W E K A
4.4
4.4
  • WEKA v4.4 documentation
    • Documentation revision history
  • WEKA System Overview
    • Introduction
      • WEKA system functionality features
      • Converged WEKA system deployment
      • Redundancy optimization in WEKA
    • SSD capacity management
    • Filesystems, object stores, and filesystem groups
    • WEKA networking
    • Data lifecycle management
    • WEKA client and mount modes
    • WEKA containers architecture overview
    • Glossary
  • Planning and Installation
    • Prerequisites and compatibility
    • WEKA cluster installation on bare metal servers
      • Plan the WEKA system hardware requirements
      • Obtain the WEKA installation packages
      • Install the WEKA cluster using the WMS with WSA
      • Install the WEKA cluster using the WSA
      • Manually install OS and WEKA on servers
      • Manually prepare the system for WEKA configuration
        • Broadcom adapter setup for WEKA system
        • Enable the SR-IOV
      • Configure the WEKA cluster using the WEKA Configurator
      • Manually configure the WEKA cluster using the resources generator
        • VLAN tagging in the WEKA system
      • Perform post-configuration procedures
      • Add clients to an on-premises WEKA cluster
    • WEKA Cloud Deployment Manager Web (CDM Web) User Guide
    • WEKA Cloud Deployment Manager Local (CDM Local) User Guide
    • WEKA installation on AWS
      • WEKA installation on AWS using Terraform
        • Terraform-AWS-WEKA module description
        • Deployment on AWS using Terraform
        • Required services and supported regions
        • Supported EC2 instance types using Terraform
        • WEKA cluster auto-scaling in AWS
        • Detailed deployment tutorial: WEKA on AWS using Terraform
      • WEKA installation on AWS using the Cloud Formation
        • Self-service portal
        • CloudFormation template generator
        • Deployment types
        • AWS Outposts deployment
        • Supported EC2 instance types using Cloud Formation
        • Add clients to a WEKA cluster on AWS
        • Auto scaling group
        • Troubleshooting
    • WEKA installation on Azure
      • Azure-WEKA deployment Terraform package description
      • Deployment on Azure using Terraform
      • Required services and supported regions
      • Supported virtual machine types
      • Auto-scale virtual machines in Azure
      • Add clients to a WEKA cluster on Azure
      • Troubleshooting
      • Detailed deployment tutorial: WEKA on Azure using Terraform
    • WEKA installation on GCP
      • WEKA project description
      • GCP-WEKA deployment Terraform package description
      • Deployment on GCP using Terraform
      • Required services and supported regions
      • Supported machine types and storage
      • Auto-scale instances in GCP
      • Add clients to a WEKA cluster on GCP
      • Troubleshooting
      • Detailed deployment tutorial: WEKA on GCP using Terraform
      • Google Kubernetes Engine and WEKA over POSIX deployment
    • WEKA installation on OCI
  • Getting Started with WEKA
    • Manage the system using the WEKA GUI
    • Manage the system using the WEKA CLI
      • WEKA CLI hierarchy
      • CLI reference guide
    • Run first IOs with WEKA filesystem
    • Getting started with WEKA REST API
    • WEKA REST API and equivalent CLI commands
  • Performance
    • WEKA performance tests
      • Test environment details
  • WEKA Filesystems & Object Stores
    • Manage object stores
      • Manage object stores using the GUI
      • Manage object stores using the CLI
    • Manage filesystem groups
      • Manage filesystem groups using the GUI
      • Manage filesystem groups using the CLI
    • Manage filesystems
      • Manage filesystems using the GUI
      • Manage filesystems using the CLI
    • Attach or detach object store buckets
      • Attach or detach object store bucket using the GUI
      • Attach or detach object store buckets using the CLI
    • Advanced data lifecycle management
      • Advanced time-based policies for data storage location
      • Data management in tiered filesystems
      • Transition between tiered and SSD-only filesystems
      • Manual fetch and release of data
    • Mount filesystems
      • Mount filesystems from Single Client to Multiple Clusters (SCMC)
      • Manage authentication across multiple clusters with connection profiles
    • Snapshots
      • Manage snapshots using the GUI
      • Manage snapshots using the CLI
    • Snap-To-Object
      • Manage Snap-To-Object using the GUI
      • Manage Snap-To-Object using the CLI
    • Snapshot policies
      • Manage snapshot policies using the GUI
      • Manage snapshot policies using the CLI
    • Quota management
      • Manage quotas using the GUI
      • Manage quotas using the CLI
  • Additional Protocols
    • Additional protocol containers
    • Manage the NFS protocol
      • Supported NFS client mount parameters
      • Manage NFS networking using the GUI
      • Manage NFS networking using the CLI
    • Manage the S3 protocol
      • S3 cluster management
