321 lines
20 KiB
YAML
321 lines
20 KiB
YAML
---
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# Logging configuration (uncomment to override defaults)
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# These default options are generally best for most clusters; override these if you want more granular
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# control over the logging output of the PVC system.
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#pvc_log_to_file: False # Log to a file in /var/log/pvc
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#pvc_log_to_stdout: True # Log to stdout (i.e. journald)
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#pvc_log_to_zookeeper: True # Log to Zookeeper (required for 'node log' commands)
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#pvc_log_colours: True # Log colourful prompts for states instead of text
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#pvc_log_dates: False # Log dates (useful with log_to_file, not useful with log_to_stdout as journald adds these)
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#pvc_log_keepalives: True # Log keepalive event every pvc_keepalive_interval seconds
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#pvc_log_keepalive_cluster_details: True # Log cluster details (VMs, OSDs, load, etc.) duing keepalive events
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#pvc_log_keepalive_plugin_details: True # Log health plugin details (messages) suring keepalive events
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#pvc_log_console_lines: 1000 # The number of VM console log lines to store in Zookeeper for 'vm log' commands.
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#pvc_log_node_lines: 2000 # The number of node log lines to store in Zookeeper for 'node log' commands.
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# Timing and fencing configuration (uncomment to override defaults)
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# These default options are generally best for most clusters; override these if you want more granular
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# control over the timings of various areas of the cluster, for instance if your hardware is slow or error-prone.
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#pvc_vm_shutdown_timeout: 180 # Number of seconds before a 'shutdown' VM is forced off
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#pvc_keepalive_interval: 5 # Number of seconds between keepalive ticks
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#pvc_monitoring_interval: 15 # Number of seconds between monitoring plugin runs
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#pvc_fence_intervals: 6 # Number of keepalive ticks before a node is considered dead
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#pvc_suicide_intervals: 0 # Number of keepalive ticks before a node consideres itself dead (0 to disable)
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#pvc_fence_successful_action: migrate # What to do with VMs when a fence is successful (migrate, None)
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#pvc_fence_failed_action: None # What to do with VMs when a fence is failed (migrate, None) - migrate is DANGEROUS without pvc_suicide_intervals set to < pvc_fence_intervals
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#pvc_migrate_target_selector: mem # The selector to use for migrating VMs if not explicitly set; one of mem, memfree, load, vcpus, vms
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# Client API basic configuration
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pvc_api_listen_address: "{{ pvc_upstream_floatingip }}"
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pvc_api_listen_port: "7370"
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pvc_api_secret_key: "" # Use pwgen to generate
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# Client API user tokens
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# Create a token (random UUID or password) for each user you wish to have access to the PVC API.
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# The first token will always be used for the "local" connection, and thus at least one token MUST be defined.
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pvc_api_enable_authentication: True
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pvc_api_tokens:
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# - description: "myuser"
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# token: "a3945326-d36c-4024-83b3-2a8931d7785a"
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# PVC API SSL configuration
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# Use these options to enable SSL for the API listener, providing security over WAN connections.
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# There are two options for defining the SSL certificate and key to use:
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# a) Set both pvc_api_ssl_cert_path and pvc_api_ssl_key_path to paths to an existing SSL combined (CA + cert) certificate and key, respectively, on the system.
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# b) Set both pvc_api_ssl_cert and pvc_api_ssl_key to the raw PEM-encoded contents of an SSL combined (CA + cert) certificate and key, respectively, which will be installed under /etc/pvc.
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# If the _path options are non-empty, the raw entries are ignored and will not be used.
