Mount filesystems

To use a filesystem via the Weka filesystem driver, it has to be mounted on one of the cluster hosts. This page describes how this is performed.

Overview

There are two methods available for mounting a filesystem in one of the cluster hosts:

  1. Using the traditional method: See below and also refer to Adding Clients (Bare Metal Installation) or Adding Clients (AWS Installation), where first a client is configured and joins a cluster, after which a mount command is executed.

  2. Using the Stateless Clients feature: See Mounting Filesystems Using the Stateless Clients Feature below, which simplifies and improves the management of clients in the cluster and eliminates the Adding Clients process.

Mount a filesystem using the traditional method

Note: Using the mount command as explained below first requires the installation of the Weka client, configuring the client, and joining it to a Weka cluster.

To mount a filesystem on one of the cluster hosts, let’s assume the cluster has a filesystem called demo. To add this filesystem to a host, SSH into one of the hosts and run the mount command as the root user, as follows:

mkdir -p /mnt/weka/demo
mount -t wekafs demo /mnt/weka/demo

The general structure of the mount command for a Weka filesystem is:

mount -t wekafs [-o option[,option]...]] <fs-name> <mount-point>

There are two options for mounting a filesystem on a cluster client: read cache and write cache. Refer to the descriptions in the links below to understand the differences between these modes:

Mount a filesystem using the stateless clients feature

The Stateless Clients feature defers the process of joining the cluster until the mount is performed. Simplifying and improving the management of clients in the cluster. It removes tedious client management procedures, which is particularly beneficial in AWS installations where clients may join and leave at high frequency.

Furthermore, it unifies all security aspects in the mount command, eliminating the search for separate credentials at cluster join and mount.

To use the Stateless Clients feature, a Weka agent must be installed. Once this is complete, mounts can be created and configured using the mount command and can be easily removed from the cluster using the unmount command.

Note: To allow only Weka authenticated users to mount a filesystem, set the filesystem --auth-required flag to yes. For more information refer the Mount authentication for organization filesystems topic.

Assuming the Weka cluster is using the backend IP of 1.2.3.4, running the following command as root on a client will install the agent:

curl http://1.2.3.4:14000/dist/v1/install | sh

On completion, the agent is installed on the client machine.

Run the mount command

Command: mount -t wekafs

Use one of the following command lines to invoke the mount command (note, the delimiter between the server and filesystem can be either :/ or /):

mount -t wekafs -o <options> <backend0>[,<backend1>,...,<backendN>]/<fs> <mount-point>

Parameters

Name

Type

Value

Limitations

Mandatory

Default

options

See Additional Mount Options below

backend

String

IP/hostname of a backend host

Must be a valid name

Yes

fs

String

Filesystem name

Must be a valid name

Yes

mount-point

String

Path to mount on the local machine

Must be a valid path-name

Yes

Mount command options

Each mount option can be passed by an individual -o flag to mount.

For all clients types

Option

Value

Description

Default

Remount Supported

readcache

None

Set mode to read cache. Note: The SMB share mount mode is always readcache. Set this option to Yes.

No

Yes

writecache

None

Set mode to write cache

Yes

Yes

dentry_max_age_positive

Number in milliseconds

After the defined time period, every metadata cached entry is refreshed from the system, allowing the host to take into account metadata changes performed by other hosts.

1000

Yes

dentry_max_age_negative

Number in milliseconds

Each time a file or directory lookup fails, an entry specifying that the file or directory does not exist is created in the local dentry cache. This entry is refreshed after the defined time, allowing the host to use files or directories created by other hosts.

0

Yes

ro

None

Mount filesystem as read-only

No

Yes

rw

None

Mount filesystem as read-write

Yes

Yes

inode_bits

32, 64 or auto

Size of the inode in bits, which may be required for 32-bit applications.

Auto

No

verbose

None

Write debug logs to the console

No

Yes

quiet

None

Don't show any logs to console

No

Yes

acl

None

Can be defined per mount.

Setting POSIX ACLs can change the effective group permissions (via the mask permissions). When ACLs defined but the mount has no ACL, the effective group permissions are granted.)

