ceph-ansible/roles/ceph-nfs/defaults/main.yml

106 lines
3.3 KiB
YAML

---
# You can override vars by using host or group vars
###########
# GENERAL #
###########
# Even though NFS nodes should not have the admin key
# at their disposal, some people might want to have it
# distributed on RGW nodes. Setting 'copy_admin_key' to 'true'
# will copy the admin key to the /etc/ceph/ directory
copy_admin_key: false
# whether docker container or systemd service should be enabled
# and started, it's useful to set it to false if nfs-ganesha
# service is managed by pacemaker
ceph_nfs_enable_service: true
# ceph-nfs systemd service uses ansible's hostname as an instance id,
# so service name is ceph-nfs@{{ ansible_hostname }}, this is not
# ideal when ceph-nfs is managed by pacemaker across multiple hosts - in
# such case it's better to have constant instance id instead which
# can be set by 'ceph_nfs_service_suffix'
# ceph_nfs_service_suffix: ansible_hostname
#######################
# Access type options #
#######################
# These are currently in ceph-common defaults because nfs_obj_gw shared with ceph-rgw
# Enable NFS File access
nfs_file_gw: false
# Enable NFS Object access
nfs_obj_gw: true
######################
# NFS Ganesha Config #
######################
ceph_nfs_log_file: "/var/log/ganesha/ganesha.log"
ceph_nfs_dynamic_exports: false
# If set to true then rados is used to store ganesha exports
# and client sessions information, this is useful if you
# run multiple nfs-ganesha servers in active/passive mode and
# want to do failover
ceph_nfs_rados_backend: false
# Name of the rados object used to store a list of the export rados
# object URLS
ceph_nfs_rados_export_index: "ganesha-export-index"
# Address ganesha service should listen on, by default ganesha listens on all
# addresses. (Note: ganesha ignores this parameter in current version due to
# this bug: https://github.com/nfs-ganesha/nfs-ganesha/issues/217)
# ceph_nfs_bind_addr: 0.0.0.0
####################
# FSAL Ceph Config #
####################
ceph_nfs_ceph_export_id: 20133
ceph_nfs_ceph_pseudo_path: "/cephfile"
ceph_nfs_ceph_protocols: "3,4"
ceph_nfs_ceph_access_type: "RW"
ceph_nfs_ceph_user: "admin"
###################
# FSAL RGW Config #
###################
ceph_nfs_rgw_export_id: 20134
ceph_nfs_rgw_pseudo_path: "/cephobject"
ceph_nfs_rgw_protocols: "3,4"
ceph_nfs_rgw_access_type: "RW"
ceph_nfs_rgw_user: "cephnfs"
# Note: keys are optional and can be generated, but not on containerized, where
# they must be configered.
#ceph_nfs_rgw_access_key: "QFAMEDSJP5DEKJO0DDXY"
#ceph_nfs_rgw_secret_key: "iaSFLDVvDdQt6lkNzHyW4fPLZugBAI1g17LO0+87[MAC[M#C"
rgw_client_name: client.rgw.{{ ansible_hostname }}
###################
# CONFIG OVERRIDE #
###################
# Ganesha configuration file override.
# These multiline strings will be appended to the contents of the blocks in ganesha.conf and
# must be in the correct ganesha.conf format seen here:
# https://github.com/nfs-ganesha/nfs-ganesha/blob/next/src/config_samples/ganesha.conf.example
#
# Example:
#CACHEINODE {
#Entries_HWMark = 100000;
#}
#
#ganesha_ceph_export_overrides:
#ganesha_rgw_export_overrides:
#ganesha_rgw_section_overrides:
#ganesha_log_overrides:
#ganesha_conf_overrides: |
# CACHEINODE {
#Entries_HWMark = 100000;
# }
##########
# DOCKER #
##########
ceph_docker_image: "ceph/daemon"
ceph_docker_image_tag: latest
ceph_nfs_docker_extra_env:
ceph_config_keys: [] # DON'T TOUCH ME