When using podman, the systemd unit scripts don't have a dependency
on the network. So we're not sure that the network is up and running
when the containers are starting.
With docker this behaviour is already handled because the systemd
unit scripts depend on docker service which is started after the
network.
Signed-off-by: Dimitri Savineau <dsavinea@redhat.com>
(cherry picked from commit f49090df7e)
As of stable-4.0, the only valid scenario is `lvm`.
Thus, this makes this variable useless.
Signed-off-by: Guillaume Abrioux <gabrioux@redhat.com>
(cherry picked from commit 4d35e9eeed)
We don't need to set After=docker.service when the container_binary
variable isn't set to docker.
It doesn't break anything currently but it could be confusing when
using podman.
Signed-off-by: Dimitri Savineau <dsavinea@redhat.com>
instead of using `RuntimeDirectory` parameter in systemd unit files,
let's use a systemd `tmpfiles.d` to ensure `/run/ceph`.
Explanation:
`podman` doesn't create the `/var/run/ceph` if it doesn't exist the time
where the container is run while `docker` used to create it.
In case of `switch_to_containers` scenario, `/run/ceph` gets created by
a tmpfiles.d systemd file; when switching to containers, the systemd
unit file complains because `/run/ceph` already exists
The better fix would be to ensure `/usr/lib/tmpfiles.d/ceph-common.conf`
is removed and only rely on `RuntimeDirectory` from systemd unit file parameter
but we come from a non-containerized environment which is already running,
it means `/run/ceph` is already created and when starting the unit to
start the container, systemd will still complain and we can't simply
remove the directory if daemons are collocated.
Signed-off-by: Guillaume Abrioux <gabrioux@redhat.com>
/var/run/ceph resides in a non persistent filesystem (tmpfs)
After a reboot, all daemons won't start because this directory will be
missing.
Signed-off-by: Guillaume Abrioux <gabrioux@redhat.com>
We don't need to pass the hostname on the container name but we can keep
it simple and just call it ceph-osd-$id.
Signed-off-by: Sébastien Han <seb@redhat.com>
Since distro will not allow /usr/share to be writable (e.g: atomic) so
we let the operator decide where to put that script.
Signed-off-by: Sébastien Han <seb@redhat.com>
Oh yeah! This patch adds more fine grained control on how we run the
activation osd container. We now use --device to give a read, write and
mknodaccess to a specific device to be consumed by Ceph. We also use
SYS_ADMIN cap to allow mount operations, ceph-disk needs to temporary
mount the osd data directory during the activation sequence.
This patch also enables the support of dedicated journal devices when
deploying ceph-docker with ceph-ansible.
Depends on https://github.com/ceph/ceph-docker/pull/478
Signed-off-by: Sébastien Han <seb@redhat.com>
We changed the way we declare image.
Prior to this patch we must have a "user/image:tag"
format, which is incompatible with non docker-hub registry where you
usually don't have a "user". On the docker hub a "user" is also
identified as a namespace, so for Ceph the user was "ceph".
Variables have been simplified with only:
* ceph_docker_image
* ceph_docker_image_tag
1. For docker hub images: ceph_docker_name: "ceph/daemon" will give
you the 'daemon' image of the 'ceph' user.
2. For non docker hub images: ceph_docker_name: "daemon" will simply
give you the "daemon" image.
Infrastructure playbooks have been modified as well.
The file group_vars/all.docker.yml.sample has been removed as well.
It is hard to maintain since we have to generate it manually. If
you want to configure specific variables for a specific daemon simply
edit group_vars/$DAEMON.yml
Fixes: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1420207
Signed-off-by: Sébastien Han <seb@redhat.com>
Prior to this patch we had several ways to runs containers, we could use
ansible's docker module on some distro and on containers distros we were
using systemd. We strongly believe threating containers as services with
systemd is the right approach so this patch generalizes to all the
distros. These days most of the distros are running systemd so it's fair
assumption.
Signed-off-by: Sébastien Han <seb@redhat.com>
This fixes#845 for containerized deployments. We now also mount the
/etc/localtime volume in the containers in order to synchronize the host
timezone with the container timezone.
Signed-off-by: Ivan Font <ivan.font@redhat.com>