OSD Config Reference¶
You can configure Ceph OSD Daemons in the Ceph configuration file, but Ceph OSD
Daemons can use the default values and a very minimal configuration. A minimal
Ceph OSD Daemon configuration sets osd journal size
and host
, and
uses default values for nearly everything else.
Ceph OSD Daemons are numerically identified in incremental fashion, beginning
with 0
using the following convention.
osd.0
osd.1
osd.2
In a configuration file, you may specify settings for all Ceph OSD Daemons in
the cluster by adding configuration settings to the [osd]
section of your
configuration file. To add settings directly to a specific Ceph OSD Daemon
(e.g., host
), enter it in an OSD-specific section of your configuration
file. For example:
[osd]
osd journal size = 1024
[osd.0]
host = osd-host-a
[osd.1]
host = osd-host-b
General Settings¶
The following settings provide an Ceph OSD Daemon’s ID, and determine paths to data and journals. Ceph deployment scripts typically generate the UUID automatically. We DO NOT recommend changing the default paths for data or journals, as it makes it more problematic to troubleshoot Ceph later.
The journal size should be at least twice the product of the expected drive
speed multiplied by filestore max sync interval
. However, the most common
practice is to partition the journal drive (often an SSD), and mount it such
that Ceph uses the entire partition for the journal.
osd uuid
Description: | The universally unique identifier (UUID) for the Ceph OSD Daemon. |
---|---|
Type: | UUID |
Default: | The UUID. |
Note: | The osd uuid applies to a single Ceph OSD Daemon. The fsid
applies to the entire cluster. |
osd data
Description: | The path to the OSDs data. You must create the directory when deploying Ceph. You should mount a drive for OSD data at this mount point. We do not recommend changing the default. |
---|---|
Type: | String |
Default: | /var/lib/ceph/osd/$cluster-$id |
osd max write size
Description: | The maximum size of a write in megabytes. |
---|---|
Type: | 32-bit Integer |
Default: | 90 |
osd max object size
Description: | The maximum size of a RADOS object in bytes. |
---|---|
Type: | 32-bit Unsigned Integer |
Default: | 128MB |
osd client message size cap
Description: | The largest client data message allowed in memory. |
---|---|
Type: | 64-bit Unsigned Integer |
Default: | 500MB default. 500*1024L*1024L |
osd class dir
Description: | The class path for RADOS class plug-ins. |
---|---|
Type: | String |
Default: | $libdir/rados-classes |
File System Settings¶
Ceph builds and mounts file systems which are used for Ceph OSDs.
osd mkfs options {fs-type}
Description: | Options used when creating a new Ceph OSD of type {fs-type}. |
---|---|
Type: | String |
Default for xfs: | |
-f -i 2048 |
|
Default for other file systems: | |
{empty string} |
- For example::
osd mkfs options xfs = -f -d agcount=24
osd mount options {fs-type}
Description: | Options used when mounting a Ceph OSD of type {fs-type}. |
---|---|
Type: | String |
Default for xfs: | |
rw,noatime,inode64 |
|
Default for other file systems: | |
rw, noatime |
- For example::
osd mount options xfs = rw, noatime, inode64, logbufs=8
Journal Settings¶
By default, Ceph expects that you will store an Ceph OSD Daemons journal with the following path:
/var/lib/ceph/osd/$cluster-$id/journal
Without performance optimization, Ceph stores the journal on the same disk as the Ceph OSD Daemons data. An Ceph OSD Daemon optimized for performance may use a separate disk to store journal data (e.g., a solid state drive delivers high performance journaling).
