Gluster and RAID question
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@travisdh1 Great thanks for that info. When you say storage for VMs are you speaking of a SAN? So your VMs are running off the Gluster?
Yeah I thought 3 nodes of storage + the hypervisor node sounded like a ton of equipment. I know you can buy single boxes that have 2 - 4 nodes inside of them to reduce the footprint.
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@biggen said in Gluster and RAID question:
@travisdh1 Great thanks for that info. When you say storage for VMs are you speaking of a SAN? So your VMs are running off the Gluster?
Yeah I thought 3 nodes of storage + the hypervisor node sounded like a ton of equipment. I know you can buy single boxes that have 2 - 4 nodes inside of them to reduce the footprint.
Something like that. Basically Gluster would replace the SAN.
Those 2-4 node in a boxes are just horrible solutions if you want fault-tolerance. Basically, you still have a single point of failure, but now it takes down all 3 nodes instead of a single node.
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@biggen said in Gluster and RAID question:
I appreciate the explanation guys. Not being in the IT field (directly) for some time means I'm playing catch up with a lot of the stuff.
Lets say as a hypothetical one wanted to build out a 500TB Gluster cluster to be used as a backup target for VMs. It looks like you need at least 3 nodes to build out the Gluster Cluster. Then, of course, you need an additional node for the hypervisor - so 4 nodes minimum.
On the three Gluster nodes, would you be installing a Linux OS directly to them (bare metal)? I know from reading here physical servers have fallen out of style. Is this a use case where a physical server still serves a purpose?
Once the Gluster volume is up and running, you could then connect the hypervisor to the cluster assuming the hypervisor had Gluster Client support and then you have the massive cluster attached to the hypervisor as a SR to be used appropriately.
I'm just wondering if something like this would work.
Why would you need a fault tolerant storage solution for your backups? i would think if it was that important - you'd more likely go to tapes as part of your backups D2D2T.
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Question for those in the know - Can Gluster run on the same boxes as the hypervisor like in a hyperconveraged setup? It seems crazy to have a solution as @biggen is suggesting - 3 Gluster nodes and a single VM host using that Gluster cluster - i.e. SPOF in that one VM host.
And as he mentioned, that's a ton of hardware. -
@Dashrender said in Gluster and RAID question:
Question for those in the know - Can Gluster run on the same boxes as the hypervisor like in a hyperconveraged setup? It seems crazy to have a solution as @biggen is suggesting - 3 Gluster nodes and a single VM host using that Gluster cluster - i.e. SPOF in that one VM host.
And as he mentioned, that's a ton of hardware.Yes. Really easy if using a linux based KVM. Just create your Gluster storage and mount it as your VM config and storage directory. I've not done a setup like this myself, so I'm probably missing some high-points, but that's the basic idea.
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@biggen said in Gluster and RAID question:
On the three Gluster nodes, would you be installing a Linux OS directly to them (bare metal)? I know from reading here physical servers have fallen out of style. Is this a use case where a physical server still serves a purpose?
This seems to be a misunderstanding. There's nothing wrong with physical servers. Something has to run on the physical hardware to make it work, I don't know diddily squat about Gluster, but I image it works something like this:
A Linux OS is installed onto some smallish disk, possibly SD card, that is used to setup a Gluster cluster.
KVM, or some other hypervisor is installed into the Linux OS as well, the hypervisor is pointed to the Gluster cluster for SR
VM's are made in that hypervisor.Now I'm guessing this can't be done with Hyper-V, since that can't run inside Linux (as far as I know), so you'd be forced to have hypervisor hosts and storage hosts (i.e. SAN/NAS) for Hyper-V and other hypervisors.
I'm looking forward to someone shredding this post.
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@travisdh1 said in Gluster and RAID question:
@biggen said in Gluster and RAID question:
@travisdh1 Great thanks for that info. When you say storage for VMs are you speaking of a SAN? So your VMs are running off the Gluster?
Yeah I thought 3 nodes of storage + the hypervisor node sounded like a ton of equipment. I know you can buy single boxes that have 2 - 4 nodes inside of them to reduce the footprint.
Something like that. Basically Gluster would replace the SAN.
