Manage filesystems using the CLI

This page describes how to view and manage filesystems using the CLI.

Using the CLI, you can perform the following actions:

View filesystems

Command: weka fs

Use this command to view information on the filesystems in the WEKA system.

Enter the relevant parameters and click Create to create the filesystem.

Create a filesystem

Command: weka fs create

Use the following command line to create a filesystem:

weka fs create <name> <group-name> <total-capacity> [--ssd-capacity <ssd-capacity>] [--thin-provision-min-ssd <thin-provision-min-ssd>] [--thin-provision-max-ssd <thin-provision-max-ssd>] [--max-files <max-files>] [--encrypted] [--obs-name <obs-name>] [--auth-required <auth-required>]

Parameters

Name

Type

Value

Limitations

Mandatory

Default

name

String

Name of the filesystem being created

Must be a valid name

Yes

group-name

String

Name of the filesystem group to which the new filesystem is to be connected

Must be a valid name

Yes

total-capacity

Number

Total capacity of the new filesystem

Minimum of 1GiB

Yes

ssd-capacity

Number

For tiered filesystems, this is the SSD capacity. If not specified, the filesystem is pinned to SSD

Minimum of 1GiB

No.

To set a thin provisioned filesystem the thin-provision-min-ssd attribute must be used instead.

SSD capacity will be set to total capacity

thin-provision-min-ssd

Number

For thin-provisioned filesystems, this is the minimum SSD capacity that is ensured to be always available to this filesystem

Minimum of 1GiB

No.

Must be set when defining a thin-provisioned filesystem.

thin-provision-max-ssd

Number

For thin-proviosined filesystem, this is the maximum SSD capacity the filesystem can consume

Cannot exceed the total-capacity

max-files

Number

Metadata allocation for this filesystem

Must be a valid number

No

Automatically calculated by the system based on the SSD capacity

encrypted

Boolean

Encryption of filesystem

No

No

obs-name

String

Object store name for tiering

Must be a valid name

Mandatory for tiered filesystems

auth-required

String

Determines if mounting the filesystem requires to be authenticated to WEKA (see User management)

yes or no Enabling authentication is not allowed for a filesystem hosting NFS client permissions or SMB shares.

No

no

Note: When creating an encrypted filesystem a KMS must be defined.

Note: To define an encrypted filesystem without a KMS, it is possible to use the--allow-no-kms parameter in the command. This can be useful when running POCs but should not be used in production, since the security chain is compromised when a KMS is not used.

If filesystem keys exist when adding a KMS, they are automatically re-encrypted by the KMS for any future use.

Add a filesystem when thin-provisioning is used

To create a new filesystem, the SSD space for the filesystem must be free and unprovisioned. When using thin-provisioned filesystems, that might not be the case. SSD space can be occupied for the thin-provisioned portion of other filesystems. Even if those are tiered, and data can be released (to object-store) or deleted, the SSD space can still get filled when data keeps being written or rehydrated from the object-store.

To create a new filesystem in this case, use the weka fs reserve CLI command. Once enough space is cleared from the SSD (either by releasing to object-store or explicit deletion of data), it is possible to create the new filesystem using the reserved space.tse

Edit a filesystem

Command: weka fs update

Use the following command line to edit an existing filesystem:

weka fs update <name> [--new-name=<new-name>] [--total-capacity=<total-capacity>] [--ssd-capacity=<ssd-capacity>] [--thin-provision-min-ssd <thin-provision-min-ssd>] [--thin-provision-max-ssd <thin-provision-max-ssd>] [--max-files=<max-files>] [--auth-required=<auth-required>]

Parameters

Name

Type

Value

Limitations

Mandatory

Default

name

String

Name of the filesystem being edited

Must be a valid name

Yes

new-name

String

New name for the filesystem

Must be a valid name

Optional

Keep unchanged

total-capacity

Number

Total capacity of the edited filesystem

Must be a valid number

Optional

Keep unchanged

ssd-capacity

Number

SSD capacity of the edited filesystem

Minimum of 1GiB

Optional

Keep unchanged

thin-provision-min-ssd

Number

For thin-provisioned filesystems, this is the minimum SSD capacity that is ensured to be always available to this filesystem

Minimum of 1GiB

Optional

thin-provision-max-ssd

Number

For thin-proviosined filesystem, this is the maximum SSD capacity the filesystem can consume

Cannot exceed the total-capacity

Optional

max-files

Number

Metadata limit for the filesystem

Must be a valid number

Optional

Keep unchanged

auth-required

String

Determines if mounting the filesystem requires to be authenticated to Weka (weka user login)

yes or no For a filesystem hosting NFS exports or SMB shares, enabling authentication is not allowed.

No

no

Delete a filesystem

Command: weka fs delete

Use the following command line to delete a filesystem:

weka fs delete <name> [--purge-from-obs]

Parameters

Name

Type

Value

Limitations

Mandatory

Default

name

String

Name of the filesystem to be deleted

Must be a valid name

Yes

purge-from-obs

Boolean

For a tiered filesystem, if set, all filesystem data is deleted from the object store bucket.

No

False

Note: Using purge-from-obs will remove all data from the object-store. This includes any backup data or snapshots created from this filesystem (if this filesystem has been downloaded from a snapshot of a different filesystem, it will leave the original snapshot data intact).

  • If any of the removed snapshots have been (or are) downloaded and used by a different filesystem, that filesystem will stop functioning correctly, data might be unavailable and errors might occur when accessing the data.

It is possible to either un-tier or migrate such a filesystem to a different object store bucket before deleting the snapshots it has downloaded.

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