No

No

obs_direct

None

No

Yes

noatime

None

Do not update inode access times

No

Yes

strictatime

None

Always update inode access times

No

Yes

relatime

None

Update inode access times only on modification or change, or if inode has been accessed and relatime_threshold has passed.

Yes

Yes

relatime_threshold

Number in seconds

How much time (in seconds) to wait since an inode has been accessed (not modified) before updating the access time.

0 means to never update the access time on access only.

This option is relevant only if relatime is on.

0 (infinite)

Yes

nosuid

None

Do not take suid/sgid bits into effect.

No

Yes

nodev

None

Do not interpret character or block special devices.

No

Yes

noexec

None

Do not allow direct execution of any binaries.

No

Yes

file_create_mask

Numeric (octal) notation of POSIX permissions

Newly created file permissions are masked with the creation mask. For example, if a user creates a file with permissions=777 but the file_create_mask is 770, the file will be created with 770 permissions.

First, the umask is taken into account, followed by the file_create_mask and then the force_file_mode.

0777

Yes

directory_create_mask

Numeric (octal) notation of POSIX permissions

Newly created directory permissions are masked with the creation mask. For example, if a user creates a directory with permissions=777 but the directory_create_mask is 770, the directory will be created with 770 permissions.

First, the umask is taken into account, followed by the directory_create_mask and then the force_directory_mode.

0777

Yes

force_file_mode

Numeric (octal) notation of POSIX permissions

Newly created file permissions are logically OR'ed with the mode. For example, if a user creates a file with permissions 770 but the force_file_mode is 775, the resulting file will be created with mode 775.

First, the umask is taken into account, followed by the file_create_mask and then the force_file_mode.

0

Yes

force_directory_mode

Numeric (octal) notation of POSIX permissions

Newly created directory permissions are logically OR'ed with the mode. For example, if a user creates a directory with permissions 770 but the force_directory_mode is 775, the resulting directory will be created with mode 775.

First, the umask is taken into account, followed by the directory_create_mask and then the force_directory_mode.

0

Yes

Remount of general options

You can remount using the mount options marked as Remount Supported in the above table (mount -o remount).

When a mount option has been explicitly changed, you must set it again in the remount operation to ensure it retains its value. For example, if you mount with ro, a remount without it changes the mount option to the default rw. If you mount with rw, it is not required to re-specify the mount option because this is the default.

Additional mount options using the stateless clients feature

Option

Value

Description

Default

Remount supported

memory_mb=<memory_mb>

Number

Amount of memory to be used by the client (for huge pages)

1400 MiB

Yes

num_cores=<frontend-cores>

Number

The number of frontend cores to allocate for the client.

Either<num_cores> or<core> can be specified, but not both.

If none are specified, the client will be configured with 1 core.

If 0 is specified then you must use net=udp.

1

No

core=<core>

Number

Specify explicit cores to be used by the WekaFS client. Multiple cores can be specified. Core 0 is not allowed.

No

net=<netdev>[/<ip>/<bits>[/<gateway>]]

String

This option must be specified for on-premises installation, and must not be specified for AWS installations.

For more info refer to Advanced Network Configuration via Mount Options section.

No

bandwidth_mbps=<bandwidth_mbps>

Number

Maximum network bandwidth in Mb/s, which limits the traffic that the container can send.

The bandwidth setting is helpful in deployments like AWS, where the bandwidth is limited but allowed to burst.

Auto-select

Yes

remove_after_secs=<secs>

Number

The number of seconds without connectivity after which the client will be removed from the cluster. Minimum value: 60 seconds.

86,400 seconds (24 hours)

Yes

traces_capacity_mb=<size-in-mb>

Number

Traces capacity limit in MB.

Minimum value: 512 MB.

No

reserve_1g_hugepages

None

Controls the page allocation algorithm if to reserve only 2 MB huge pages or also 1 GB ones.

Yes

Yes

readahead_kb=<readahead>

Number in KB

Controls the readahead per mount (higher readahead better for sequential reads of large files).

32768

Yes

auth_token_path

String

Path to the mount authentication token (per mount).