Ceph’s default osd journal size
is 0, so you will need to set this in your
ceph.conf
file. A journal size should find the product of the filestore
max sync interval
and the expected throughput, and multiply the product by
two (2):
osd journal size = {2 * (expected throughput * filestore max sync interval)}
The expected throughput number should include the expected disk throughput
(i.e., sustained data transfer rate), and network throughput. For example,
a 7200 RPM disk will likely have approximately 100 MB/s. Taking the min()
of the disk and network throughput should provide a reasonable expected
throughput. Some users just start off with a 10GB journal size. For
example:
osd journal size = 10000
osd journal
Description: | The path to the OSD’s journal. This may be a path to a file or a
block device (such as a partition of an SSD). If it is a file,
you must create the directory to contain it. We recommend using a
drive separate from the osd data drive. |
---|---|
Type: | String |
Default: | /var/lib/ceph/osd/$cluster-$id/journal |
osd journal size
Description: | The size of the journal in megabytes. If this is 0, and the journal is a block device, the entire block device is used. Since v0.54, this is ignored if the journal is a block device, and the entire block device is used. |
---|---|
Type: | 32-bit Integer |
Default: | 5120 |
Recommended: | Begin with 1GB. Should be at least twice the product of the
expected speed multiplied by filestore max sync interval . |
See Journal Config Reference for additional details.
Monitor OSD Interaction¶
Ceph OSD Daemons check each other’s heartbeats and report to monitors periodically. Ceph can use default values in many cases. However, if your network has latency issues, you may need to adopt longer intervals. See Configuring Monitor/OSD Interaction for a detailed discussion of heartbeats.
Data Placement¶
See Pool & PG Config Reference for details.
Scrubbing¶
In addition to making multiple copies of objects, Ceph insures data integrity by
scrubbing placement groups. Ceph scrubbing is analogous to fsck
on the
object storage layer. For each placement group, Ceph generates a catalog of all
objects and compares each primary object and its replicas to ensure that no
objects are missing or mismatched. Light scrubbing (daily) checks the object
size and attributes. Deep scrubbing (weekly) reads the data and uses checksums
to ensure data integrity.
Scrubbing is important for maintaining data integrity, but it can reduce performance. You can adjust the following settings to increase or decrease scrubbing operations.
osd max scrubs
Description: | The maximum number of simultaneous scrub operations for a Ceph OSD Daemon. |
---|---|
Type: | 32-bit Int |
Default: | 1 |
osd scrub begin hour
Description: | The time of day for the lower bound when a scheduled scrub can be performed. |
---|---|
Type: | Integer in the range of 0 to 24 |
Default: | 0 |
osd scrub end hour
Description: | The time of day for the upper bound when a scheduled scrub can be
performed. Along with osd scrub begin hour , they define a time
window, in which the scrubs can happen. But a scrub will be performed
no matter the time window allows or not, as long as the placement
group’s scrub interval exceeds osd scrub max interval . |
---|---|
Type: | Integer in the range of 0 to 24 |
Default: | 24 |
osd scrub during recovery
Description: | Allow scrub during recovery. Setting this to false will disable
scheduling new scrub (and deep–scrub) while there is active recovery.
Already running scrubs will be continued. This might be useful to reduce
load on busy clusters. |
---|---|
Type: | Boolean |
Default: | true |
osd scrub thread timeout
Description: | The maximum time in seconds before timing out a scrub thread. |
---|---|
Type: | 32-bit Integer |
Default: | 60 |
osd scrub finalize thread timeout
Description: | The maximum time in seconds before timing out a scrub finalize thread. |
---|---|
Type: | 32-bit Integer |
Default: | 60*10 |
osd scrub load threshold
Description: | The maximum load. Ceph will not scrub when the system load
(as defined by getloadavg() ) is higher than this number.
