Deploying Ceph using Crowbar 2.0

For quite some time now the Crowbar team have been refactoring their cloud unboxer solution. It is is not yet ready for public consumption, but if you want to see what they’ve got, it’s already possible. Victor Lowther have just released the first CB20 compatible workload which is Ceph, a distributed storage solution from Inktank. This article will build up on the previous one which details the process of building a Crowbar ISO, let see how it differs if you want to see the latest and greatest of Crowbar 2.0. If you really don’t know what we are talking about, just start from the beginning. ...

December 8, 2013 · 9 min · planetrobbie

Ceph Workshop

I’ve attended the first Ceph Workshop in Amsterdam, Nov 2, 2012, with all the Ceph gurus, Sage Weil, Wildo den Hollander, Ross Turk, Gregory Farnum presenting this outstanding distributed storage technology. I’m sharing with you my notes. Keynote by Wildo den Hollander 42on (@widoth) partners of the first ever workshop day inktank - the founders providing services & support contributed 90% of ceph code 42on spinoff of European company which now focus on Ceph Dell gave gears for Demo facilities Why Ceph ? World of storage is changing everyday, now storing Petabytes of data How to store it is a lot of work Do we use proprietary systems ? How do we scale ? Does that fit in our budget Use Ceph Fully distributed without any SPoF Scales with you into the Petabytes Runs on commodity hardware Keynote by Sage Weil (@liewegas, sage@inktank.com) First ever Ceph day Unified Distributed System Why you should care diverse storage needs object storage block devices (for VMs) with snapshots, cloning shared file system with POSIX, coherent caches structured data: files, block devices, or objects ? scale terabytes, petabytes, exabytes heterogeneous hardware time ease of admin no manual data migration, load balancing painless scaling expansion and contraction seamless integration cost linear function of size, of performance incremental expansion no fork lift upgrades no vendor lock-in choice of hardware and software open What is it, what it’s for It’s a storage system that stores: Objects native API or RESTful API Blocks thin provisioning snapshots layering/cloning Files strong consistency, snapshots It’s a distributed storage system that scale from 10s to 10 000 of machines terabytes to exabytes Which is fault tolerant - no SPoF how it works - architecture - ceph object model ...

November 5, 2012 · 21 min · planetrobbie