/longhorn-engine

World's smallest storage controller

Primary LanguageGoApache License 2.0Apache-2.0

Longhorn Engine

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Longhorn Engine implements a lightweight block device storage controller capable of storing the data in a number of replicas. It functions like a network RAID controller.

  1. The replicas are backed by Linux sparse files, and support efficient snapshots using differencing disks.
  2. The replicas function like a networked disk, supporting read/write operations over a network protocol.
  3. The frontend (only Open-iSCSI/tgt are supported at this moment) is a kernel driver that translates read/write operations on the Longhorn block device (mapped at /dev/longhorn/vol-name) to user-level network requests on the controller.
  4. Each Longhorn block device is backed by its own dedicated controller.
  5. The controller sychronously replicates write operations to all replicas.
  6. The controller detects faulty replicas and rebuilds replicas.
  7. The controller coordinates snapshot and backup operations.
  8. Controllers and replicas are packaged as Docker containers.

The following figure illustrates the relationship between the Longhorn block device, tgt frontend, controller, and replicas.

Overview Graphics

Building from source code

make

Running a controller with a single replica

The easiest way to try the Longhorn Engine is to start a controller with a single replica.

Host needs to have docker installed. Run following command to make sure:

docker info

With TGT frontend

User need to make sure the host has iscsiadm installed. Run following command to check:

iscsiadm --version

To start Longhorn Engine with an single replica, run following command:

docker run --privileged -v /dev:/host/dev -v /proc:/host/proc -v /volume \
    rancher/longhorn-engine launch-simple-longhorn vol-name 10g tgt

That will create the device /dev/longhorn/vol-name

Running a controller with multiple replicas

In order to start Longhorn Engine with multiple replicas, you need to setup a network between replica container and controller container. Here we use Docker network feature to demostrate that:

1. Create a network named longhorn-net
docker network create --subnet=172.18.0.0/16 longhorn-net
2. Add two replicas to the network, and set their IPs to 172.18.0.2 and 172.18.0.3:
docker run --net longhorn-net --ip 172.18.0.2 -v /volume \
    rancher/longhorn-engine launch replica --listen 172.18.0.2:9502 --size 10g /volume
docker run --net longhorn-net --ip 172.18.0.3 -v /volume \
    rancher/longhorn-engine launch replica --listen 172.18.0.3:9502 --size 10g /volume
3. Start the controller. Take TGT for example:
docker run --net longhorn-net --privileged -v /dev:/host/dev -v /proc:/host/proc \
    rancher/longhorn-engine launch controller --frontend tgt-blockdev \ 
    --replica tcp://172.18.0.2:9502 --replica tcp://172.18.0.3:9502 vol-name

Now you will have device /dev/longhorn/vol-name.

Run longhorn command

The longhorn command allows you to manage a Longhorn controller. By executing the longhorn command in the controller container, you can list replicas, add and remove replicas, take snapshots, and create backups.

$ docker exec <controller-docker-id> longhorn ls
ADDRESS               MODE CHAIN
tcp://172.18.0.2:9502 RW   [volume-head-000.img]
tcp://172.18.0.3:9502 RW   [volume-head-000.img]

Contribution

Please check the main repo for the contributing guide.

License

Copyright (c) 2014-2019 The Longhorn Authors

Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at

http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0

Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License.