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pvc_api_enable_ssl: False
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pvc_api_ssl_cert_path:
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pvc_api_ssl_cert: >
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# A RAW CERTIFICATE FILE, installed to /etc/pvc/api-cert.pem
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pvc_api_ssl_key_path:
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pvc_api_ssl_key: >
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# A RAW KEY FILE, installed to /etc/pvc/api-key.pem
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# Ceph storage configuration
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pvc_ceph_storage_secret_uuid: "" # Use uuidgen to generate
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# Database configuration
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pvc_dns_database_name: "pvcdns"
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pvc_dns_database_user: "pvcdns"
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pvc_dns_database_password: "" # Use pwgen to generate
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pvc_api_database_name: "pvcapi"
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pvc_api_database_user: "pvcapi"
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pvc_api_database_password: "" # Use pwgen to generate
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pvc_replication_database_user: "replicator"
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pvc_replication_database_password: "" # Use pwgen to generate
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pvc_superuser_database_user: "postgres"
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pvc_superuser_database_password: "" # Use pwgen to generate
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# Network routing configuration
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# > The ASN should be a private ASN number.
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# > The list of routers are those which will learn routes to the PVC client networks via BGP;
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# they should speak BGP and allow sessions from the PVC nodes.
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pvc_asn: "65500"
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pvc_routers:
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- "192.168.100.1"
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# PVC Node list
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# > Every node configured with this playbook must be specified in this list.
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pvc_nodes:
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- hostname: "pvchv1" # This name MUST match the Ansible inventory_hostname's first portion, i.e. "inventory_hostname.split('.')[0]"
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is_coordinator: yes
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node_id: 1
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router_id: "192.168.100.11"
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upstream_ip: "192.168.100.11"
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cluster_ip: "10.0.0.1"
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storage_ip: "10.0.1.1"
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ipmi_host: "{{ ipmi['hosts']['pvchv1']['hostname'] }}" # Note the node hostname key in here
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ipmi_user: "{{ ipmi['users']['pvc']['username'] }}"
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ipmi_password: "{{ ipmi['users']['pvc']['password'] }}"
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cpu_tuning: # Example of cpu_tuning overrides per-node, only relevant if enabled; see below
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system_cpus: 2
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osd_cpus: 2
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- hostname: "pvchv2" # This name MUST match the Ansible inventory_hostname's first portion, i.e. "inventory_hostname.split('.')[0]"
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is_coordinator: yes
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node_id: 2
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router_id: "192.168.100.12"
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upstream_ip: "192.168.100.12"
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cluster_ip: "10.0.0.2"
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storage_ip: "10.0.1.2"
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ipmi_host: "{{ ipmi['hosts']['pvchv2']['hostname'] }}" # Note the node hostname key in here
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ipmi_user: "{{ ipmi['users']['pvc']['username'] }}"
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ipmi_password: "{{ ipmi['users']['pvc']['password'] }}"
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- hostname: "pvchv3" # This name MUST match the Ansible inventory_hostname's first portion, i.e. "inventory_hostname.split('.')[0]"
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is_coordinator: yes
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node_id: 3
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router_id: "192.168.100.13"
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upstream_ip: "192.168.100.13"
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cluster_ip: "10.0.0.3"
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storage_ip: "10.0.1.3"
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ipmi_host: "{{ ipmi['hosts']['pvchv3']['hostname'] }}" # Note the node hostname key in here
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ipmi_user: "{{ ipmi['users']['pvc']['username'] }}"
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ipmi_password: "{{ ipmi['users']['pvc']['password'] }}"
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# Bridge device entry
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# This device is passed to PVC and is used when creating bridged networks. Normal managed networks are
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# created on top of the "cluster" interface defined below, however bridged networks must be created
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# directly on an underlying non-vLAN network device. This can be the same underlying device as the
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# upstream/cluster/storage networks (especially if the upstream network device is not a vLAN itself),
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# or a different device separate from the other 3 main networks.
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pvc_bridge_device: bondU # Replace based on your network configuration
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pvc_bridge_mtu: 1500 # Replace based on your network configuration
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# SR-IOV device configuration
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# SR-IOV enables the passing of hardware-virtualized network devices (VFs), created on top of SR-IOV-enabled
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# physical NICs (PFs), into virtual machines. SR-IOV is a complex topic, and will not be discussed in detail
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# here. Instead, the SR-IOV mode is disabled by default and a commented out example configuration is shown.
