Thanks for the explanation – that helps a lot. In that case, I actually want the 10.174.1.0/24 network to be both my cluster and my public network, because I want all “heavy” data traffic to be on that network.
And by “heavy”, I mean large volumes of data, both normal Ceph client traffic and OSD-to-OSD communication. Contrast this with the more “control plane” connections between the MONs and the OSDs, which we intend to go over the lighter-weight management network. The documentation seems to indicate that the MONs also communicate on the “public” network, but our MONs aren’t currently on that network (we were treating it as an OSD/Client network). I guess I need to put
them on that network…? Thanks. Jon Heese ** This message contains confidential information, which also may be privileged, and is intended only for the person(s) addressed above. Any unauthorized use, distribution, copying or disclosure
of confidential and/or privileged information is strictly prohibited. If you have received this communication in error, please erase all copies of the message and its attachments and notify the sender immediately via reply e-mail. ** From: Campbell, Bill [mailto:bcampbell@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx]
The "public" network is where all storage accesses from other systems or clients will occur. When you map RBD's to other hosts, access object storage through the
RGW, or CephFS access, you will access the data through the "public" network. The "cluster" network is where all internal replication between OSD processes will occur. As an example in our set up, we have a 10GbE public network for hypervisor nodes to access,
along with a 10GbE cluster network for back-end replication/communication. Our 1GbE network is used for monitoring integration and system administration. From:
"Jon Heese" <jheese@xxxxxxxxx> Hello, We have two separate networks in our Ceph cluster design: 10.197.5.0/24 - The "front end" network, "skinny pipe", all 1Gbe, intended to be a management or control plane network 10.174.1.0/24 - The "back end" network, "fat pipe", all OSD nodes use 2x bonded 10Gbe, intended to be the data network So we want all of the OSD traffic to go over the "back end", and the MON traffic to go over the "front end". We thought the following would do that: public network = 10.197.5.0/24 # skinny pipe, mgmt & MON traffic cluster network = 10.174.1.0/24 # fat pipe, OSD traffic But that doesn't seem to be the case -- iftop and netstat show that little/no OSD communication is happening over the 10.174.1 network and it's all happening over the 10.197.5 network. What configuration should we be running to enforce the networks per our design? Thanks! Jon Heese ** This message contains confidential information, which also may be privileged, and is intended only for the person(s) addressed above. Any unauthorized use, distribution, copying or disclosure
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