single shared puppet host definition like:
+
+```puppet
+node /^annex\d+$/ { # annex{1,2,..N}
+ class { '::gluster::simple':
+ }
+}
+```
+
+If you wish to pass in different parameters, you can specify them in the class
+before you provision your hosts:
+
+```puppet
+class { '::gluster::simple':
+ replica => 2,
+ volume => ['volume1', 'volume2', 'volumeN'],
+}
+```
+
+###Elastic setup
+
+The gluster::elastic class is not yet available. Stay tuned!
+
+###Advanced setup
+
+Some system administrators may wish to manually itemize each of the required
+components for the Puppet-Gluster deployment. This happens automatically with
+the higher level modules, but may still be a desirable feature, particularly
+for non-elastic storage pools where the configuration isn't expected to change
+very often (if ever).
+
+To put together your cluster piece by piece, you must manually include and
+define each class and type that you wish to use. If there are certain aspects
+that you wish to manage yourself, you can omit them from your configuration.
+See the [reference](#reference) section below for the specifics. Here is one
+possible example:
+
+```puppet
+class { '::gluster::server':
+ shorewall => true,
+}
+
+gluster::host { 'annex1.example.com':
+ # use uuidgen to make these
+ uuid => '1f660ca2-2c78-4aa0-8f4d-21608218c69c',
+}
+
+# note that this is using a folder on your existing file system...
+# this can be useful for prototyping gluster using virtual machines
+# if this isn't a separate partition, remember that your root fs will
+# run out of space when your gluster volume does!
+gluster::brick { 'annex1.example.com:/data/gluster-storage1':
+ areyousure => true,
+}
+
+gluster::host { 'annex2.example.com':
+ # NOTE: specifying a host uuid is now optional!
+ # if you don't choose one, one will be assigned
+ #uuid => '2fbe6e2f-f6bc-4c2d-a301-62fa90c459f8',
+}
+
+gluster::brick { 'annex2.example.com:/data/gluster-storage2':
+ areyousure => true,
+}
+
+$brick_list = [
+ 'annex1.example.com:/data/gluster-storage1',
+ 'annex2.example.com:/data/gluster-storage2',
+]
+
+gluster::volume { 'examplevol':
+ replica => 2,
+ bricks => $brick_list,
+ start => undef, # i'll start this myself
+}
+
+# namevar must be: <VOLNAME>#<KEY>
+gluster::volume::property { 'examplevol#auth.reject':
+ value => ['192.0.2.13', '198.51.100.42', '203.0.113.69'],
+}
+```
+
+##Usage and frequently asked questions
+
+All management should be done by manipulating the arguments on the appropriate
+Puppet-Gluster classes and types. Since certain manipulations are either not
+yet possible with Puppet-Gluster, or are not supported by GlusterFS, attempting
+to manipulate the Puppet configuration in an unsupported way will result in
+undefined behaviour, and possible even data loss, however this is unlikely.
+
+###How do I change the replica count?
+
+You must set this before volume creation. This is a limitation of GlusterFS.
+There are certain situations where you can change the replica count by adding
+a multiple of the existing brick count to get this desired effect. These cases
+are not yet supported by Puppet-Gluster. If you want to use Puppet-Gluster
+before and / or after this transition, you can do so, but you'll have to do the
+changes manually.
+
+###Do I need to use a virtual IP?
+
+Using a virtual IP (VIP) is strongly recommended as a distributed lock manager
+(DLM) and also to provide a highly-available (HA) IP address for your clients
+to connect to. For a more detailed explanation of the reasoning please see:
+
+[https://ttboj.wordpress.com/2012/08/23/how-to-avoid-cluster-race-conditions-or-how-to-implement-a-distributed-lock-manager-in-puppet/](https://ttboj.wordpress.com/2012/08/23/how-to-avoid-cluster-race-conditions-or-how-to-implement-a-distributed-lock-manager-in-puppet/)
+
+Remember that even if you're using a hosted solution (such as AWS) that doesn't
+provide an additional IP address, or you want to avoid using an additional IP,
+and you're okay not having full HA client mounting, you can use an unused
+private RFC1918 IP address as the DLM VIP. Remember that a layer 3 IP can
+co-exist on the same layer 2 network with the layer 3 network that is used by
+your cluster.
+
+###Is it possible to have Puppet-Gluster complete in a single run?