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pvc_sriov_enable: False
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#pvc_sriov_device:
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# - phy: ens1f0
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# mtu: 9000
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# vfcount: 6
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# Memory tuning
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# > ADVANCED TUNING: For most users, this is unnecessary and PVC will run fine with the default memory
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# allocations. Uncomment these options only low-memory situations (nodes with <32GB RAM).
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#
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# OSD memory limit - 939524096 (~900MB) is the lowest possible value; default is 4GB.
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# > This option is *only* applied at cluster bootstrap and cannot be changed later
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# here, only by editing the `files/ceph/<cluster>/ceph.conf` file directly.
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#pvc_osd_memory_limit: 939524096
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#
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# Zookeeper heap memory limit, sets Xms and Xmx values to the Java process; default is 512M.
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# > WARNING: Unless you have an extremely limited amount of RAM, changing this setting is NOT RECOMMENDED.
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# Lowering the heap limit may cause poor performance or crashes in Zookeeper during some tasks.
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#pvc_zookeeper_heap_limit: 128M # 1/4 of default
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#
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# Zookeeper stack memory limit, sets Xss value to the Java process; default is 1024M.
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# > WARNING: Unless you have an extremely limited amount of RAM, changing this setting is NOT RECOMMENDED.
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# Lowering the stack limit may cause poor performance or crashes in Zookeeper during some tasks.
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#pvc_zookeeper_stack_limit: 256M # 1/4 of default
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# CPU tuning
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# > ADVANCED TUNING: These options are strongly recommended due to the performance gains possible, but
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# most users would be able to use the default without too much issue. Read the following notes
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# carefully to determine if this setting should be enabled in your cluster.
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# > NOTE: CPU tuning is only supported on Debian Bullseye (11) or newer
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# > Defines CPU tuning/affinity options for various subsystems within PVC. This is useful to
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# help limit the impact that noisy elements may have on other elements, e.g. busy VMs on
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# OSDs, or system processes on latency-sensitive VMs.
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# > To enable tuning, set enabled to yes.
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# > Within "nodes", two counts are specified:
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# * system_cpus: The number of CPUs to assign to the "system" slice, i.e. all non-VM,
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# non-OSD processes on the system. Should usually be at least 2, and be
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# higher on the coordinators of larger clusters (i.e. >5 nodes).
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# * osd_cpus: The number of CPUs to assign to the "osd" slice, i.e. all OSD processes.
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# Should be at least 1 per OSD, and ideally 2 per OSD for best performance.
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# A third count, for the VM CPUs, is autogenerated based on the total node CPU count and
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# the above two values (using all remaining CPUs).
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# > Tuning is done based on cores; for systems with SMT (>1 thread-per-core), all SMTs within
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# a given core are also assigned to the same CPU set. So for example, if the "system" group is
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# assigned 2 system_cpus, there are 16 cores, and there are 2 threads per core, the list will be:
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# 0,1,16,17
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# leveraging the assumption that Linux puts all cores before all threads.
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# > This tuning section under "nodes" is global to the cluster; to override these values on
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# a per-node basis, use the corresponding "cpu_tuning" section of a given "pvc_nodes" entry
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# as shown below.
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# > If disabled after being enabled, the tuning configurations on each node will be removed
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# on the next run. A reboot of all nodes is required to fully disable the tuning.
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# > IMPORTANT NOTE: Enabling CPU tuning requires a decent number of CPU cores on the system. For very
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# low-spec systems (i.e. less than at least 12 cores per node), it is advisable to leave this tuning
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# off, as otherwise very few cores will actually be allocated to VMs. With a larger number (>16 or so),
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# this tuning is likely to greatly increase storage performance, though balance between the VM workload
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# and total number of cores must be carefully considered.
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cpu_tuning:
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enabled: no # Disable or enable CPU tuning; recommended to enable for optimal storage performance
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nodes:
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system_cpus: 2 # Set based on your actual system configuration (min 2, increase on coordinators if many nodes)
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osd_cpus: 2 # Set based on your actual number of OSDs (for optimal performance, 2 per OSD)
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# PVC VM autobackups
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# > PVC supports autobackups, which can perform automatic snapshot-level VM backups of selected
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# virtual machines based on tags. The backups are fully managed on a consistent schedule, and
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# include both full and incremental varieties.