        • Manage the S3 service using the GUI
        • Manage the S3 service using the CLI
      • S3 buckets management
        • Manage S3 buckets using the GUI
        • Manage S3 buckets using the CLI
      • S3 users and authentication
        • Manage S3 users and authentication using the CLI
        • Manage S3 service accounts using the CLI
      • S3 lifecycle rules management
        • Manage S3 lifecycle rules using the GUI
        • Manage S3 lifecycle rules using the CLI
      • Audit S3 APIs
        • Configure audit webhook using the GUI
        • Configure audit webhook using the CLI
        • Example: How to use Splunk to audit S3
        • Example: How to use S3 audit events for tracking and security
      • S3 supported APIs and limitations
      • S3 examples using boto3
      • Configure and use AWS CLI with WEKA S3 storage
    • Manage the SMB protocol
      • Manage SMB using the GUI
      • Manage SMB using the CLI
  • Security
    • WEKA security overview
    • Obtain authentication tokens
    • Manage token expiration
    • Manage account lockout threshold policy
    • Manage KMS
      • Manage KMS using GUI
      • Manage KMS using CLI
    • Manage TLS certificates
      • Manage TLS certificates using GUI
      • Manage TLS certificates using CLI
    • Manage Cross-Origin Resource Sharing
    • Manage CIDR-based security policies
    • Manage login banner
  • Secure cluster membership with join secret authentication
  • Licensing
    • License overview
    • Classic license
  • Operation Guide
    • Alerts
      • Manage alerts using the GUI
      • Manage alerts using the CLI
      • List of alerts and corrective actions
    • Events
      • Manage events using the GUI
      • Manage events using the CLI
      • List of events
    • Statistics
      • Manage statistics using the GUI
      • Manage statistics using the CLI
      • List of statistics
    • Insights
    • System congestion
    • User management
      • Manage users using the GUI
      • Manage users using the CLI
    • Organizations management
      • Manage organizations using the GUI
      • Manage organizations using the CLI
      • Mount authentication for organization filesystems
    • Expand and shrink cluster resources
      • Add a backend server
      • Expand specific resources of a container
      • Shrink a cluster
    • Background tasks
      • Set up a Data Services container for background tasks
      • Manage background tasks using the GUI
      • Manage background tasks using the CLI
    • Upgrade WEKA versions
    • Manage WEKA drivers
  • Monitor the WEKA Cluster
    • Deploy monitoring tools using the WEKA Management Station (WMS)
    • WEKA Home - The WEKA support cloud
      • Local WEKA Home overview
      • Deploy Local WEKA Home v3.0 or higher
      • Deploy Local WEKA Home v2.x
      • Explore cluster insights
      • Explore performance statistics in Grafana
      • Manage alerts and integrations
      • Enforce security and compliance
      • Optimize support and data management
      • Export cluster metrics to Prometheus
    • Set up WEKAmon for external monitoring
    • Set up the SnapTool external snapshots manager
  • Kubernetes
    • Composable clusters for multi-tenancy in Kubernetes
    • WEKA Operator deployment
    • WEKA Operator day-2 operations
  • WEKApod
    • WEKApod Data Platform Appliance overview
    • WEKApod servers overview
    • Rack installation
    • WEKApod initial system setup and configuration
    • WEKApod support process
  • AWS Solutions
    • Amazon SageMaker HyperPod and WEKA Integrations
      • Deploy a new Amazon SageMaker HyperPod cluster with WEKA
      • Add WEKA to an existing Amazon SageMaker HyperPod cluster
    • AWS ParallelCluster and WEKA Integration
  • Azure Solutions
    • Azure CycleCloud for SLURM and WEKA Integration
  • Best Practice Guides
    • WEKA and Slurm integration
      • Avoid conflicting CPU allocations
    • Storage expansion best practice
  • Support
    • Get support for your WEKA system
    • Diagnostics management
      • Traces management
        • Manage traces using the GUI
        • Manage traces using the CLI
      • Protocols debug level management
        • Manage protocols debug level using the GUI
        • Manage protocols debug level using the CLI
      • Diagnostics data management
  • Appendices
    • WEKA CSI Plugin
      • Deployment
      • Storage class configurations
      • Tailor your storage class configuration with mount options
      • Dynamic and static provisioning
      • Launch an application using WEKA as the POD's storage
      • Add SELinux support
      • NFS transport failback
      • Upgrade legacy persistent volumes for capacity enforcement
      • Troubleshooting
    • Convert cluster to multi-container backend
    • Create a client image
    • Update WMS and WSA
    • BIOS tool
Powered by GitBook
On this page
  • Upload a snapshot
  • Create a filesystem from an uploaded snapshot
  • Manage synchronous snapshots
  • Download a synchronous snapshot
  • Recover from a remote snapshot
  1. WEKA Filesystems & Object Stores
  2. Snap-To-Object

