--- # Variables here are applicable to all host groups NOT roles # This sample file generated by generate_group_vars_sample.sh # Dummy variable to avoid error because ansible does not recognize the # file as a good configuration file when no variable in it. dummy: # You can override vars by using host or group vars ########### # GENERAL # ########### #fetch_directory: fetch/ # The 'cluster' variable determines the name of the cluster. # Changing the default value to something else means that you will # need to change all the command line calls as well, for example if # your cluster name is 'foo': # "ceph health" will become "ceph --cluster foo health" # # An easier way to handle this is to use the environment variable CEPH_ARGS # So run: "export CEPH_ARGS="--cluster foo" # With that you will be able to run "ceph health" normally #cluster: ceph ########### # INSTALL # ########### #mon_group_name: mons #osd_group_name: osds #rgw_group_name: rgws #mds_group_name: mdss #nfs_group_name: nfss #restapi_group_name: restapis #rbdmirror_group_name: rbdmirrors #client_group_name: clients #iscsi_group_name: iscsigws #mgr_group_name: mgrs # If check_firewall is true, then ansible will try to determine if the # Ceph ports are blocked by a firewall. If the machine running ansible # cannot reach the Ceph ports for some other reason, you may need or # want to set this to False to skip those checks. #check_firewall: False # This variable determines if ceph packages can be updated. If False, the # package resources will use "state=present". If True, they will use # "state=latest". #upgrade_ceph_packages: False # /!\ EITHER ACTIVE ceph_stable OR ceph_stable_uca OR ceph_dev OR ceph_custom /!\ #debian_package_dependencies: # - python-pycurl # - hdparm #centos_package_dependencies: # - python-pycurl # - hdparm # - epel-release # - python-setuptools # - libselinux-python #redhat_package_dependencies: # - python-pycurl # - hdparm # - python-setuptools # Enable the ntp service by default to avoid clock skew on # ceph nodes #ntp_service_enabled: true # The list of ceph packages needed for debian. # This variable should only be changed if packages are not available from a given # install source or architecture. #debian_ceph_packages: # - ceph # - ceph-common #|--> yes, they are already all dependencies from 'ceph' # - ceph-fs-common #|--> however while proceding to rolling upgrades and the 'ceph' package upgrade # - ceph-fuse #|--> they don't get update so we need to force them # Whether or not to install the ceph-test package. #ceph_test: False ## Configure package origin # #ceph_origin: 'upstream' # or 'distro' or 'local' # 'distro' means that no separate repo file will be added # you will get whatever version of Ceph is included in your Linux distro. # 'local' means that the ceph binaries will be copied over from the local machine # LOCAL CEPH INSTALLATION (ceph_origin==local) # # Path to DESTDIR of the ceph install #ceph_installation_dir: "/path/to/ceph_installation/" # Whether or not to use installer script rundep_installer.sh # This script takes in rundep and installs the packages line by line onto the machine # If this is set to false then it is assumed that the machine ceph is being copied onto will already have # all runtime dependencies installed #use_installer: false # Root directory for ceph-ansible #ansible_dir: "/path/to/ceph-ansible" #ceph_use_distro_backports: false # DEBIAN ONLY # STABLE ######## # COMMUNITY VERSION #ceph_stable: false # use ceph stable branch #ceph_mirror: http://download.ceph.com #ceph_stable_key: https://download.ceph.com/keys/release.asc #ceph_stable_release: kraken # ceph stable release #ceph_stable_repo: "{{ ceph_mirror }}/debian-{{ ceph_stable_release }}" ###################################### # Releases name to number dictionary # ###################################### #ceph_release_num: # dumpling: 0.67 # emperor: 0.72 # firefly: 0.80 # giant: 0.87 # hammer: 0.94 # infernalis: 9 # jewel: 10 # kraken: 11 # luminous: 12 # Use the option below to specify your