This patch is part of the docs migration for Cinder. It is more or less a drag and drop of the docs from openstack-manuals admin-guide directory. I needed to change some syntax to work with Cinder's more stringent doc build. Note that the purpose of this patch is just to get the documentation back to an accessible location. Later patches will clean up the organization and content. Change-Id: Ib3f9255e0f9f2ff42a0ee4126607ff319a3d901e
4.9 KiB
Configure an NFS storage back end
This section explains how to configure OpenStack Block Storage to use
NFS storage. You must be able to access the NFS shares from the server
that hosts the cinder volume service.
Note
The cinder volume service is named
openstack-cinder-volume on the following distributions:
- CentOS
- Fedora
- openSUSE
- Red Hat Enterprise Linux
- SUSE Linux Enterprise
In Ubuntu and Debian distributions, the cinder volume
service is named cinder-volume.
Configure Block Storage to use an NFS storage back end
Log in as
rootto the system hosting thecindervolume service.Create a text file named
nfssharesin the/etc/cinder/directory.Add an entry to
/etc/cinder/nfssharesfor each NFS share that thecindervolume service should use for back end storage. Each entry should be a separate line, and should use the following format:HOST:SHAREWhere:
- HOST is the IP address or host name of the NFS server.
- SHARE is the absolute path to an existing and accessible NFS share.
Set
/etc/cinder/nfssharesto be owned by therootuser and thecindergroup:# chown root:cinder /etc/cinder/nfssharesSet
/etc/cinder/nfssharesto be readable by members of the cinder group:# chmod 0640 /etc/cinder/nfssharesConfigure the
cindervolume service to use the/etc/cinder/nfssharesfile created earlier. To do so, open the/etc/cinder/cinder.confconfiguration file and set thenfs_shares_configconfiguration key to/etc/cinder/nfsshares.On distributions that include
openstack-config, you can configure this by running the following command instead:# openstack-config --set /etc/cinder/cinder.conf \ DEFAULT nfs_shares_config /etc/cinder/nfssharesThe following distributions include openstack-config:
- CentOS
- Fedora
- openSUSE
- Red Hat Enterprise Linux
- SUSE Linux Enterprise
Optionally, provide any additional NFS mount options required in your environment in the
nfs_mount_optionsconfiguration key of/etc/cinder/cinder.conf. If your NFS shares do not require any additional mount options (or if you are unsure), skip this step.On distributions that include
openstack-config, you can configure this by running the following command instead:# openstack-config --set /etc/cinder/cinder.conf \ DEFAULT nfs_mount_options OPTIONSReplace OPTIONS with the mount options to be used when accessing NFS shares. See the manual page for NFS for more information on available mount options (
man nfs).Configure the
cindervolume service to use the correct volume driver, namelycinder.volume.drivers.nfs.NfsDriver. To do so, open the/etc/cinder/cinder.confconfiguration file and set the volume_driver configuration key tocinder.volume.drivers.nfs.NfsDriver.On distributions that include
openstack-config, you can configure this by running the following command instead:# openstack-config --set /etc/cinder/cinder.conf \ DEFAULT volume_driver cinder.volume.drivers.nfs.NfsDriverYou can now restart the service to apply the configuration.
Note
The
nfs_sparsed_volumesconfiguration key determines whether volumes are created as sparse files and grown as needed or fully allocated up front. The default and recommended value istrue, which ensures volumes are initially created as sparse files.Setting
nfs_sparsed_volumestofalsewill result in volumes being fully allocated at the time of creation. This leads to increased delays in volume creation.However, should you choose to set
nfs_sparsed_volumestofalse, you can do so directly in/etc/cinder/cinder.conf.On distributions that include
openstack-config, you can configure this by running the following command instead:# openstack-config --set /etc/cinder/cinder.conf \ DEFAULT nfs_sparsed_volumes falseWarning
If a client host has SELinux enabled, the
virt_use_nfsboolean should also be enabled if the host requires access to NFS volumes on an instance. To enable this boolean, run the following command as therootuser:# setsebool -P virt_use_nfs onThis command also makes the boolean persistent across reboots. Run this command on all client hosts that require access to NFS volumes on an instance. This includes all compute nodes.