Manage Snap-To-Object using the CLI

The Snap-To-Object feature enables the committing of all the data of a specific snapshot to an object store.

PreviousManage Snap-To-Object using the GUINextSnapshot policies

Last updated 5 months ago

Using the CLI, you can:

Upload a snapshot

Command: weka fs snapshot upload

Use the following command line to upload an existing snapshot:

weka fs snapshot upload <file-system> <snapshot> [--site site]

Parameters

Name
Value
Default

file-system*

Name of the filesystem

snapshot*

Name of the snapshot of the <file-system> filesystem to upload.

site*

Location for the snapshot upload. Mandatory only if both local and remote buckets are attached. Possible values: local or remote

Auto-selected if only one bucket for upload is attached.

Create a filesystem from an uploaded snapshot

Command: weka fs download

Use the following command to create or recreate a filesystem from an existing snapshot. If the snapshot originates from an encrypted source, be sure to include the required KMS-related parameters:

weka fs download <name> <group-name> <total-capacity> <ssd-capacity> <obs-bucket> <locator> [--auth-required auth-required] [--additional-obs additional-obs] [--snapshot-name snapshot-name] [--access-point access-point] [--kms-key-identifier kms-key-identifier] [--kms-namespace kms-namespace] [--kms-role-id kms-role-id] [--kms-secret-id kms-secret-id] [--skip-resource-validation]

When creating a filesystem from a snapshot, a background cluster task automatically prefetches its metadata, providing better latency for metadata queries.

Parameters

Name
Value
Default

name*

Name of the filesystem to create.

group-name*

Name of the filesystem group in which the new filesystem is placed.

total-capacity*

The total capacity of the downloaded filesystem.

ssd-capacity*

SSD capacity of the downloaded filesystem.

obs-bucket*

Object store name for tiering.

locator*

Object store locator obtained from a previously successful snapshot upload.

auth-required

Require authentication for the mounting user when mounting this filesystem. This setting is only applicable in the root organization; users in non-root organizations must always be authenticated to perform a mount operation. Format: yes or no.

no

additional-obs

An additional object-store name. If the data to recover reside in two object stores (a second object store attached to the filesystem, and the filesystem has not undergone full migration), this object store is attached in a read-only mode. The snapshot locator must be in the primary object store specified in the obs parameter.

snapshot-name

The downloaded snapshot name.