~/.weka/auth-token.json

No

dedicated_mode

full or none

Determine whether DPKD networking dedicates a core (full) or not (none). none can only be set when the NIC driver supports it. See DPDK Without Core Dedication section. This option is relevant when using DPDK networking (net=udp is not set).

full

No

qos_preferred_throughput_mbps

Number

Preferred requests rate for QoS in megabytes per second.

No limit. The cluster admin can set this default. See Set mount option default values.

Yes

qos_max_throughput_mbps

Number

Maximum requests rate for QoS in megabytes per second. This option allows bursting above the specified limit but aims to keep this limit on average.

No limit. The cluster admin can set this default. See Set mount option default values.

Yes

qos_max_ops

Number

Maximum number of IO operations a client can perform per second. Set a limit to a client or clients to prevent starvation from the rest of the clients.

No limit. Do not set this option for mounting from a backend.

Yes

connect_timeout_secs

Number

The timeout, in seconds, for establishing a connection to a single host.


10

Yes

response_timeout_secs

Number

The timeout, in seconds, waiting for the response from a single host.

60

Yes

join_timeout_secs

Number

The timeout, in seconds, for the client container to join the Weka cluster.

360

Yes

Note: These parameters, if not stated otherwise, are only effective on the first mount command for each client.

Note: By default, the command selects the optimal core allocation for Weka. If necessary, multiple core parameters can be used to allocate specific cores to the WekaFS client. E.g., mount -t wekafs -o core=2 -o core=4 -o net=ib0 backend-host-0/my_fs /mnt/weka

Example: On-Premise Installations

mount -t wekafs -o num_cores=1 -o net=ib0 backend-host-0/my_fs /mnt/weka

Running this command on a host installed with the Weka agent will download the appropriate Weka version from the hostbackend-host-0and create a Weka container that allocates a single core and a named network interface (ib0). Then it will join the cluster that backend-host-0 is part of and mount the filesystem my_fs on /mnt/weka.

mount -t wekafs -o num_cores=0 -o net=udp backend-host-0/my_fs /mnt/weka

Running this command will use UDP mode (usually selected when the use of DPDK is not available).

Example: AWS Installations

mount -t wekafs -o num_cores=2 backend1,backend2,backend3/my_fs /mnt/weka

Running this command on an AWS host will allocate two cores (multiple-frontends) and attach and configure two ENIs on the new client. The client will attempt to rejoin the cluster via all three backends used in the command line.

For stateless clients, the first mount command installs the weka client software and joins the cluster). Any subsequent mount command, can either use the same syntax or just the traditional/per-mount parameters as defined in Mounting Filesystems since it is not necessary to join a cluster.

It is now possible to access Weka filesystems via the mount-point, e.g., by cd /mnt/weka/ command.

After the execution of anumount command, which unmounts the last Weka filesystem, the client is disconnected from the cluster and will be uninstalled by the agent. Consequently, executing a new mount command requires the specification of the cluster, cores, and networking parameters again.

Note: When running in AWS, the instance IAM role is required to provide permissions to several AWS APIs, as described in IAM Role Created in Template.

Note: Memory allocation for a client is predefined. Contact the Weka Support Team when it is necessary to change the amount of memory allocated to a client.

Remount of stateless clients options

Mount options marked as Remount Supported in the above table can be remounted (using mount -o remount). When a mount option is not set in the remount operation, it will retain its current value. To set a mount option back to its default value, use the default modifier (e.g., memory_mb=default).

Set mount option default values

The defaults of the mount options qos_max_throughput_mbps and qos_preferred_throughput_mbps have no limit.

The cluster admin can set these default values to meet the organization's requirements, reset to the initial default values (no limit), or show the existing values.

The mount option defaults are only relevant for new mounts performed and do not influence the existing ones.

Commands:

weka cluster mount-defaults set

weka cluster mount-defaults reset

weka cluster mount-defaults show

To set the mount option default values, run the following command:

weka cluster mount-defaults set [--qos-max-throughput qos-max-throughput] [--qos-preferred-throughput qos-preferred-throughput]

Parameters

Option

Value

Description

qos_max_throughput

Number

Sets the default value for the qos_max_throughput_mbps option, which is the max requests rate for QoS in megabytes per second.

qos_preferred_throughput

Number

Sets the default value for the qos_preferred_throughput_mbps option, which is the preferred requests rate for QoS in megabytes per second.