Those 2-4 node in a boxes are just horrible solutions if you want fault-tolerance. Basically, you still have a single point of failure, but now it takes down all 3 nodes instead of a single node.
Yeah I've always wondered about that multiple nodes in one case setup. Especially since I'd imagine the PSU backplane is probably being shared between all the nodes inside in some fashion.
@Dashrender said in Gluster and RAID question:
@biggen said in Gluster and RAID question:
I appreciate the explanation guys. Not being in the IT field (directly) for some time means I'm playing catch up with a lot of the stuff.
Lets say as a hypothetical one wanted to build out a 500TB Gluster cluster to be used as a backup target for VMs. It looks like you need at least 3 nodes to build out the Gluster Cluster. Then, of course, you need an additional node for the hypervisor - so 4 nodes minimum.
On the three Gluster nodes, would you be installing a Linux OS directly to them (bare metal)? I know from reading here physical servers have fallen out of style. Is this a use case where a physical server still serves a purpose?
Once the Gluster volume is up and running, you could then connect the hypervisor to the cluster assuming the hypervisor had Gluster Client support and then you have the massive cluster attached to the hypervisor as a SR to be used appropriately.
I'm just wondering if something like this would work.
Why would you need a fault tolerant storage solution for your backups? i would think if it was that important - you'd more likely go to tapes as part of your backups D2D2T.
You probably wouldn't. I was just trying to dream up a solution of doing a three cluster Gluster. Perhaps a VM SR would be a better scenario OR perhaps a massive NAS storage Gluster cluster holding raw 4K footage for a production company. Again, it was a hypothetical. I have a hard time imagining any scenario where I would need to ever contain this much storage unless I'm starting up my own YouTube or some sort. The guys over on Reddit in the r/Datahoarder sub are commonly collecting hundreds of TB of junk but that is mostly on spare parts and cobbled together machinery. I've never seen any massive storage scale done with my own eyes using production level equipment and software so I guess its more curiosity on my own part as to how it would work.
@travisdh1 said in Gluster and RAID question:
@Dashrender said in Gluster and RAID question:
Question for those in the know - Can Gluster run on the same boxes as the hypervisor like in a hyperconveraged setup? It seems crazy to have a solution as @biggen is suggesting - 3 Gluster nodes and a single VM host using that Gluster cluster - i.e. SPOF in that one VM host.
And as he mentioned, that's a ton of hardware.Yes. Really easy if using a linux based KVM. Just create your Gluster storage and mount it as your VM config and storage directory. I've not done a setup like this myself, so I'm probably missing some high-points, but that's the basic idea.
I know there are lots of ways to skin the cat, but wouldn't you still need three separate Gluster nodes? Gluster recommends at least three in order to avoid split brain. If you used a two physical node system I don't think they want you to do that without an arbiter which is something I have no idea about.
@Dashrender said in Gluster and RAID question:
@biggen said in Gluster and RAID question:
On the three Gluster nodes, would you be installing a Linux OS directly to them (bare metal)? I know from reading here physical servers have fallen out of style. Is this a use case where a physical server still serves a purpose?
This seems to be a misunderstanding. There's nothing wrong with physical servers. Something has to run on the physical hardware to make it work, I don't know diddily squat about Gluster, but I image it works something like this:
A Linux OS is installed onto some smallish disk, possibly SD card, that is used to setup a Gluster cluster.
KVM, or some other hypervisor is installed into the Linux OS as well, the hypervisor is pointed to the Gluster cluster for SR
VM's are made in that hypervisor.Now I'm guessing this can't be done with Hyper-V, since that can't run inside Linux (as far as I know), so you'd be forced to have hypervisor hosts and storage hosts (i.e. SAN/NAS) for Hyper-V and other hypervisors.
I'm looking forward to someone shredding this post.
I don't know any about Gluster either other than what I've gleaned in the last 24 hours. From what I toyed with, I spun up two Debian VMs and installed and configured the Gluster volume from those two VMs. Then I could (I didn't though) install the Glusterfs client on xcp-ng in order to connect to the cluster and then the hypervisor uses the cluster as a SR.
If you were talking about ONLY two physical nodes for everything, then what you say makes sense. I think you'd have to install your base OS (Debian, Cent, whatever...) on each node, configure the cluster, and install the hypervisor inside the same OS on both nodes in order to utilize the cluster.
