Ceph

    PLEASE NOTE: This document applies to v1.0 version and not to the latest stable release v1.9

    Ceph Object Store CRD

    Rook allows creation and customization of object stores through the custom resource definitions (CRDs). The following settings are available for Ceph object stores.

    Sample

    NOTE This example requires you to have at least 3 bluestore OSDs each on a different node. This is because the below erasureCoded chunk settings require at least 3 bluestore OSDs and as failureDomain setting to host (default), each OSD needs to be on a different nodes.

    apiVersion: ceph.rook.io/v1
    kind: CephObjectStore
    metadata:
      name: my-store
      namespace: rook-ceph
    spec:
      metadataPool:
        failureDomain: host
        replicated:
          size: 3
      dataPool:
        failureDomain: host
        erasureCoded:
          dataChunks: 2
          codingChunks: 1
      gateway:
        type: s3
        sslCertificateRef:
        port: 80
        securePort:
        instances: 1
        allNodes: false
        # A key/value list of annotations
        annotations:
        #  key: value
        placement:
        #  nodeAffinity:
        #    requiredDuringSchedulingIgnoredDuringExecution:
        #      nodeSelectorTerms:
        #      - matchExpressions:
        #        - key: role
        #          operator: In
        #          values:
        #          - rgw-node
        #  tolerations:
        #  - key: rgw-node
        #    operator: Exists
        #  podAffinity:
        #  podAntiAffinity:
        resources:
        #  limits:
        #    cpu: "500m"
        #    memory: "1024Mi"
        #  requests:
        #    cpu: "500m"
        #    memory: "1024Mi"
    

    Object Store Settings

    Metadata

    • name: The name of the object store to create, which will be reflected in the pool and other resource names.
    • namespace: The namespace of the Rook cluster where the object store is created.

    Pools

    The pools allow all of the settings defined in the Pool CRD spec. For more details, see the Pool CRD settings. In the example above, there must be at least three hosts (size 3) and at least three devices (2 data + 1 coding chunks) in the cluster.

    • metadataPool: The settings used to create all of the object store metadata pools. Must use replication.
    • dataPool: The settings to create the object store data pool. Can use replication or erasure coding.

    Gateway Settings

    The gateway settings correspond to the RGW daemon settings.

    • type: S3 is supported
    • sslCertificateRef: If the certificate is not specified, SSL will not be configured. If specified, this is the name of the Kubernetes secret that contains the SSL certificate to be used for secure connections to the object store. Rook will look in the secret provided at the cert key name. The value of the cert key must be in the format expected by the RGW service: “The server key, server certificate, and any other CA or intermediate certificates be supplied in one file. Each of these items must be in pem form.”
    • port: The port on which the RGW pods and the RGW service will be listening (not encrypted).
    • securePort: The secure port on which RGW pods will be listening. An SSL certificate must be specified.
    • instances: The number of pods that will be started to load balance this object store. Ignored if allNodes is true.
    • allNodes: Whether RGW pods should be started on all nodes. If true, a daemonset is created. If false, instances must be set.
    • annotations: Key value pair list of annotations to add.
    • placement: The Kubernetes placement settings to determine where the RGW pods should be started in the cluster.
    • resources: Set resource requests/limits for the Gateway Pod(s), see Resource Requirements/Limits.

    Runtime settings

    MIME types

    Rook provides a default mime.types file for each Ceph object store. This file is stored in a Kubernetes ConfigMap with the name rook-ceph-rgw-<STORE-NAME>-mime-types. For most users, the default file should suffice, however, the option is available to users to edit the mime.types file in the ConfigMap as they desire. Users may have their own special file types, and particularly security conscious users may wish to pare down the file to reduce the possibility of a file type execution attack.

    Rook will not overwrite an existing mime.types ConfigMap so that user modifications will not be destroyed. If the object store is destroyed and recreated, the ConfigMap will also be destroyed and created anew.