Shared filesystem services

Overview

As of the 20.02 OpenStack Charms release, with OpenStack Rocky or later, support for integrating Manila with CephFS to provide shared filesystems is available.

Three new charms are needed to deploy this solution: ‘manila’, ‘manila-ganesha’, and ‘ceph-fs’. The ‘manila’ charm provides the Manila API service to the OpenStack deployment, the ‘ceph-fs’ charm provides the Ceph services required to provide CephFS, and the ‘manila-ganesha’ charm integrates these two via a Manila managed NFS gateway (Ganesha) to provide access controlled NFS mounts to OpenStack instances.

Deployment

Warning

Throughout this guide make sure openstack-origin matches the value you used when deploying OpenStack.

One way to add Manila Ganesha is to do so during the bundle deployment of a new OpenStack cloud. This is done by means of a bundle overlay, such as manila-ganesha-overlay.yaml:

machines:
  '0':
    series: bionic
  '1':
    series: bionic
  '2':
    series: bionic
  '3':
    series: bionic
relations:
- - manila:ha
  - manila-hacluster:ha
- - manila-ganesha:ha
  - manila-ganesha-hacluster:ha
- - ceph-mon:mds
  - ceph-fs:ceph-mds
- - ceph-mon:client
  - manila-ganesha:ceph
- - manila-ganesha:shared-db
  - percona-cluster:shared-db
- - manila-ganesha:amqp
  - rabbitmq-server:amqp
- - manila-ganesha:identity-service
  - keystone:identity-credentials
- - manila:remote-manila-plugin
  - manila-ganesha:manila-plugin
- - manila:amqp
  - rabbitmq-server:amqp
- - manila:identity-service
  - keystone:identity-service
- - manila:shared-db
  - percona-cluster:shared-db
series: bionic
applications:
  ceph-fs:
    charm: cs:ceph-fs
    num_units: 2
    options:
      source: cloud:bionic-train
  manila-hacluster:
    charm: cs:hacluster
  manila-ganesha-hacluster:
    charm: cs:hacluster
  manila-ganesha:
    charm: cs:manila-ganesha
    series: bionic
    num_units: 3
    options:
      openstack-origin: cloud:bionic-train
      vip: <INSERT VIP(S)>
    bindings:
      public: public
      admin: admin
      internal: internal
      shared-db: internal
      amqp: internal
      # This could also be another existing space
      tenant-storage: tenant-storage
    to:
    - 'lxd:1'
    - 'lxd:2'
    - 'lxd:3'
  manila:
    charm: cs:manila
    series: bionic
    num_units: 3
    options:
      openstack-origin: cloud:bionic-train
      vip: <INSERT VIP(S)>
      default-share-backend: cephfsnfs1
      share-protocols: NFS
    bindings:
      public: public
      admin: admin
      internal: internal
      shared-db: internal
      amqp: internal
    to:
    - 'lxd:1'
    - 'lxd:2'
    - 'lxd:3'

Warning

The machine mappings will almost certainly need to be changed.

To deploy OpenStack with Manila Ganesha:

juju deploy ./base.yaml --overlay ./manila-ganesha-overlay.yaml

Where base.yaml is a bundle to deploy OpenStack. See Install OpenStack from a bundle.

Configuration

To create and access CephFS shares over NFS, you’ll need to create the share and then you’ll need to grant access to the share.

Spaces

This charm can optionally dedicate a provider’s physical network to serving Ganesha NFS shares. It does so through its support for Juju spaces.

The charm uses a space called ‘tenant-storage’ and it should be accessible (routed is ok) to all tenants that expect to access the Manila shares. The easiest way to ensure this access is to create a provider network in OpenStack that is mapped to the same network layer as this space is. For example, the storage space is mapped to VLAN 120, then an OpenStack administrator should create a provider network that maps to the same VLAN. For example:

openstack network create \
    --provider-network-type vlan \
    --provider-segment 120 \
    --share \
    --provider-physical-network physnet1 \
    tenant-storage

openstack subnet create tenant \
    --network=tenant-storage \
    --subnet-range 10.1.10.0/22 \
    --gateway 10.1.10.1 \
    --allocation-pool start=10.1.10.50,end=10.1.13.254

When creating the space in MAAS that corresponds to this network, be sure that DHCP is disabled in this space. If MAAS performs any additional allocations in this space, ensure that the range configured for the subnet in Neutron does not overlap with the MAAS subnets.

If dedicating a network space is not desired, it is also possible to use Ganesha over a routed network. Manila’s IP access restrictions will continue to secure access to Ganesha even for a network that is not managed by Neutron. In order for the latter to apply, a provider network is required, and guests must be attached to that provider network.