Default is 0.5 . |
---|---|
Type: | Float |
Default: | 0.5 |
osd scrub min interval
Description: | The minimal interval in seconds for scrubbing the Ceph OSD Daemon when the Ceph Storage Cluster load is low. |
---|---|
Type: | Float |
Default: | Once per day. 60*60*24 |
osd scrub max interval
Description: | The maximum interval in seconds for scrubbing the Ceph OSD Daemon irrespective of cluster load. |
---|---|
Type: | Float |
Default: | Once per week. 7*60*60*24 |
osd scrub chunk min
Description: | The minimal number of object store chunks to scrub during single operation. Ceph blocks writes to single chunk during scrub. |
---|---|
Type: | 32-bit Integer |
Default: | 5 |
osd scrub chunk max
Description: | The maximum number of object store chunks to scrub during single operation. |
---|---|
Type: | 32-bit Integer |
Default: | 25 |
osd scrub sleep
Description: | Time to sleep before scrubbing next group of chunks. Increasing this value will slow down whole scrub operation while client operations will be less impacted. |
---|---|
Type: | Float |
Default: | 0 |
osd deep scrub interval
Description: | The interval for “deep” scrubbing (fully reading all data). The
osd scrub load threshold does not affect this setting. |
---|---|
Type: | Float |
Default: | Once per week. 60*60*24*7 |
osd scrub interval randomize ratio
Description: | Add a random delay to osd scrub min interval when scheduling
the next scrub job for a placement group. The delay is a random
value less than osd scrub min interval *
osd scrub interval randomized ratio . So the default setting
practically randomly spreads the scrubs out in the allowed time
window of [1, 1.5] * osd scrub min interval . |
---|---|
Type: | Float |
Default: | 0.5 |
osd deep scrub stride
Description: | Read size when doing a deep scrub. |
---|---|
Type: | 32-bit Integer |
Default: | 512 KB. 524288 |
Operations¶
Operations settings allow you to configure the number of threads for servicing
requests. If you set osd op threads
to 0
, it disables multi-threading.
By default, Ceph uses two threads with a 30 second timeout and a 30 second
complaint time if an operation doesn’t complete within those time parameters.
You can set operations priority weights between client operations and
recovery operations to ensure optimal performance during recovery.
osd op threads
Description: | The number of threads to service Ceph OSD Daemon operations.
Set to 0 to disable it. Increasing the number may increase
the request processing rate. |
---|---|
Type: | 32-bit Integer |
Default: | 2 |
osd op queue
Description: | This sets the type of queue to be used for prioritizing ops
in the OSDs. Both queues feature a strict sub-queue which is
dequeued before the normal queue. The normal queue is different
between implementations. The original PrioritizedQueue (prio ) uses a
token bucket system which when there are sufficient tokens will
dequeue high priority queues first. If there are not enough
tokens available, queues are dequeued low priority to high priority.
The WeightedPriorityQueue (wpq ) dequeues all priorities in
relation to their priorities to prevent starvation of any queue.
WPQ should help in cases where a few OSDs are more overloaded
than others. The new mClock based OpClassQueue
(mclock_opclass ) prioritizes operations based on which class
they belong to (recovery, scrub, snaptrim, client op, osd subop).
And, the mClock based ClientQueue (mclock_client ) also
incorporates the client identifier in order to promote fairness
between clients. See QoS Based on mClock. Requires a restart. |
---|---|
Type: | String |
Valid Choices: | prio, wpq, mclock_opclass, mclock_client |
Default: | prio |
osd op queue cut off
Description: | This selects which priority ops will be sent to the strict
queue verses the normal queue. The low setting sends all
replication ops and higher to the strict queue, while the high
option sends only replication acknowledgement ops and higher to
the strict queue. Setting this to high should help when a few
OSDs in the cluster are very busy especially when combined with
wpq in the osd op queue setting. OSDs that are very busy
handling replication traffic could starve primary client traffic
on these OSDs without these settings. Requires a restart. |
---|---|
Type: | String |
Valid Choices: | low, high |
Default: | low |
osd client op priority
Description: | The priority set for client operations. It is relative to
osd recovery op priority . |
---|---|
Type: | 32-bit Integer |
Default: | 63 |
Valid Range: | 1-63 |
osd recovery op priority
Description: | The priority set for recovery operations. It is relative to
osd client op priority . |
---|---|
Type: | 32-bit Integer |
Default: | 3 |
Valid Range: | 1-63 |
osd scrub priority
Description: | The priority set for scrub operations. It is relative to
osd client op priority . |
---|---|
Type: | 32-bit Integer |
Default: | 5 |
Valid Range: | 1-63 |
osd snap trim priority