There is a split brain issue with only using two nodes from what I've read though.
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Yes. Really easy if using a linux based KVM. Just create your Gluster storage and mount it as your VM config and storage directory. I've not done a setup like this myself, so I'm probably missing some high-points, but that's the basic idea.
I know there are lots of ways to skin the cat, but wouldn't you still need three separate Gluster nodes? Gluster recommends at least three in order to avoid split brain. If you used a two physical node system I don't think they want you to do that without an arbiter which is something I have no idea about.
Yes, it would be a minimum of 3 hosts.
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@biggen said in Gluster and RAID question:
I know you can buy single boxes that have 2 - 4 nodes inside of them to reduce the footprint.
Yes, for instance the 2U 4-node servers from Supermicro.
Each node has 6 hot swap bays, dual CPUs, PCIe slot etc. So 4 complete servers in one.
Even if they're small they can be extremely powerful.
For instance each node can have 2 x 64 core AMD Epyc Rome CPU, 1TB RAM, 6x4TB SSD, NVMe Optane cache, 100 Gigabit ethernet.
With a price to match the specs....
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@biggen said in Gluster and RAID question:
Lets say as a hypothetical one wanted to build out a 500TB Gluster cluster to be used as a backup target for VMs.
That's the first problem. Bottom line is: you don't.
And by that I don't mean that the tech is wrong. I mean the approach is wrong. Gluster is JUST a filesystem, it's not a target for VMs or anything like that. It's you want to transport fruit from your farm to the market. And you are asking "okay, so I want to use these Goodyear tires, how do I do it?"
You just don't. You look at the job holistically: "How do I store backups of VMs?" Then you answer it at the high level "I store them on an SMB file server!"
Then in the process of answering "How do I host an SMB file server?" you come up with "On a hypervisor."
Eventually you get "under the hood enough" that maybe, MAYBE, the question of "on what storage platform do I run my VMs" the answer becomes "Gluster". But the Gluster piece is not connected at all to the "backup target for VMs".
Just like the tires aren't connected to the fruit. Sure, there is a decent chance that the vehicle that hauls your fruit will use tires, and maybe even Goodyear tires, but it's an under the hood detail that has nothing directly to do with the fact that higher up the chain you are hauling fruit.
Gluster doesn't solve the kind of problem you are trying to solve. So the question doesn't make sense. And it is making you really confused.
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@biggen said in Gluster and RAID question:
It looks like you need at least 3 nodes to build out the Gluster Cluster. Then, of course, you need an additional node for the hypervisor - so 4 nodes minimum.
No, the hypervisor would never be on a different node. It would almost be on the same cluster as the Gluster storage. If you separate it out, you break the vast majority of the value.
You are trying to use Gluster as if it were a SAN. Gluster can be used underneath a SAN. But a SAN would have no role to play in this kind of setup.
I think you are trying to ask good questions, but are adding so many assumptions by accident that you are floundering.
Start with your goal: "How do I make a backup target for VMs, it likely needs to be 500GB?"
And let's go from there. Absolutely nowhere should Gluster be involved until after loads and loads of other things have been figured out. And then, maybe, Gluster will come into the picture. But if Gluster is an option or not depends on lots of other things.
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@biggen said in Gluster and RAID question:
So your VMs are running off the Gluster?
Gluster is generally used for that, yes. Because backup storage rarely can leverage the advantages of Gluster, it just doesn't make sense. But for VMs, that's Gluster's bread and butter.
VMs really "never" should be running off of a SAN. That's exactly the least likely option to make sense.
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@biggen said in Gluster and RAID question:
I know you can buy single boxes that have 2 - 4 nodes inside of them to reduce the footprint.
It reduces the physical size, but limits your storage in horrific ways and is still a lot of nodes that aren't serving a purpose.
That you put a box around four servers doesn't stop them being four servers.
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@Dashrender said in Gluster and RAID question:
Can Gluster run on the same boxes as the hypervisor like in a hyperconveraged setup?
