/cinder

Primary LanguagePythonOtherNOASSERTION

TrueNAS Cinder Driver

This repository contains driver scripts for TrueNAS version >= 12.x interaction with OpenStack Cinder for block storage manipulation.

WARNING

This driver should be considered experimental. Use at your own risk!

Requirements

  1. A TrueNAS system with at least 8 Gb of memory and a minimum 20 GiB disk. Suggested version >= 12.x to use API v2.0
  2. Another system running either DevStack (Train or higher) or an OpenStack storage node.
  3. This driver is now upgraded to Python 3, so is usable by OpenStack versions from Train on.
  4. This driver should be running on a single cinder driver instance deployment, High Available (Active-Active) multiple cinder driver instance deployment is not supported.

Getting Started with Devstack

Download and install the TrueNAS Cinder driver on the system running Devstack Newton or newer release:

% sudo -s
# cd /
# git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/iXsystems/cinder
% su - stack
% cd /
% cp -R ./cinder/driver/ixsystems/ /opt/stack/cinder/cinder/volume/drivers/

Configure the Cinder driver. Open /etc/cinder/cinder.conf in an editor to both edit and add parameters.

Edit these lines:

default_volume_type = ixsystems-iscsi
enabled_backends = ixsystems-iscsi, lvm

Add these parameters and the appropriate values:

[ixsystems-iscsi]
iscsi_helper = <iscsi helper type. Standard Value>
volume_dd_blocksize = <block size>
volume_driver = <Path of the main class of iXsystems cinder driver. The standard value for this driver is cinder.volume.drivers.ixsystems.iscsi.FreeNASISCSIDriver>
ixsystems_apikey = <apikey of TrueNAS - optional if you choose to use username and password authentication>
ixsystems_login = <username of TrueNAS Host - currently needs to be root, optional if you choose to use apikey authentication>
ixsystems_password = <Password of TrueNAS Host - the root password, optional if you choose to use apikey authentication>
ixsystems_server_hostname = <IP Address of TrueNAS Host>
ixsystems_transport_type = <TrueNAS Host API transportation protocal, http or https, default http>
ixsystems_volume_backend_name = <driver specific information. Standard value is 'iXsystems_TRUENAS_Storage' >
ixsystems_iqn_prefix = <Base name of ISCSI Target. (Get it from the web UI of the connected TrueNAS system by navigating: Sharing -> Block(iscsi) -> Target Global Configuration -> Base Name)>
ixsystems_datastore_pool = <Base pool name on the connected TrueNAS host e.g. 'tank'>
ixsystems_dataset_path = <Dataset name inside the pool, full path including pool.  Can just be pool name for no nesting.  e.g. 'tank/os/cinder'.  This is where zvols will be created by the driver.>
ixsystems_vendor_name = <driver specific information. Standard value is 'iXsystems' >
ixsystems_storage_protocol =  <driver specific information. Standard value is 'iscsi'>
image_volume_cache_enabled = <Enable or disable TrueNAS backend image volume cache. When set true, a service image volume is created for image as cache volume, all volume created from this image will be cloned from this service image volume snapshot. Set false disable this feature. Default false, recommend set as true>

Here is an example configuration:

[ixsystems-iscsi]
iscsi_helper = tgtadm
volume_dd_blocksize = 512
volume_driver = cinder.volume.drivers.ixsystems.iscsi.FreeNASISCSIDriver
ixsystems_login = root
ixsystems_password = thisisdummypassword
ixsystems_server_hostname = 100.1.2.34
ixsystems_transport_type = https
ixsystems_volume_backend_name = iXsystems_TRUENAS_Storage
ixsystems_iqn_prefix = iqn.2005-10.org.freenas.ctl
ixsystems_datastore_pool = tank
ixsystems_dataset_path = tank/openstack/cinder
ixsystems_vendor_name = iXsystems
ixsystems_storage_protocol = iscsi
image_volume_cache_enabled = true

Now restart the Cinder service to enable the changes. The simplest method is to reboot the Devstack system.

Alternatively, to restart the Cinder service manually without rebooting, use the screen command (documentation: https://www.gnu.org/software/screen/manual/screen.html). Attach to the devstack screens by following these steps:

% su -s
# script
# su - stack
% script
% screen -x stack .

Switch to the c-vol screen by holding Ctrl and pressing A and P in rapid sequence. Stop the c-vol service by pressing Ctrl + C. Press the Up Arrow button then Enter to restart the Cinder service. The edited cinder.conf is read by the Cinder service as it restarts.

After the initial reboot or manual reset of the Cinder service, it can be easily restarted with this command:

/usr/local/bin/cinder-volume --config-file /etc/cinder/cinder.conf & echo $! >/opt/stack/status/stack/c-vol.pid; fg || echo "c-vol failed to start" | tee "/opt/stack/status/stack/c-vol.failure"

After the Cinder service is restarted, log in to the web interface of the Devstack Newton system by navigating to the system IP address in a web browser. After logging in, navigate to Admin -> System -> Volumes -> Volume Types and click Create Volume Type. Type ixsystems-iscsi in the Name field and check the Public option. Create this volume type, which is added to the list of types after the system completes the task.

Click Update Volume Type Metadata for the volume type you just created (example:ixsystems-iscsi). Add metadata with key=volume_backend_name value=iXsystems_TRUENAS_Storage (This value comes from cinder.conf ixsystems_volume_backend_name = iXsystems_TRUENAS_Storage)

Note: You can set your own Volume Type name.

Now the TrueNAS Cinder driver is functional in the OpenStack Web Interface.

Getting Started If You Are Using The OpenStack Installation Guide

If you are following the installation guide here, then after you have installed a storage node as in the documentation, take the following steps.

% sudo su -
# git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/iXsystems/cinder
# cp -R ./cinder/driver/ixsystems/ /usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/cinder/volume/drivers/

Configure the cinder driver as above in the DevStack instructions, starting with the editing of /etc/cinder/cinder.conf

Using the Cinder Driver

Here are some examples commands:

  • Create a volume:

    $ cinder create --name <volumeName> <volumeSizeInGiB>

    Examples:

    $ cinder create --name TestVolume 2

    $ openstack volume create --size 20 --image ubuntu-20.04 --description "Volume for test-vm" --bootable test-vm-vol

The Projects -> Volumes and Admin -> Volumes sections of the web interface integrate Cinder functionality directly in the interface options using the ixsystems-iscsi Volume Type.

Additional Notes

  • It has been noted that for an initial connection to be made, the TrueNAS host needs to have a valid ssl certificate installed and the key ixsystems_server_hostname in cinder.conf needs to be set to the FQDN referenced by the certificate. This issue needs more investigation.

  • Users have reported that scaling beyond 80 LUNS is possible when setting the kern.cam.ctl.max_ports=512 tunable in TrueNAS 13.

About Source Code

The TrueNAS Cinder driver uses several scripts:

  • iscsi.py: Defines the Cinder APIs, including create_volume and delete_volume.
  • truenasapi.py: Defines the REST API call routine and methods.
  • options.py: Defines the default configuration parameters not fetched from the cinder.conf file.