Description: | The priority set for snap trim operations. It is relative to
osd client op priority . |
---|---|
Type: | 32-bit Integer |
Default: | 5 |
Valid Range: | 1-63 |
osd op thread timeout
Description: | The Ceph OSD Daemon operation thread timeout in seconds. |
---|---|
Type: | 32-bit Integer |
Default: | 15 |
osd op complaint time
Description: | An operation becomes complaint worthy after the specified number of seconds have elapsed. |
---|---|
Type: | Float |
Default: | 30 |
osd disk threads
Description: | The number of disk threads, which are used to perform background disk intensive OSD operations such as scrubbing and snap trimming. |
---|---|
Type: | 32-bit Integer |
Default: | 1 |
osd disk thread ioprio class
Description: | Warning: it will only be used if both osd disk thread
ioprio class and osd disk thread ioprio priority are
set to a non default value. Sets the ioprio_set(2) I/O
scheduling class for the disk thread. Acceptable
values are idle , be or rt . The idle
class means the disk thread will have lower priority
than any other thread in the OSD. This is useful to slow
down scrubbing on an OSD that is busy handling client
operations. be is the default and is the same
priority as all other threads in the OSD. rt means
the disk thread will have precendence over all other
threads in the OSD. Note: Only works with the Linux Kernel
CFQ scheduler. Since Jewel scrubbing is no longer carried
out by the disk iothread, see osd priority options instead. |
---|---|
Type: | String |
Default: | the empty string |
osd disk thread ioprio priority
Description: | Warning: it will only be used if both osd disk thread
ioprio class and osd disk thread ioprio priority are
set to a non default value. It sets the ioprio_set(2)
I/O scheduling priority of the disk thread ranging
from 0 (highest) to 7 (lowest). If all OSDs on a given
host were in class idle and compete for I/O
(i.e. due to controller congestion), it can be used to
lower the disk thread priority of one OSD to 7 so that
another OSD with priority 0 can have priority.
Note: Only works with the Linux Kernel CFQ scheduler. |
---|---|
Type: | Integer in the range of 0 to 7 or -1 if not to be used. |
Default: | -1 |
osd op history size
Description: | The maximum number of completed operations to track. |
---|---|
Type: | 32-bit Unsigned Integer |
Default: | 20 |
osd op history duration
Description: | The oldest completed operation to track. |
---|---|
Type: | 32-bit Unsigned Integer |
Default: | 600 |
osd op log threshold
Description: | How many operations logs to display at once. |
---|---|
Type: | 32-bit Integer |
Default: | 5 |
QoS Based on mClock¶
Ceph’s use of mClock is currently in the experimental phase and should be approached with an exploratory mindset.
Core Concepts¶
The QoS support of Ceph is implemented using a queueing scheduler based on the dmClock algorithm. This algorithm allocates the I/O resources of the Ceph cluster in proportion to weights, and enforces the constraits of minimum reservation and maximum limitation, so that the services can compete for the resources fairly. Currently the mclock_opclass operation queue divides Ceph services involving I/O resources into following buckets:
- client op: the iops issued by client
- osd subop: the iops issued by primary OSD
- snap trim: the snap trimming related requests
- pg recovery: the recovery related requests
- pg scrub: the scrub related requests
And the resources are partitioned using following three sets of tags. In other words, the share of each type of service is controlled by three tags:
- reservation: the minimum IOPS allocated for the service.
- limitation: the maximum IOPS allocated for the service.
- weight: the proportional share of capacity if extra capacity or system oversubscribed.
In Ceph operations are graded with “cost”. And the resources allocated for serving various services are consumed by these “costs”. So, for example, the more reservation a services has, the more resource it is guaranteed to possess, as long as it requires. Assuming there are 2 services: recovery and client ops:
- recovery: (r:1, l:5, w:1)
- client ops: (r:2, l:0, w:9)
The settings above ensure that the recovery won’t get more than 5 requests per second serviced, even if it requires so (see CURRENT IMPLEMENTATION NOTE below), and no other services are competing with it. But if the clients start to issue large amount of I/O requests, neither will they exhaust all the I/O resources. 1 request per second is always allocated for recovery jobs as long as there are any such requests. So the recovery jobs won’t be starved even in a cluster with high load. And in the meantime, the client ops can enjoy a larger portion of the I/O resource, because its weight is “9”, while its competitor “1”. In the case of client ops, it is not clamped by the limit setting, so it can make use of all the resources if there is no recovery ongoing.
