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 commit re-uses some of the existing ceph-ansible variables for a
containirzed deployment. There is no reasons why we should add new
variables for the containerized deployment.
Signed-off-by: Sébastien Han <seb@redhat.com>
Refactor the code using 'package' module
Fix Issue #520
(However it doesn't cover all cases because some cases are not refactorable.
Ex: because of diverging packages name between distribution)
Ansible task was not properly fetching OSD cluster keyring causing
the keyring to be missing when we needed to authenticate. Similarly, we
were not properly waiting on the OSD keyring to be available before
continuing.
Signed-off-by: Ivan Font <ifont@redhat.com>
- Update rolling update playbook to support containerized deployments
for mons, osds, mdss, and rgws
- Skip checking if existing cluster is running when performing a rolling
update
- Fixed bug where we were failing to start the mds container because it
was missing the admin keyring. The admin keyring was missing because
it was not being pushed from the mon host to the ansible host due to
the keyring not being available before running the copy_configs.yml
task include file. Now we forcefully wait for the admin keyring to be
generated before continuing with the copy_configs.yml task include file
- Skip pre_requisite.yml when running on atomic host. This technically
no longer requires specifying to skip tasks containing the with_pkg tag
- Add missing variables to all.docker.sample
- Misc. cleanup
Signed-off-by: Ivan Font <ifont@redhat.com>
Even for dmcrypt we need to check the "devices" status and
"raw_journal_devices" as well so we can fix them if there is something
wrong with them.
Signed-off-by: Sébastien Han <seb@redhat.com>
This allows us to test devices set with persistent naming such as
/dev/disk/by-*
When registering devices we can use persisent (/dev/disk/by-*) or
non-persistent (/dev/sd*). Both declarations are supported by
ceph-ansible. There was just two tasks that were not compatible with
this. Since we support using partitions directly we need to test that
because the device activation will be different. To test if the device
is a partition we use a regular expression which wasn't compatible with
the persistent device naming format (/dev/disk/by-*).
This commit solves this issue by reading the path of the symlink since
devices like /dev/disk/by-* are symlinks to devices like /dev/sd*
Signed-off-by: Sébastien Han <seb@redhat.com>
use the activation scenario instead of the full ceph_disk one, we
already have a task to prepare osds so we just need to activate the
device.
working for me using vagrant :)
Signed-off-by: Sébastien Han <seb@redhat.com>
* changed s/colocation/collocation/
* declare dmcrypt variable in ceph-common so the variables check does
not fail
Signed-off-by: Sébastien Han <seb@redhat.com>