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# > To solve the shared storage issue and ensure backups are taken off-cluster, automaticmounting
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# of remote filesystems is supported by autobackup.
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pvc_autobackup:
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# Enable or disable autobackup
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# > If disabled, no timers or "/etc/pvc/autobackup.yaml" configuration will be installed, and any
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# existing timers or configuration will be REMOVED on each run (even if manually created).
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# > Since autobackup is an integrated PVC CLI feature, the command will always be available regardless
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# of this setting, but without this option enabled, the lack of a "/etc/pvc/autobackup.yaml" will
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# prevent its use.
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enabled: no
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# Set the backup root path and (optional) suffix
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# > This directory will be used for autobackups, optionally suffixed with the suffix if it is present
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# > If remote mounting is enabled, the remote filesystem will be mounted at the root path; if it is
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# not enabled, there must be a valid large(!) filesystem mounted on all coordinator nodes at this
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# path.
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# > The suffix can be used to allow a single backup root path to back up multiple clusters without
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# conflicts should those clusters share VM names. It is optional unless this matches your situation.
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# > The path "/tmp/backups" is usually recommended for remote mounting
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# > NOTE: If you specify it, the suffix must begin with a '/', but is relative to the root path!
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root_path: "/tmp/backups"
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root_suffix: "/mycluster"
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# Set the VM tag(s) which will be selected for autobackup
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# > Autobackup selects VMs based on their tags. If a VM has a tag present in this list, it will be
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# selected for autobackup at runtime; if not it will be ignored.
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# > Usually, the tag "autobackup" here is sufficient; the administrator should then add this tag
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# to any VM(s) they want to use autobackups. However, any tag may be specified to keep the tag list
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# cleaner and more focused, should the administrator choose to.
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tags:
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- autobackup
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# Autobackup scheduling
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schedule:
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# Backups are performed at regular intervals via a systemd timer
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# > Optionally, forced-full backups can also be specified, which ensures consistent rotation
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# between VMs regardless of when they are added; if forced_full_time is empty or missing, this
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# feature is disabled
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# > This default schedule performs a (forced) full backup every Monday at midnight, then normal backups
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# every other day at midnight (these may be full or incremental depending on the options below
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# > These options use a systemd timer date string; see "man systemd.time" for details
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normal_time: "Tue..Sun *-*-* 0:0:00"
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forced_full_time: "Mon *-*-* 0:0:00"
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# The interval between full backups determines which backups are full and which are incrementals
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# > When a backup is run, if there are this many (inclusive) backups since the last full backup,
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# then a new full backup is taken and rotation occurs; otherwise, an incremental backup is taken
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# > For example, a value of 1 means every backup is a full backup; a value of 2 means every other
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# bakcup is a full backup; a value of 7 means every 7th backup is a full backup (i.e. once per week
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# with a daily backup time).
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full_interval: 7
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# The retention count specifies how many full backups should be kept
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# > Retention cleanup is run after each full backup, and thus, that backup is counted in this number
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# > For example, a value of 2 means that there will always be at least 2 full backups. When a new
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# full backup is taken, the oldest (i.e. 3rd) full backup is removed.
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# > When a full backup is removed, all incremental backups with that full backup as their parent are
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# also removed.
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# > Thus, this schedule combined with a full_interval of 7 ensures there is always 2 full weekly backups,
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# plus at least 1 full week's worth of incremental backups.
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full_retention: 2
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# Set reporting options for autobackups
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# NOTE: By default, pvc-ansible installs a local Postfix MTA and Postfix sendmail to send emails
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# This may not be what you want! If you want an alternate sendmail MTA (e.g. msmtp) you must install it
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# yourself in a custom role!