Along with mclock_opclass another mclock operation queue named mclock_client is available. It divides operations based on category but also divides them based on the client making the request. This helps not only manage the distribution of resources spent on different classes of operations but also tries to insure fairness among clients.
CURRENT IMPLEMENTATION NOTE: the current experimental implementation does not enforce the limit values. As a first approximation we decided not to prevent operations that would otherwise enter the operation sequencer from doing so.
Subtleties of mClock¶
The reservation and limit values have a unit of requests per second. The weight, however, does not technically have a unit and the weights are relative to one another. So if one class of requests has a weight of 1 and another a weight of 9, then the latter class of requests should get 9 executed at a 9 to 1 ratio as the first class. However that will only happen once the reservations are met and those values include the operations executed under the reservation phase.
Even though the weights do not have units, one must be careful in choosing their values due how the algorithm assigns weight tags to requests. If the weight is W, then for a given class of requests, the next one that comes in will have a weight tag of 1/W plus the previous weight tag or the current time, whichever is larger. That means if W is sufficiently large and therefore 1/W is sufficiently small, the calculated tag may never be assigned as it will get a value of the current time. The ultimate lesson is that values for weight should not be too large. They should be under the number of requests one expects to ve serviced each second.
Caveats¶
There are some factors that can reduce the impact of the mClock op
queues within Ceph. First, requests to an OSD are sharded by their
placement group identifier. Each shard has its own mClock queue and
these queues neither interact nor share information among them. The
number of shards can be controlled with the configuration options
osd_op_num_shards
, osd_op_num_shards_hdd
, and
osd_op_num_shards_ssd
. A lower number of shards will increase the
impact of the mClock queues, but may have other deliterious effects.
Second, requests are transferred from the operation queue to the operation sequencer, in which they go through the phases of execution. The operation queue is where mClock resides and mClock determines the next op to transfer to the operation sequencer. The number of operations allowed in the operation sequencer is a complex issue. In general we want to keep enough operations in the sequencer so it’s always getting work done on some operations while it’s waiting for disk and network access to complete on other operations. On the other hand, once an operation is transferred to the operation sequencer, mClock no longer has control over it. Therefore to maximize the impact of mClock, we want to keep as few operations in the operation sequencer as possible. So we have an inherent tension.
The configuration options that influence the number of operations in
the operation sequencer are bluestore_throttle_bytes
,
bluestore_throttle_deferred_bytes
,
bluestore_throttle_cost_per_io
,
bluestore_throttle_cost_per_io_hdd
, and
bluestore_throttle_cost_per_io_ssd
.
A third factor that affects the impact of the mClock algorithm is that we’re using a distributed system, where requests are made to multiple OSDs and each OSD has (can have) multiple shards. Yet we’re currently using the mClock algorithm, which is not distributed (note: dmClock is the distributed version of mClock).
Various organizations and individuals are currently experimenting with mClock as it exists in this code base along with their modifications to the code base. We hope you’ll share you’re experiences with your mClock and dmClock experiments in the ceph-devel mailing list.
