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121 lines
6.6 KiB
Markdown
### Purpose
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This document will get you up to speed with some hands-on experience
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with Gluster by guiding you through the steps of setting it up for the
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first time. If you are looking to get right into things, you are in the
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right place. If you want just the bare minimum steps, see the [Quick Start Guide](./Quick_start.md).
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If you want some in-depth information on each of the steps, you are in the right place.
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Both the guides will get you
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to a working Gluster cluster, so it depends on you how much time you
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want to spend. The [Quick Start Guide](./Quick_start.md) should have you up and running in ten minutes
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or less. This guide can easily be done in a lunch break, and still gives
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you time to have a quick bite to eat. The Getting Started guide can be
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done easily in a few hours, depending on how much testing you want to
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do.
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After you deploy Gluster by following these steps, we recommend that
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you read the [Gluster Admin Guide](../Administrator Guide/) to learn how to administer Gluster and
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how to select a volume type that fits your needs. Also, be sure to
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enlist the help of the Gluster community via the IRC channel or Q&A
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section . We want you to be successful in as short a time as possible.
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Overview:
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Before we begin, let’s talk about what Gluster is, dispel a few myths
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and misconceptions, and define a few terms. This will help you to avoid
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some of the common issues that others encounter most frequently.
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#### What is Gluster
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Gluster is a distributed scale out filesystem that allows rapid
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provisioning of additional storage based on your storage consumption
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needs. It incorporates automatic failover as a primary feature. All of
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this is accomplished without a centralized metadata server.
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#### What is Gluster without making me learn an extra glossary of terminology?
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- Gluster is an easy way to provision your own storage backend NAS
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using almost any hardware you choose.
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- You can add as much as you want to start with, and if you need more
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later, adding more takes just a few steps.
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- You can configure failover automatically, so that if a server goes
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down, you don’t lose access to the data. No manual steps are
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required for failover. When you fix the server that failed and bring
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it back online, you don’t have to do anything to get the data back
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except wait. In the mean time, the most current copy of your data
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keeps getting served from the node that was still running.
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- You can build a clustered filesystem in a matter of minutes…it is
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trivially easy for basic setups
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- It takes advantage of what we refer to as “commodity hardware”,
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which means, we run on just about any hardware you can think of,
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from that stack of decomm’s and gigabit switches in the corner no
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one can figure out what to do with (how many license servers do you
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really need, after all?), to that dream array you were speccing out
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online. Don’t worry, I won’t tell your boss.
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- It takes advantage of commodity software too. No need to mess with
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kernels or fine tune the OS to a tee. We run on top of most unix
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filesystems, with XFS and ext4 being the most popular choices. We do
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have some recommendations for more heavily utilized arrays, but
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these are simple to implement and you probably have some of these
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configured already anyway.
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- Gluster data can be accessed from just about anywhere – You can use
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traditional NFS, SMB/CIFS for Windows clients, or our own native
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GlusterFS (a few additional packages are needed on the client
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machines for this, but as you will see, they are quite small).
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- There are even more advanced features than this, but for now we will
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focus on the basics.
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- It’s not just a toy. Gluster is enterprise ready, and commercial
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support is available if you need it. It is used in some of the most
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taxing environments like media serving, natural resource
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exploration, medical imaging, and even as a filesystem for Big Data.
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#### Is Gluster going to work for me and what I need it to do?
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Most likely, yes. People use Gluster for all sorts of things. You are
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encouraged to ask around in our IRC channel or Q&A forums to see if
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anyone has tried something similar. That being said, there are a few
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places where Gluster is going to need more consideration than others. -
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Accessing Gluster from SMB/CIFS is often going to be slow by most
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people’s standards. If you only moderate access by users, then it most
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likely won’t be an issue for you. On the other hand, adding enough
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Gluster servers into the mix, some people have seen better performance
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with us than other solutions due to the scale out nature of the
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technology - Gluster does not support so called “structured data”,
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meaning live, SQL databases. Of course, using Gluster to backup and
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restore the database would be fine - Gluster is traditionally better
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when using file sizes at of least 16KB (with a sweet spot around 128KB
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or so).
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#### What is the cost and complexity required to set up cluster?
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Question: How many billions of dollars is it going to cost to setup a cluster?
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Don’t I need redundant networking, super fast SSD’s,
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technology from Alpha Centauri delivered by men in black, etc…?
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I have never seen anyone spend even close to a billion, unless they got
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the rust proof coating on the servers. You don’t seem like the type that
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would get bamboozled like that, so have no fear. For purpose of this
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tutorial, if your laptop can run two VM’s with 1GB of memory each, you
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can get started testing and the only thing you are going to pay for is
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coffee (assuming the coffee shop doesn’t make you pay them back for the
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electricity to power your laptop).
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If you want to test on bare metal, since Gluster is built with commodity
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hardware in mind, and because there is no centralized meta-data server,
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a very simple cluster can be deployed with two basic servers (2 CPU’s,
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4GB of RAM each, 1 Gigabit network). This is sufficient to have a nice
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file share or a place to put some nightly backups. Gluster is deployed
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successfully on all kinds of disks, from the lowliest 5200 RPM SATA to
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mightiest 1.21 gigawatt SSD’s. The more performance you need, the more
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consideration you will want to put into how much hardware to buy, but
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the great thing about Gluster is that you can start small, and add on as
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your needs grow.
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#### OK, but if I add servers on later, don’t they have to be exactly the same?
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In a perfect world, sure. Having the hardware be the same means less
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troubleshooting when the fires start popping up. But plenty of people
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deploy Gluster on mix and match hardware, and successfully.
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Get started by checking some [Common Criteria](./Common_criteria.md)
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