Installing Gluster on CentOS 7
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@penguinwrangler said in Installing Gluster on CentOS 7:
I was thinking about doing Gluster Storage for my three KVM Hosts and keep my KVM VMs there. So if I made a virtual machine for the Gluster that used all the storage on each machine and then mounted the Gluster store in each KVM host for storage, would there be any disadvantage to that?
That's Red Hat's HCI model.
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@scottalanmiller @travisdh1 Another question. I have two SSDs for the main OS (RAID 1), CentOS, then I have the 8 TB enterprise drive for the gluster store. What are your thoughts of needing raid on the 8 TB drive that would be in each machine? I was going to have the gluster store replicate itself to each machine so we only have 8 TB of storage but in theory, we could lose two of the machines and be okay, correct? In a perfect world, I would raid the 8 TB drives with a raid 1 for redundancy, however, this is for my friend who is at a school district that literally doesn't have two pennies to rub together, so the cost of the drives is an issue. He is just now starting to virtualize machines after I have been badgering him forever about it. He picked up some refurbished supermicro servers that we will be using.
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@penguinwrangler said in Installing Gluster on CentOS 7:
@scottalanmiller @travisdh1 Another question. I have two SSDs for the main OS (RAID 1), CentOS, then I have the 8 TB enterprise drive for the gluster store. What are your thoughts of needing raid on the 8 TB drive that would be in each machine? I was going to have the gluster store replicate itself to each machine so we only have 8 TB of storage but in theory, we could lose two of the machines and be okay, correct? In a perfect world, I would raid the 8 TB drives with a raid 1 for redundancy, however, this is for my friend who is at a school district that literally doesn't have two pennies to rub together, so the cost of the drives is an issue. He is just now starting to virtualize machines after I have been badgering him forever about it. He picked up some refurbished supermicro servers that we will be using.
What you have with the gluster configuration is already a network based triple mirror. Having a local RAID and a gluster setup becomes a waste of resources quick.
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@travisdh1 That is where my thinking was going, just wanted to make sure I was
on the correct pagegoing down the right path. -
@penguinwrangler said in Installing Gluster on CentOS 7:
I was thinking about doing Gluster Storage for my three KVM Hosts and keep my KVM VMs there. So if I made a virtual machine for the Gluster that used all the storage on each machine and then mounted the Gluster store in each KVM host for storage, would there be any disadvantage to that?
Why I cant visualize this....
So 3 KVM hosts. Node 1/2/3
And you will make VM that will use the storage, on Node 1/2/3. But how will you overcome the cannot use root partitions with Gluster?
Then you will mount the storage again from Node/1/2/3. But what if the VM went down ? is it an SPOF ?
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@emad-r said in Installing Gluster on CentOS 7:
@penguinwrangler said in Installing Gluster on CentOS 7:
I was thinking about doing Gluster Storage for my three KVM Hosts and keep my KVM VMs there. So if I made a virtual machine for the Gluster that used all the storage on each machine and then mounted the Gluster store in each KVM host for storage, would there be any disadvantage to that?
Why I cant visualize this....
So 3 KVM hosts. Node 1/2/3
And you will make VM that will use the storage, on Node 1/2/3. But how will you overcome the cannot use root partitions with Gluster?
He has a completely separate drive for the Gluster storage. Doesn't even need to deal with partitioning a single drive.
Then you will mount the storage again from Node/1/2/3. But what if the VM went down ? is it an SPOF ?
Well, the likely hood that one of the VMs would go down is less likely than having a hardware issue with one of the nodes.
When a VM or hardware issue comes up, then that one node/VM drops out of the Gluster group. Now you have 2 nodes active instead of 3. When the one that went down is restored, the data is copied back from the two active nodes.
For a bit of a visual example: https://docs.google.com/document/d/17uSypf3QfAH-E9xHY_6brbOOfRYO5QUzrtmm8Y1vhIA/edit?usp=sharing
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@scottalanmiller Thanks for this post and answering all my questions. @travisdh1 Thanks for answering all my questions as well. Good Thread!