Commit Graph

5 Commits (68f6d0a52c2d776712a9adb690b2aab42036e52f)

Author SHA1 Message Date
Andrew Schoen b01756488b Fetch keys from the mons when taking over a cluster
This fixes a bug where mons added to a "taken over" cluster
will get a newly generated key and do not join the cluster.

Signed-off-by: Andrew Schoen <aschoen@redhat.com>

Resolves: rhbz#1357292
2016-07-18 10:06:20 -05:00
Rachana Patel d495b3f494 adding missing quotes
fixes: #884
Signed-off-by: Rachana Patel <rachana83.patel@gmail.com>
2016-07-15 00:04:09 -04:00
Gerard Braad 6b7fc157b4 Trivial; grammar changes 2016-05-16 03:51:12 +00:00
Sébastien Han 45fada4958 take-over: remove the connection local
Signed-off-by: Sébastien Han <seb@redhat.com>
2016-05-04 10:37:59 +02:00
Sébastien Han 764eebf9e9 take over an existing cluster with ceph ansible
Introducing a playbook helper to control a ceph cluster that was not
deployed with ceph ansible.
The procedure is rather simple. If the cluster was deployed with the
following project there won’t be any issue:

* Ceph Deploy
* Puppet Ceph
* Chef Ceph
* Any other deployment tool that relies on ceph-disk

The procedure comes as fellow:

1. Install Ansible and add your monitors and osds hosts in it. For more
detailed information you can read the Ceph Ansible Wiki
2. Set  generate_fsid: false in group_vars
3. Get your current cluster fsid with ceph fsid and set cluster_fsid
accordingly in group_vars
4. Run the playbook called: take-over-existing-cluster.yml like this
ansible-playbook take-over-existing-cluster.yml.
5. Eventually run Ceph Ansible to validate everything by doing:
ansible-playbook site.yml.

Signed-off-by: Sébastien Han <seb@redhat.com>
2016-05-01 16:46:28 +02:00