That's the intended use case. Really, the only intended use case. It's never intended to be used remotely, it has no accommodation for that. You can, of course, by building a SAN on top of it. But how silly is that
Gluster only natively works when the hypervisor is local. Loads of solutions, like Proxmox, have this all baked in.
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@biggen said in Gluster and RAID question:
On the three Gluster nodes, would you be installing a Linux OS directly to them (bare metal)? I know from reading here physical servers have fallen out of style. Is this a use case where a physical server still serves a purpose?
Physical servers effectively have no purpose. It is extremely safe to say that you won't ever be the exception to that rule. There are exceptions, we should never mention them as they are so rare as to be ridiculous to contemplate in real world discussions. If you see any case and ask "doesn't this make a physical install make sense", that's the time to stop because something must be very wrong because there is no way that that will come up.
In this case, it feels that way because you are misunderstanding hyperconvergence and the storage of VMs and missing the essential "99% majority use case" model. There are only two models that any normal company needs to consider... stand alone boxes, and hyperconvergence. That's it. Don't even worry about anything else, it's so insanely rare that it's not reasonable to think about and if you get it wrong failing to SA/HC are "safe" mistakes, but skipping them and doing something else when you shouldn't is generally insanely expensive, complex, and risky.
One of the biggest mistakes nearly every IT person makes (and people in general, check the movie "He's Just Not That Into You"... is believing that they are the one exception to the rules. Everyone thinks it, but no one is. You aren't the exception, you are the rule (direct quote from the movie.) Same for me. I'm no exception. Same for everyone here. We all feel like we should be the exception, but none of us are. We are all the rule. Not on the edge, either. We are all very much exactly the rule.
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@Dashrender said in Gluster and RAID question:
Now I'm guessing this can't be done with Hyper-V, since that can't run inside Linux (as far as I know)
No T1 hypervisor can, by definition. T1 Hypervisors have to run on the bare metal, it's part of the definition.
Hyper-V needs a different product that is compatible with it to replace Gluster. This is why you define the pieces higher up before you even talk about the storage tech. Because the hypervisor determines that storage. Starting with Gluster is the cart driving the horse.
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@Pete-S said in Gluster and RAID question:
Yes, for instance the 2U 4-node servers from Supermicro.
Each node has 6 hot swap bays, dual CPUs, PCIe slot etc. So 4 complete servers in one.Problem there is, that's a very limited amount of storage. All that compute power, and almost no storage. But what he actually needs is the opposite.
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@biggen so here is what I'm thinking....
Goal: 500TB of storage for backups.
Proposed solution: Use MinIO in LXC or Docker
Looks absolutely nothing like what you were thinking, but approaches the problem from a "how do we solve the problem" perspective. Rather than "I have this technology, what problem might it solve."
Why use Samba for backup storage when you could use distributed object storage?
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@scottalanmiller said in Gluster and RAID question:
@Pete-S said in Gluster and RAID question:
Yes, for instance the 2U 4-node servers from Supermicro.
Each node has 6 hot swap bays, dual CPUs, PCIe slot etc. So 4 complete servers in one.Problem there is, that's a very limited amount of storage. All that compute power, and almost no storage. But what he actually needs is the opposite.
In this case yes, but you could for instance use the exact same model with 3.5" drives instead and get 3x16=48TB per node. Or if that is not enough, just go with hooking up external disc enclosures to those nodes that need lot's of storage - assuming that a cluster of nodes might be doing more than just backup.
For instance the 847 from Supermicro is pretty common. Gives you 44x3.5" hotswap bays in 4U. So 44x16=704TB raw storage.
You can use one enclosure to provide disk space for 4 nodes if you wanted. Hundred different options of course. You could also do three 2U servers, each with 16x3.5" bays giving you 256TB per server. It all depends on how high density and how flexible you need it to be.
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@Pete-S said in Gluster and RAID question:
You can use one enclosure to provide disk space for 4 nodes if you wanted. Hundred different options of course. It also depends on how high density and how flexible you need it to be.
The thing is, you only need one node. There's no purpose to the other three nodes
The enclosures with all the drives are great and make sense. The additional compute nodes don't, they aren't really serving any purpose at all here. This is really either a single node standalone system. Or it is a scale out system. Regardless of which approach you take, multiple nodes in one enclosure don't make sense for this kind of use case.