Advanced network configuration by mount options

When using a stateless client, it is possible to alter and control many different networking options, such as:

  • Virtual functions

  • IPs

  • Gateway (in case the client is on a different subnet)

  • Physical network devices (for performance and HA)

  • UDP mode

Use -o net=<netdev> mount option with the various modifiers as described below.

<netdev> is either the name, MAC address, or PCI address of the physical network device (can be a bond device) to allocate for the client.

Note: When using wekafs mounts, both clients and backends should use the same type of networking technology (either IB or Ethernet).

IP, subnet, gateway, and virtual functions

For higher performance, the usage of multiple Frontends may be required. When using a NIC other than Mellanox or Intel E810, or when mounting a DPDK client on a VM, it is required to use SR-IOV to expose a VF of the physical device to the client. Once exposed, it can be configured via the mount command.

To determine the VFs IP addresses, or when the client resides in a different subnet and routing is needed in the data network, usenet=<netdev>/[ip]/[bits]/[gateway].

ip, bits, gateway are optional. If these options are not provided, the Weka system performs one of the following depending on the environment:

  • Cloud environment: the Weka system deduces the values of these options.

  • On-premises environment: the Weka system allocates values of these options from the cluster default network (the weka cluster default-net must be set before running the mount command). Otherwise, the Weka cluster does not allocate the IP for the client. For more details, see Optional: Configure default data networking.

For example, the following command allocates two cores and a single physical network device (intel0). It will configure two VFs for the device and assign each one of them to one of the frontend nodes. The first node will receive a 192.168.1.100 IP address, and the second will use a 192.168.1.101 IP address. Both of the IPs have 24 network mask bits and a default gateway of 192.168.1.254.

mount -t wekafs -o num_cores=2 -o net=intel0/192.168.1.100+192.168.1.101/24/192.168.1.254 backend1/my_fs /mnt/weka

Multiple physical network devices for performance and HA

It is possible to use more than one physical network device for performance or high availability.

Using multiple physical network devices for better performance

It's easy to saturate the bandwidth of a single network interface when using WekaFS. It is possible to leverage multiple network interface cards (NICs) for higher throughput. The -o net notation shown in the examples above can be used to pass the names of specific NICs to the WekaFS host driver.

For example, the following command will allocate two cores and two physical network devices for increased throughput:

mount -t wekafs -o num_cores=2 -o net=mlnx0 -o net=mlnx1 backend1/my_fs /mnt/weka

Using multiple physical network devices for HA configuration

Multiple NICs can also be configured to achieve redundancy (refer to Weka Networking HA section for more information) in addition to higher throughput, for a complete, highly available solution. For that, use more than one physical device as previously described and, also, specify the client management IPs using -o mgmt_ip=<ip>+<ip2> command-line option.

For example, the following command will use two network devices for HA networking and allocate both devices to four Frontend processes on the client. The modifier ha is used here, which means using the device on all processes.

mount -t wekafs -o num_cores=4 -o net:ha=mlnx0,net:ha=mlnx1 backend1/my_fs -o mgmt_ip=10.0.0.1+10.0.0.2 /mnt/weka

Advanced mounting options for multiple physical network devices

With multiple Frontend processes (as expressed by -o num_cores), it is possible to control what processes use what NICs. This can be accomplished through the use of special command line modifiers called slots. In WekaFS, slot is synonymous with a process number. Typically, the first WekaFS Frontend process will occupy slot 1, then the second - slot 2 and so on.

Examples of slot notation include s1, s2, s2+1, s1-2, slots1+3, slot1, slots1-4 , where - specifies a range of devices, while + specifies a list. For example, s1-4 implies slots 1, 2, 3 and 4, while s1+4 specifies slots 1 and 4 only.