+
+No. This is a limitation of Puppet, and is related to how GlusterFS operates.
+For example, it is not reliably possible to predict which ports a particular
+GlusterFS volume will run on until after the volume is started. As a result,
+this module will initially whitelist connections from GlusterFS host IP
+addresses, and then further restrict this to only allow individual ports once
+this information is known. This is possible in conjunction with the
+[puppet-shorewall](https://github.com/purpleidea/puppet-shorewall) module.
+You should notice that each run should complete without error. If you do see an
+error, it means that either something is wrong with your system and / or
+configuration, or because there is a bug in Puppet-Gluster.
+
+###Can you integrate this with vagrant?
+
+Not until vagrant properly supports libvirt/KVM. I have no desire to use
+VirtualBox for fun.
+
+###Awesome work, but it's missing support for a feature and/or platform!
+
+Since this is an Open Source / Free Software project that I also give away for
+free (as in beer, free as in gratis, free as in libre), I'm unable to provide
+unlimited support. Please consider donating funds, hardware, virtual machines,
+and other resources. For specific needs, you could perhaps sponsor a feature!
+
+###You didn't answer my question, or I have a question!
+
+Contact me through my [technical blog](https://ttboj.wordpress.com/contact/)
+and I'll do my best to help. If you have a good question, please remind me to
+add my answer to this documentation!
+
+##Reference
+Please note that there are a number of undocumented options. For more
+information on these options, please view the source at:
+[https://github.com/purpleidea/puppet-gluster/](https://github.com/purpleidea/puppet-gluster/).
+If you feel that a well used option needs documenting here, please contact me.
+
+###Overview of classes and types
+
+* [gluster::simple](#glustersimple): Simple Puppet-Gluster deployment.
+* [gluster::elastic](#glusterelastic): Under construction.
+* [gluster::server](#glusterserver): Base class for server hosts.
+* [gluster::host](#glusterhost): Host type for each participating host.
+* [gluster::brick](#glusterbrick): Brick type for each defined brick, per host.
+* [gluster::volume](#glustervolume): Volume type for each defined volume.
+* [gluster::volume::property](#glustervolumeproperty): Manages properties for each volume.
+
+###gluster::simple
+This is gluster::simple. It should probably take care of 80% of all use cases.
+It is particularly useful for deploying quick test clusters. It uses a
+finite-state machine (FSM) to decide when the cluster has settled and volume
+creation can begin. For more information on the FSM in Puppet-Gluster see:
+[https://ttboj.wordpress.com/2013/09/28/finite-state-machines-in-puppet/](https://ttboj.wordpress.com/2013/09/28/finite-state-machines-in-puppet/)
+
+####`replica`
+The replica count. Can't be changed automatically after initial deployment.
+
+####`volume`
+The volume name or list of volume names to create.
+
+####`path`
+The valid brick path for each host. Defaults to local file system. If you need
+a different path per host, then Gluster::Simple will not meet your needs.
+
+####`vip`
+The virtual IP address to be used for the cluster distributed lock manager.
+
+####`shorewall`
+Boolean to specify whether puppet-shorewall integration should be used or not.
+
+###gluster::elastic
+Under construction.
+
+###gluster::server
+Main server class for the cluster. Must be included when building the GlusterFS
+cluster manually. Wrapper classes such as [gluster::simple](#glustersimple)
+include this automatically.
+
+####`vip`
+The virtual IP address to be used for the cluster distributed lock manager.
+
+####`shorewall`
+Boolean to specify whether puppet-shorewall integration should be used or not.
+
+###gluster::host
+Main host type for the cluster. Each host participating in the GlusterFS
+cluster must define this type on itself, and on every other host. As a result,
+this is not a singleton like the [gluster::server](#glusterserver) class.
+
+####`ip`
+Specify which IP address this host is using. This defaults to the
+_$::ipaddress_ variable. Be sure to set this manually if you're declaring this
+yourself on each host without using exported resources. If each host thinks the
+other hosts should have the same IP address as itself, then Puppet-Gluster and
+GlusterFS won't work correctly.