The uploaded snapshot name.

access-point

The downloaded snapshot access point.

The uploaded access point.

kms-key-identifier

Customize KMS key name for this filesystem (applicable only for HashiCorp Vault).

kms-namespace

Customize the KMS role ID for this filesystem (applicable only for HashiCorp Vault).

kms-role-id

Customize the KMS role ID for this filesystem (applicable only for HashiCorp Vault).

kms-secret-id

Customize the KMS secret ID for this filesystem (applicable only for HashiCorp Vault).

skip-resource-validation

Skip verifying RAM and SSD resource allocation for the downloaded filesystem on the cluster.

For encrypted filesystems, when downloading, you must use the same KMS cluster-wide key or, if configured, the per-filesystem encryption parameters to decrypt the snapshot data. For more information, see Manage KMS.

The locator can be a previously saved locator for disaster scenarios, or you can obtain the locator using the weka fs snapshot command on a system with a live filesystem with snapshots.

If you need to pause and resume the download process, use the command: weka cluster task pause / resume. To abort the download process, delete the downloaded filesystem directly. For details, see Background tasks.

Due to the bandwidth characteristics and potential costs when interacting with remote object stores it is not allowed to download a filesystem from a remote object-store bucket. If a snapshot on a local object-store bucket exists, it is advisable to use that one. Otherwise, follow the procedure inRecover from a remote snapshot.

Manage synchronous snapshots

The workflow to manage the synchronous snapshots includes:

  1. Upload snapshots using, for example, the snapshots scheduler. See Snapshots.

  2. Download the synchronous snapshot (described below).

Download a synchronous snapshot

Command: weka fs snapshot download

Use the following command line to download a synchronous snapshot. This command is only relevant for snapshots uploaded from a system of version 4.3 and later:

weka fs snapshot download <file-system> <locator>

Make sure to download synchronous snapshots in chronological order. Non-chronological snapshots are inefficient and are not synchronous.

If you need to download a snapshot earlier than the latest downloaded one, for example, when you need one of the daily synchronous snapshots after the weekly synchronous snapshot was downloaded, add the --allow-non-chronological flag to download it anyway.

Parameters

Name
Value

file-system*

Name of the filesystem.

locator*

Object store locator obtained from a previously successful snapshot upload.

If you need to pause and resume the download process, use the command: weka cluster task pause / resume. To abort the download process, delete the downloaded snapshot directly. For details, see Background tasks.

Related topics

Recover from a remote snapshot

When recovering a snapshot residing on a remote object store, it is required to define the object store bucket containing the snapshot as a local bucket.

To recover a snapshot residing on a remote object store, create a new filesystem from this snapshot as follows:

  1. Add a new local object-store, using weka fs tier obs add CLI command.

  2. Add a local object-store bucket, referring to the bucket containing the snapshot to recover, using weka fs tier s3 add.

  3. Download the filesystem, using weka fs download.

  4. If the recovered filesystem should also be tiered, add a local object store bucket for tiering using weka fs tier s3 add.

  5. Detach the initial object store bucket from the filesystem.

  6. Assuming you want a remote backup to this filesystem, attach a remote bucket to the filesystem.

  7. Remove the local object store bucket and local object store created for this procedure.

Restore a specific snapshot to a filesystem. See .

A remote object store has restrictions over the download, and we want to use a different local object store due to the QoS reasons explained in .

Upload a snapshot
Create a filesystem from an uploaded snapshot
Manage synchronous snapshots
Recover from a remote snapshot
Manage object stores
Restore a snapshot to a filesystem or another snapshot
Synchronous snapshots