For example, in the following command, mlnx0 is bound to the second Frontend process whilemlnx1 to the first one for improved performance.

mount -t wekafs -o num_cores=2 -o net:s2=mlnx0,net:s1=mlnx1 backend1/my_fs /mnt/weka

For example, in the following HA mounting command, two cores (two Frontend processes) and two physical network devices (mlnx0, mlnx1) are allocated. By explicitly specifying s2+1, s1-2 modifiers for network devices, both devices will be used by both Frontend processes. Notation s2+1 stands for the first and second processes, while s1-2 stands for the range of 1 to 2, and are effectively the same.

mount -t wekafs -o num_cores=2 -o net:s2+1=mlnx0,net:s1-2=mlnx1 backend1/my_fs -o mgmt_ip=10.0.0.1+10.0.0.2 /mnt/weka

UDP mode

In cases where DPDK cannot be used, it is possible to use WekaFS in UDP mode through the kernel. Use net=udp in the mount command to set the UDP networking mode, for example:

mount -t wekafs -o num_cores=0 -o net=udp backend-host-0/my_fs /mnt/weka

Note: A client in UDP mode cannot be configured in HA mode. However, the client can still work with a highly available cluster.

Note: Providing multiple IPs in the <mgmt-ip> in UDP mode will utilize their network interfaces for more bandwidth (can be useful in RDMA environments), rather than using only one NIC.

Mount filesystems using fstab

Note: This option works when using stateless clients and with OS that supports systemd (e.g.: RHEL/CentOS 7.2 and up, Ubuntu 16.04 and up, Amazon Linux 2 LTS).

Edit /etc/fstab file to include the filesystem mount entry:

  • A comma-separated list of backend hosts, with the filesystem name

  • The mount point

  • Filesystem type - wekafs

  • Mount options:

    • Configure systemd to wait for the weka-agent service to come up, and set the filesystem as a network filesystem, e.g.:

      x-systemd.requires=weka-agent.service,x-systemd.mount-timeout=infinity,_netdev

    • Any additional wekafs supported mount option

  • A comma-separated list of backend hosts, with the filesystem name

  • The mount point

  • Filesystem type - wekafs

  • Mount options:

    • Configure systemd to wait for the weka-agent service to come up, and set the filesystem as a network filesystem, e.g.:

      x-systemd.requires=weka-agent.service,x-systemd.mount-timeout=infinity,_netdev

    • Any additional wekafs supported mount option

# create a mount point 
mkdir -p /mnt/weka/my_fs

# edit fstab file
vi /etc/fstab

# fstab with weka options (example, change with your desired settings)
backend-0,backend-1,backend-3/my_fs /mnt/weka/my_fs  wekafs  num_cores=1,net=eth1,x-systemd.requires=weka-agent.service,x-systemd.mount-timeout=infinity,_netdev   0       0

Reboot the machine for the systemd unit to be created and marked correctly.

The filesystem should now be mounted at boot time.

Note: Do not configure this entry for a mounted filesystem before un-mounting it (umount), as the systemd needs to mark the filesystem as a network filesystem (occurs as part of the reboot). Trying to reboot a host when there is a mounted WekaFS filesystem when setting its fstab configuration might yield a failure to unmount the filesystem and leave the system hanged.

Mount filesystems using autofs

Procedure:

  1. Install autofs on the host using one of the following commands according to your deployment:

  • On RedHat or Centos:

yum install -y autofs
  • On Debian or Ubuntu:

apt-get install -y autofs

2. To create the autofs configuration files for Weka filesystems, do one of the following depending on the client type:

  • For a stateful client (traditional), run the following commands:

echo "/mnt/weka   /etc/auto.wekafs -fstype=wekafs" > /etc/auto.master.d/wekafs.autofs
echo "*   &" > /etc/auto.wekafs

3. Restart the autofs service:

service autofs restart

4. The configuration is distribution-dependent. Verify that the service is configured to start automatically after restarting the host. Run the following command: systemctl is-enabled autofs. If the output is enabled the service is configured to start automatically.

Example: In Amazon Linux, you can verify that the autofs service is configured to start automatically by running the command chkconfig. If the output is on for the current runlevel (you can check with therunlevel command), autofs is enabled upon restart.

# chkconfig | grep autofs
autofs         0:off 1:off 2:off 3:on 4:on 5:on 6:off

Once you complete this procedure, it is possible to access Weka filesystems using the command cd /mnt/weka/<fs-name>.

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