applicable package tree, eg. when using non-LTS Ubuntu versions # # for a list of available Debian distributions, visit http://download.ceph.com/debian-{{ ceph_stable_release }}/dists/ # for more info read: https://github.com/ceph/ceph-ansible/issues/305 #ceph_stable_distro_source: # This option is needed for _both_ stable and dev version, so please always fill the right version # # for supported distros, see http://download.ceph.com/rpm-{{ ceph_stable_release }}/ #ceph_stable_redhat_distro: el7 # ENTERPRISE VERSION RED HAT STORAGE (from 1.3) # This version is only supported on RHEL >= 7.1 # As of RHEL 7.1, libceph.ko and rbd.ko are now included in Red Hat's kernel # packages natively. The RHEL 7.1 kernel packages are more stable and secure than # using these 3rd-party kmods with RHEL 7.0. Please update your systems to RHEL # 7.1 or later if you want to use the kernel RBD client. # # The CephFS kernel client is undergoing rapid development upstream, and we do # not recommend running the CephFS kernel module on RHEL 7's 3.10 kernel at this # time. Please use ELRepo's latest upstream 4.x kernels if you want to run CephFS # on RHEL 7. # # # Backward compatibility of variable names # Commit 492518a2 changed variable names of rhcs installations # to not break backward compatiblity we re-declare these variables # with the content of the new variable #ceph_rhcs: "{{ ceph_stable_rh_storage | default(false) }}" # This will affect how/what repositories are enabled depending on the desired # version. The previous version was 1.3. The current version is 2. #ceph_rhcs_version: "{{ ceph_stable_rh_storage_version | default(2) }}" #ceph_rhcs_cdn_install: "{{ ceph_stable_rh_storage_cdn_install | default(false) }}" # assumes all the nodes can connect to cdn.redhat.com #ceph_rhcs_iso_install: "{{ ceph_stable_rh_storage_iso_install | default(false) }}" # usually used when nodes don't have access to cdn.redhat.com #ceph_rhcs_iso_path: "{{ ceph_stable_rh_storage_iso_path | default('') }}" #ceph_rhcs_mount_path: "{{ ceph_stable_rh_storage_mount_path | default('/tmp/rh-storage-mount') }}" #ceph_rhcs_repository_path: "{{ ceph_stable_rh_storage_repository_path | default('/tmp/rh-storage-repo') }}" # where to copy iso's content # UBUNTU CLOUD ARCHIVE # This allows the install of Ceph from the Ubuntu Cloud Archive. The Ubuntu Cloud Archive # usually has newer Ceph releases than the normal distro repository. # #ceph_stable_uca: false #ceph_stable_repo_uca: "http://ubuntu-cloud.archive.canonical.com/ubuntu" #ceph_stable_openstack_release_uca: liberty #ceph_stable_release_uca: "{{ansible_lsb.codename}}-updates/{{ceph_stable_openstack_release_uca}}" # DEV # ### #ceph_dev: false # use ceph development branch #ceph_dev_branch: master # development branch you would like to use e.g: master, wip-hack #ceph_dev_sha1: latest # distinct sha1 to use, defaults to 'latest' (as in latest built) # CUSTOM # ### # Use a custom repository to install ceph. For RPM, ceph_custom_repo should be # a URL to the .repo file to be installed on the targets. For deb, # ceph_custom_repo should be the URL to the repo base. #ceph_custom: false # use custom ceph repository #ceph_custom_repo: https://server.domain.com/ceph-custom-repo ###################### # CEPH CONFIGURATION # ###################### ## Ceph options # # Each cluster requires a unique, consistent filesystem ID. By # default, the playbook generates one for you and stores it in a file # in `fetch_directory`. If you want to customize how the fsid is # generated, you may find it useful to disable fsid generation to # avoid cluttering up your ansible repo. If you set `generate_fsid` to # false, you *must* generate `fsid` in another way. #fsid: "{{ cluster_uuid.stdout }}" #generate_fsid: true #cephx: true #max_open_files: 131072 ## Client options # #rbd_cache: "true" #rbd_cache_writethrough_until_flush: "true" #rbd_concurrent_management_ops: 20 #rbd_client_directories: true # this will create rbd_client_log_path and rbd_client_admin_socket_path directories with proper permissions # Permissions for the rbd_client_log_path and # rbd_client_admin_socket_path. Depending on your use case for Ceph # you may want to change these values. The default, which is used if # any of the variables are unset or set to a false value (like `null` # or `false`) is to automatically determine what is appropriate for # the Ceph version with non-OpenStack workloads -- ceph:ceph and 0770 # for infernalis releases, and root:root and 1777 for pre-infernalis # releases. # # For other use cases, including running Ceph with OpenStack, you'll # want to set these differently: # # For OpenStack on RHEL, you'll want: # rbd_client_directory_owner: "qemu" # rbd_client_directory_group: "libvirtd" (or "libvirt", depending on your version of libvirt) # rbd_client_directory_mode: "0755" # # For OpenStack on Ubuntu or Debian, set: # rbd_client_directory_owner: "libvirt-qemu" # rbd_client_directory_group: "kvm" # rbd_client_directory_mode: "0755" # # If you set rbd_client_directory_mode, you must use a string (e.g., # 'rbd_client_directory_mode: "0755"', *not* # 'rbd_client_directory_mode: 0755', or Ansible will complain: mode # must be in octal or symbolic form #rbd_client_directory_owner: null #rbd_client_directory_group: null #rbd_client_directory_mode: null #rbd_client_log_path: /var/log/ceph #rbd_client_log_file: "{{ rbd_client_log_path }}/qemu-guest-$pid.log" # must be writable by QEMU and allowed by SELinux or AppArmor #rbd_client_admin_socket_path: /var/run/ceph # must be writable by QEMU and allowed by SELinux or AppArmor ## Monitor options # # You must define either monitor_interface or monitor_address. Preference # will go to monitor_interface if both are defined. # To use an IPv6 address, use the monitor_address setting instead (and set ip_version to ipv6) #monitor_interface: interface #monitor_address: 0.0.0.0 # set to either ipv4 or ipv6, whichever your network is using #ip_version: ipv4 #mon_use_fqdn: false # if set to true, the MON name used will be the fqdn in the ceph.conf #monitor_address_block: false ## OSD options # #journal_size: 5120 # OSD journal size in MB #public_network: 0.0.0.0/0 #cluster_network: "{{ public_network }}" #osd_mkfs_type: xfs #osd_mkfs_options_xfs: -f -i size=2048 #osd_mount_options_xfs: noatime,largeio,inode64,swalloc #osd_objectstore: filestore # xattrs. by default, 'filestore xattr use omap' is set to 'true' if # 'osd_mkfs_type' is set to 'ext4'; otherwise it isn't set. This can # be set to 'true' or 'false' to explicitly override those # defaults. Leave it 'null' to use the default for your chosen mkfs # type. #filestore_xattr_use_omap: null ## MDS options # #mds_use_fqdn: false # if set to true, the MDS name used will be the fqdn in the ceph.conf #mds_allow_multimds: false #mds_max_mds: 3 ## Rados Gateway options # #radosgw_dns_name: your.subdomain.tld # subdomains used by radosgw. See http://ceph.com/docs/master/radosgw/config/#enabling-subdomain-s3-calls #radosgw_resolve_cname: false # enable for radosgw to resolve DNS CNAME based bucket names #radosgw_civetweb_port: 8080 #radosgw_civetweb_bind_ip: "{{ ansible_default_ipv4.address }}" # when using ipv6 enclose with brackets: "[{{ ansible_default_ipv6.address }}]" #radosgw_civetweb_num_threads: 100 # For additional civetweb configuration options available such as SSL, logging, # keepalive, and timeout settings, please see the civetweb docs at # https://github.com/civetweb/civetweb/blob/master/docs/UserManual.md #radosgw_civetweb_options: "port={{ radosgw_civetweb_bind_ip }}:{{ radosgw_civetweb_port }} num_threads={{ radosgw_civetweb_num_threads }}" #radosgw_keystone: false # activate OpenStack Keystone options full detail here: http://ceph.com/docs/master/radosgw/keystone/ #radosgw_keystone_url: # url:admin_port ie: http://192.168.0.1:35357 #radosgw_keystone_api_version: 2 # API versions 2 and 3 are supported #radosgw_keystone_ssl: true # Can be used to disable PKI revocation checks when other token types are used. # for admin_token method, define radosgw_keystone_admin_token # for auth_token method, define _user, _password, and _tenant #radosgw_keystone_auth_method: admin_token #radosgw_keystone_admin_token: password #radosgw_keystone_admin_user: username #radosgw_keystone_admin_password: password #radosgw_keystone_admin_tenant: tenant #radosgw_keystone_admin_domain: default #radosgw_keystone_accepted_roles: Member, _member_, admin #radosgw_keystone_token_cache_size: 10000 #radosgw_keystone_revocation_internal: 900 #radosgw_s3_auth_use_keystone: "true" #radosgw_nss_db_path: /var/lib/ceph/radosgw/ceph-radosgw.