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reporting:
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# Enable or disable email reporting; if disabled ("no"), no reports are ever sent
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enabled: no
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# Email a report to these addresses; at least one MUST be specified if enabled
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emails:
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- myuser@domain.tld
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- otheruser@domain.tld
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# Email a report on the specified jobs
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report_on:
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# Send a report on a forced_full backup (usually, weekly)
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forced_full: yes
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# Send a report on a normal backup (usually, daily)
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normal: yes
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# Configure automatic mounting support
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# > PVC autobackup features the ability to automatically and dynamically mount and unmount remote
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# filesystems, or, indeed, perform any arbitrary pre- or post-run tasks, using a set of arbitrary
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# commands
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# > Automatic mountoing is optional if you choose to use a static mount on all PVC coordinators
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# > While the examples here show absolute paths, that is not required; they will run with the $PATH of the
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# executing environment (either the "pvc" command on a CLI or a cron/systemd timer)
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# > A "{backup_root_path}" f-string/str.format type variable MAY be present in any cmds string to represent
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# the above configured root backup path, and is which is interpolated at runtime
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# > If multiple commands are given, they will be executed in the order given; if no commands are given,
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# nothing is executed, but the keys MUST be present
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auto_mount:
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# Enable or disable automatic mounting
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enabled: no
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# These Debian packages will be automatically installed if automatic mounting is enabled
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packages:
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# This example installs nfs-common, required for NFS mounts
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# - nfs-common
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# These commands are executed at the start of the backup run and should mount a filesystem or otherwise
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# prepare the system for the backups
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mount_cmds:
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# This example shows an NFS mount leveraging the backup_root_path variable
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# - "/usr/sbin/mount.nfs -o nfsvers=3 10.0.0.10:/backups {backup_root_path}"
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# This example shows an SSHFS mount leveraging the backup_root_path variable
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# - "/usr/bin/sshfs user@hostname:/path {backup_root_path} -o default_permissions -o sshfs_sync -o IdentityFile=/path/to/id_rsa"
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# These commands are executed at the end of the backup run and should unmount a filesystem
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unmount_cmds:
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# This example shows a generic umount leveraging the backup_root_path variable
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# - "/usr/bin/umount {backup_root_path}"
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# This example shows an fusermount3 unmount (e.g. for SSHFS) leveraging the backup_root_path variable
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# - "/usr/bin/fusermount3 -u {backup_root_path}"
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# Configuration file networks
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# > Taken from base.yml's configuration; DO NOT MODIFY THIS SECTION.
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pvc_upstream_device: "{{ networks['upstream']['device'] }}"
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pvc_upstream_mtu: "{{ networks['upstream']['mtu'] }}"
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pvc_upstream_domain: "{{ networks['upstream']['domain'] }}"
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pvc_upstream_netmask: "{{ networks['upstream']['netmask'] }}"
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pvc_upstream_subnet: "{{ networks['upstream']['subnet'] }}"
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pvc_upstream_floatingip: "{{ networks['upstream']['floating_ip'] }}"
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pvc_upstream_gatewayip: "{{ networks['upstream']['gateway_ip'] }}"
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pvc_cluster_device: "{{ networks['cluster']['device'] }}"
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pvc_cluster_mtu: "{{ networks['cluster']['mtu'] }}"
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pvc_cluster_domain: "{{ networks['cluster']['domain'] }}"
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pvc_cluster_netmask: "{{ networks['cluster']['netmask'] }}"
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pvc_cluster_subnet: "{{ networks['cluster']['subnet'] }}"
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pvc_cluster_floatingip: "{{ networks['cluster']['floating_ip'] }}"
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pvc_storage_device: "{{ networks['storage']['device'] }}"
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pvc_storage_mtu: "{{ networks['storage']['mtu'] }}"
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pvc_storage_domain: "{{ networks['storage']['domain'] }}"
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pvc_storage_netmask: "{{ networks['storage']['netmask'] }}"
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pvc_storage_subnet: "{{ networks['storage']['subnet'] }}"
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pvc_storage_floatingip: "{{ networks['storage']['floating_ip'] }}"
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