+
+####`uuid`
+Universally unique identifier (UUID) for the host. If empty, Puppet-Gluster
+will generate this automatically for the host. You can generate your own
+manually with _uuidgen_, and set them yourself. I found this particularly
+useful for testing, because I would pick easy to recognize UUID's like:
+_aaaaaaaa-aaaa-aaaa-aaaa-aaaaaaaaaaaa_,
+_bbbbbbbb-bbbb-bbbb-bbbb-bbbbbbbbbbbb_, and so on. If you set a UUID manually,
+and Puppet-Gluster has a chance to run, then it will remember your choice, and
+store it locally to be used again if you no longer specify the UUID. This is
+particularly useful for upgrading an existing un-managed GlusterFS installation
+to a Puppet-Gluster managed one, without changing any UUID's.
+
+###gluster::brick
+Main brick type for the cluster. Each brick is an individual storage segment to
+be used on a host. Each host must have at least one brick to participate in the
+cluster, but usually a host will have multiple bricks. A brick can be as simple
+as a file system folder, or it can be a separate file system. Please read the
+official GlusterFS documentation, if you aren't entirely comfortable with the
+concept of a brick.
+
+For most test clusters, and for experimentation, it is easiest to use a
+directory on the root file system. You can even use a _/tmp_ sub folder if you
+don't care about the persistence of your data. For more serious clusters, you
+might want to create separate file systems for your data. On self-hosted iron,
+it is not uncommon to create multiple RAID-6 drive pools, and to then create a
+separate file system per virtual drive. Each file system can then be used as a
+single brick.
+
+So that each volume in GlusterFS has the maximum ability to grow, without
+having to partition storage separately, the bricks in Puppet-Gluster are
+actually folders (on whatever backing store you wish) which then contain
+sub folders-- one for each volume. As a result, all the volumes on a given
+GlusterFS cluster can share the total available storage space. If you wish to
+limit the storage used by each volume, you can setup quotas. Alternatively, you
+can buy more hardware, and elastically grow your GlusterFS volumes, since the
+price per GB will be significantly less than any proprietary storage system.
+The one downside to this brick sharing, is that if you have chosen the brick
+per host count specifically to match your performance requirements, and
+each GlusterFS volume on the same cluster has drastically different brick per
+host performance requirements, then this won't suit your needs. I doubt that
+anyone actually has such requirements, but if you do insist on needing this
+compartmentalization, then you can probably use the Puppet-Gluster grouping
+feature to accomplish this goal. Please let me know about your use-case, and
+be warned that the grouping feature hasn't been extensively tested.
+
+To prove to you that I care about automation, this type offers the ability to
+automatically partition and format your file systems. This means you can plug
+in new iron, boot, provision and configure the entire system automatically.
+Regrettably, I don't have a lot of test hardware to routinely use this feature.
+If you'd like to donate some, I'd be happy to test this thoroughly. Having said
+that, I have used this feature, I consider it to be extremely safe, and it has
+never caused me to lose data. If you're uncertain, feel free to look at the
+code, or avoid using this feature entirely. If you think there's a way to make
+it even safer, then feel free to let me know.
+
+####`dev`
+Block device, such as _/dev/sdc_ or _/dev/disk/by-id/scsi-0123456789abcdef_. By
+default, Puppet-Gluster will assume you're using a folder to store the brick
+data, if you don't specify this parameter.
+
+####`fsuuid`
+File system UUID. This ensures we can distinctly identify a file system. You
+can set this to be used with automatic file system creation, or you can specify
+the file system UUID that you'd like to use.
+
+####`labeltype`
+Only _gpt_ is supported. Other options include _msdos_, but this has never been
+used because of it's size limitations.
+
+####`fstype`
+This should be _xfs_ or _ext4_. Using _xfs_ is recommended, but _ext4_ is also
+quite common. This only affects a file system that is getting created by this
+module. If you provision a new machine, with a root file system of _ext4_, and
+the brick you create is a root file system path, then this option does nothing.
+
+####`xfs_inode64`
+Set _inode64_ mount option when using the _xfs_ fstype. Choose _true_ to set.
+
+####`xfs_nobarrier`
+Set _nobarrier_ mount option when using the _xfs_ fstype. Choose _true_ to set.
+
+####`ro`
+Whether the file system should be mounted read only. For emergencies only.
+
+####`force`
+If _true_, this will overwrite any xfs file system it sees. This is useful for
+rebuilding GlusterFS repeatedly and wiping data. There are other safeties in
+place to stop this. In general, you probably don't ever want to touch this.
+
+####`areyousure`
+Do you want to allow Puppet-Gluster to do dangerous things? You have to set
+this to _true_ to allow Puppet-Gluster to _fdisk_ and _mkfs_ your file system.