osd push per object cost
Description: | the overhead for serving a push op |
---|---|
Type: | Unsigned Integer |
Default: | 1000 |
osd recovery max chunk
Description: | the maximum total size of data chunks a recovery op can carry. |
---|---|
Type: | Unsigned Integer |
Default: | 8 MiB |
osd op queue mclock client op res
Description: | the reservation of client op. |
---|---|
Type: | Float |
Default: | 1000.0 |
osd op queue mclock client op wgt
Description: | the weight of client op. |
---|---|
Type: | Float |
Default: | 500.0 |
osd op queue mclock client op lim
Description: | the limit of client op. |
---|---|
Type: | Float |
Default: | 1000.0 |
osd op queue mclock osd subop res
Description: | the reservation of osd subop. |
---|---|
Type: | Float |
Default: | 1000.0 |
osd op queue mclock osd subop wgt
Description: | the weight of osd subop. |
---|---|
Type: | Float |
Default: | 500.0 |
osd op queue mclock osd subop lim
Description: | the limit of osd subop. |
---|---|
Type: | Float |
Default: | 0.0 |
osd op queue mclock snap res
Description: | the reservation of snap trimming. |
---|---|
Type: | Float |
Default: | 0.0 |
osd op queue mclock snap wgt
Description: | the weight of snap trimming. |
---|---|
Type: | Float |
Default: | 1.0 |
osd op queue mclock snap lim
Description: | the limit of snap trimming. |
---|---|
Type: | Float |
Default: | 0.001 |
osd op queue mclock recov res
Description: | the reservation of recovery. |
---|---|
Type: | Float |
Default: | 0.0 |
osd op queue mclock recov wgt
Description: | the weight of recovery. |
---|---|
Type: | Float |
Default: | 1.0 |
osd op queue mclock recov lim
Description: | the limit of recovery. |
---|---|
Type: | Float |
Default: | 0.001 |
osd op queue mclock scrub res
Description: | the reservation of scrub jobs. |
---|---|
Type: | Float |
Default: | 0.0 |
osd op queue mclock scrub wgt
Description: | the weight of scrub jobs. |
---|---|
Type: | Float |
Default: | 1.0 |
osd op queue mclock scrub lim
Description: | the limit of scrub jobs. |
---|---|
Type: | Float |
Default: | 0.001 |
Backfilling¶
When you add or remove Ceph OSD Daemons to a cluster, the CRUSH algorithm will want to rebalance the cluster by moving placement groups to or from Ceph OSD Daemons to restore the balance. The process of migrating placement groups and the objects they contain can reduce the cluster’s operational performance considerably. To maintain operational performance, Ceph performs this migration with ‘backfilling’, which allows Ceph to set backfill operations to a lower priority than requests to read or write data.
osd max backfills
Description: | The maximum number of backfills allowed to or from a single OSD. |
---|---|
Type: | 64-bit Unsigned Integer |
Default: | 1 |
osd backfill scan min
Description: | The minimum number of objects per backfill scan. |
---|---|
Type: | 32-bit Integer |
Default: | 64 |
osd backfill scan max
Description: | The maximum number of objects per backfill scan. |
---|---|
Type: | 32-bit Integer |
Default: | 512 |
osd backfill retry interval
Description: | The number of seconds to wait before retrying backfill requests. |
---|---|
Type: | Double |
Default: | 10.0 |
OSD Map¶
OSD maps reflect the OSD daemons operating in the cluster. Over time, the number of map epochs increases. Ceph provides some settings to ensure that Ceph performs well as the OSD map grows larger.
osd map dedup
Description: | Enable removing duplicates in the OSD map. |
---|---|
Type: | Boolean |
Default: | true |
osd map cache size
Description: | The number of OSD maps to keep cached. |
---|---|
Type: | 32-bit Integer |
Default: | 500 |
osd map cache bl size
Description: | The size of the in-memory OSD map cache in OSD daemons. |
---|---|
Type: | 32-bit Integer |
Default: | 50 |
osd map cache bl inc size
Description: | The size of the in-memory OSD map cache incrementals in OSD daemons. |
---|---|
Type: | 32-bit Integer |
Default: | 100 |
osd map message max
Description: | The maximum map entries allowed per MOSDMap message. |
---|---|
Type: | 32-bit Integer |
Default: | 100 |
Recovery¶
When the cluster starts or when a Ceph OSD Daemon crashes and restarts, the OSD begins peering with other Ceph OSD Daemons before writes can occur. See Monitoring OSDs and PGs for details.
If a Ceph OSD Daemon crashes and comes back online, usually it will be out of sync with other Ceph OSD Daemons containing more recent versions of objects in the placement groups. When this happens, the Ceph OSD Daemon goes into recovery mode and seeks to get the latest copy of the data and bring its map back up to date. Depending upon how long the Ceph OSD Daemon was down, the OSD’s objects and placement groups may be significantly out of date. Also, if a failure domain went down (e.g., a rack), more than one Ceph OSD Daemon may come back online at the same time. This can make the recovery process time consuming and resource intensive.