{{ ansible_hostname }}/nss # Settings for the RGW usage logging described at http://docs.ceph.com/docs/jewel/man/8/radosgw/#usage-logging #radosgw_usage_log: false #radosgw_usage_log_tick_interval: 30 #radosgw_usage_log_flush_threshold: 1024 #radosgw_usage_max_shards: 32 #radosgw_usage_max_user_shards: 1 # Settings for static website hosting #radosgw_static_website: false #radosgw_dns_s3website_name: your.subdomain.tld # subdomain used by radosgw for website bucket hosting. # Rados Gateway options #email_address: foo@bar.com ## REST API options # #restapi_interface: "{{ monitor_interface }}" #restapi_address: "{{ monitor_address }}" #restapi_port: 5000 ## Testing mode # enable this mode _only_ when you have a single node # if you don't want it keep the option commented #common_single_host_mode: true ## Handlers - restarting daemons after a config change # if for whatever reasons the content of your ceph configuration changes # ceph daemons will be restarted as well. At the moment, we can not detect # which config option changed so all the daemons will be restarted. Although # this restart will be serialized for each node, in between a health check # will be performed so we make sure we don't move to the next node until # ceph is not healthy # Obviously between the checks (for monitors to be in quorum and for osd's pgs # to be clean) we have to wait. These retries and delays can be configurable # for both monitors and osds. #handler_health_mon_check_retries: 5 #handler_health_mon_check_delay: 10 #handler_health_osd_check_retries: 40 #handler_health_osd_check_delay: 30 #handler_health_osd_check: true ################### # CONFIG OVERRIDE # ################### # Ceph configuration file override. # This allows you to specify more configuration options # using an INI style format. # The following sections are supported: [global], [mon], [osd], [mds], [rgw] # # Example: # ceph_conf_overrides: # global: # foo: 1234 # bar: 5678 # #ceph_conf_overrides: {} ############# # OS TUNING # ############# #disable_transparent_hugepage: true #os_tuning_params: # - { name: kernel.pid_max, value: 4194303 } # - { name: fs.file-max, value: 26234859 } # - { name: vm.zone_reclaim_mode, value: 0 } # - { name: vm.swappiness, value: 10 } # - { name: vm.min_free_kbytes, value: "{{ vm_min_free_kbytes }}" } ########## # DOCKER # ########## #docker: false #ceph_docker_image: "ceph/daemon" #ceph_docker_image_tag: latest # Do not comment the following variables mon_containerized_deployment_* here. These variables are being used # by ceph.conf.j2 template. so it should always be defined #mon_containerized_deployment_with_kv: false #mon_containerized_deployment: false #mon_containerized_default_ceph_conf_with_kv: false # Confiure the type of NFS gatway access. At least one must be enabled for an # NFS role to be useful # # Set this to true to enable File access via NFS. Requires an MDS role. #nfs_file_gw: true # this is only here for usage with the rolling_update.yml playbook # do not ever change this here #rolling_update: false #ceph_docker_registry: docker.io #ceph_docker_enable_centos_extra_repo: false #mon_use_fqdn: false # if set to true, the MON name used will be the fqdn # Set uid/gid to default '64045' for bootstrap directories. # '64045' is used for debian based distros. It must be set to 167 in case of rhel based distros. # These values have to be set according to the base OS used by the container image, NOT the host. #bootstrap_dirs_owner: "64045" #bootstrap_dirs_group: "64045"