+
+###gluster::volume
+Main volume type for the cluster. This is where a lot of the magic happens.
+Remember that changing some of these parameters after the volume has been
+created won't work, and you'll experience undefined behaviour. There could be
+FSM based error checking to verify that no changes occur, but it has been left
+out so that this code base can eventually support such changes, and so that the
+user can manually change a parameter if they know that it is safe to do so.
+
+####`bricks`
+List of bricks to use for this volume. If this is left at the default value of
+_true_, then this list is built automatically. The algorithm that determines
+this order does not support all possible situations, and most likely can't
+handle certain corner cases. It is possible to examine the FSM to view the
+selected brick order before it has a chance to create the volume. The volume
+creation script won't run until there is a stable brick list as seen by the FSM
+running on the host that has the DLM. If you specify this list of bricks
+manually, you must choose the order to match your desired volume layout. If you
+aren't sure about how to order the bricks, you should review the GlusterFS
+documentation first.
+
+####`transport`
+Only _tcp_ is supported. Possible values can include _rdma_, but this won't get
+any testing if I don't have access to infiniband hardware. Donations welcome.
+
+####`replica`
+Replica count. Usually you'll want to set this to _2_. Some users choose _3_.
+Other values are seldom seen. A value of _1_ can be used for simply testing a
+distributed setup, when you don't care about your data or high availability. A
+value greater than _4_ is probably wasteful and unnecessary. It might even
+cause performance issues if a synchronous write is waiting on a slow fourth
+server.
+
+####`stripe`
+Stripe count. Thoroughly unsupported and untested option. Not recommended for
+use by GlusterFS.
+
+####`ping`
+Do we want to include ping checks with _fping_?
+
+####`settle`
+Do we want to run settle checks?
+
+####`start`
+Requested state for the volume. Valid values include: _true_ (start), _false_
+(stop), or _undef_ (un-managed start/stop state).
+
+###gluster::volume::property
+Main volume property type for the cluster. This allows you to manage GlusterFS
+volume specific properties. There are a wide range of properties that volumes
+support. For the full list of properties, you should consult the GlusterFS
+documentation, or run the _gluster volume set help_ command. To set a property
+you must use the special name pattern of: _volume_#_key_. The value argument is
+used to set the associated value. It is smart enough to accept values in the
+most logical format for that specific property. Some properties aren't yet
+supported, so please report any problems you have with this functionality.
+Because this feature is an awesome way to _document as code_ the volume
+specific optimizations that you've made, make sure you use this feature even if
+you don't use all the others.
+
+####`value`
+The value to be used for this volume property.
+
+##Examples
+For example configurations, please consult the [examples/](https://github.com/purpleidea/puppet-gluster/tree/master/examples) directory in the git
+source repository. It is available from:
+
+[https://github.com/purpleidea/puppet-gluster/tree/master/examples](https://github.com/purpleidea/puppet-gluster/tree/master/examples)
+
+It is also available from:
+
+[https://forge.gluster.org/puppet-gluster/puppet-gluster/trees/master/examples](https://forge.gluster.org/puppet-gluster/puppet-gluster/trees/master/examples/)
+
+##Limitations
+
+This module has been tested against open source Puppet 3.2.4 and higher.
+
+The module has been tested on:
+
+* CentOS 6.4
+
+It will probably work without incident or without major modification on:
+
+* CentOS 5.x/6.x
+* RHEL 5.x/6.x
+
+It will most likely work with other Puppet versions and on other platforms, but
+testing under other conditions has been light due to lack of resources. It will
+most likely not work on Debian/Ubuntu systems without modification. I would
+really love to add support for these operating systems, but I do not have any
+test resources to do so. Please sponsor this if you'd like to see it happen.
+
+##Development
+
+This is my personal project that I work on in my free time.
+Donations of funding, hardware, virtual machines, and other resources are
+appreciated. Please contact me if you'd like to sponsor a feature, invite me to
+talk/teach or for consulting.
+
+You can follow along [on my technical blog](https://ttboj.wordpress.com/).
+
+##Author
+
+Copyright (C) 2010-2013+ James Shubin
+
+* [github](https://github.com/purpleidea/)
+* [@purpleidea](https://twitter.com/#!/purpleidea)
+* [https://ttboj.wordpress.com/](https://ttboj.wordpress.com/)
+