To maintain operational performance, Ceph performs recovery with limitations on the number recovery requests, threads and object chunk sizes which allows Ceph perform well in a degraded state.
osd recovery delay start
Description: | After peering completes, Ceph will delay for the specified number of seconds before starting to recover objects. |
---|---|
Type: | Float |
Default: | 0 |
osd recovery max active
Description: | The number of active recovery requests per OSD at one time. More requests will accelerate recovery, but the requests places an increased load on the cluster. |
---|---|
Type: | 32-bit Integer |
Default: | 3 |
osd recovery max chunk
Description: | The maximum size of a recovered chunk of data to push. |
---|---|
Type: | 64-bit Unsigned Integer |
Default: | 8 << 20 |
osd recovery max single start
Description: | The maximum number of recovery operations per OSD that will be newly started when an OSD is recovering. |
---|---|
Type: | 64-bit Unsigned Integer |
Default: | 1 |
osd recovery thread timeout
Description: | The maximum time in seconds before timing out a recovery thread. |
---|---|
Type: | 32-bit Integer |
Default: | 30 |
osd recover clone overlap
Description: | Preserves clone overlap during recovery. Should always be set
to true . |
---|---|
Type: | Boolean |
Default: | true |
osd recovery sleep
Description: | Time in seconds to sleep before next recovery or backfill op. Increasing this value will slow down recovery operation while client operations will be less impacted. |
---|---|
Type: | Float |
Default: | 0 |
osd recovery sleep hdd
Description: | Time in seconds to sleep before next recovery or backfill op for HDDs. |
---|---|
Type: | Float |
Default: | 0.1 |
osd recovery sleep ssd
Description: | Time in seconds to sleep before next recovery or backfill op for SSDs. |
---|---|
Type: | Float |
Default: | 0 |
osd recovery sleep hybrid
Description: | Time in seconds to sleep before next recovery or backfill op when osd data is on HDD and osd journal is on SSD. |
---|---|
Type: | Float |
Default: | 0.025 |
Tiering¶
osd agent max ops
Description: | The maximum number of simultaneous flushing ops per tiering agent in the high speed mode. |
---|---|
Type: | 32-bit Integer |
Default: | 4 |
osd agent max low ops
Description: | The maximum number of simultaneous flushing ops per tiering agent in the low speed mode. |
---|---|
Type: | 32-bit Integer |
Default: | 2 |
See cache target dirty high ratio for when the tiering agent flushes dirty objects within the high speed mode.
Miscellaneous¶
osd snap trim thread timeout
Description: | The maximum time in seconds before timing out a snap trim thread. |
---|---|
Type: | 32-bit Integer |
Default: | 60*60*1 |
osd backlog thread timeout
Description: | The maximum time in seconds before timing out a backlog thread. |
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Type: | 32-bit Integer |
Default: | 60*60*1 |
osd default notify timeout
Description: | The OSD default notification timeout (in seconds). |
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Type: | 32-bit Unsigned Integer |
Default: | 30 |
osd check for log corruption
Description: | Check log files for corruption. Can be computationally expensive. |
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Type: | Boolean |
Default: | false |
osd remove thread timeout
Description: | The maximum time in seconds before timing out a remove OSD thread. |
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Type: | 32-bit Integer |
Default: | 60*60 |
osd command thread timeout
Description: | The maximum time in seconds before timing out a command thread. |
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Type: | 32-bit Integer |
Default: | 10*60 |
osd command max records
Description: | Limits the number of lost objects to return. |
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Type: | 32-bit Integer |
Default: | 256 |
osd auto upgrade tmap
Description: | Uses tmap for omap on old objects. |
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Type: | Boolean |
Default: | true |
osd tmapput sets users tmap
Description: | Uses tmap for debugging only. |
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Type: | Boolean |
Default: | false |
osd fast fail on connection refused
Description: | If this option is enabled, crashed OSDs are marked down immediately by connected peers and MONs (assuming that the crashed OSD host survives). Disable it to restore old behavior, at the expense of possible long I/O stalls when OSDs crash in the middle of I/O operations. |
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Type: | Boolean |
Default: | true |