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Dot Hill AssuredSAN Fibre Channel and iSCSI drivers
The DotHillFCDriver
and DotHillISCSIDriver
volume drivers allow Dot Hill arrays to be used for block storage in
OpenStack deployments.
System requirements
To use the Dot Hill drivers, the following are required:
- Dot Hill AssuredSAN array with:
- iSCSI or FC host interfaces
- G22x firmware or later
- Appropriate licenses for the snapshot and copy volume features
- Network connectivity between the OpenStack host and the array management interfaces
- HTTPS or HTTP must be enabled on the array
Supported operations
- Create, delete, attach, and detach volumes.
- Create, list, and delete volume snapshots.
- Create a volume from a snapshot.
- Copy an image to a volume.
- Copy a volume to an image.
- Clone a volume.
- Extend a volume.
- Migrate a volume with back-end assistance.
- Retype a volume.
- Manage and unmanage a volume.
Configuring the array
Verify that the array can be managed via an HTTPS connection. HTTP can also be used if
dothill_api_protocol=http
is placed into the appropriate sections of thecinder.conf
file.Confirm that virtual pools A and B are present if you plan to use virtual pools for OpenStack storage.
If you plan to use vdisks instead of virtual pools, create or identify one or more vdisks to be used for OpenStack storage; typically this will mean creating or setting aside one disk group for each of the A and B controllers.
Edit the
cinder.conf
file to define an storage back-end entry for each storage pool on the array that will be managed by OpenStack. Each entry consists of a unique section name, surrounded by square brackets, followed by options specified inkey=value
format.- The
dothill_backend_name
value specifies the name of the storage pool or vdisk on the array. - The
volume_backend_name
option value can be a unique value, if you wish to be able to assign volumes to a specific storage pool on the array, or a name that is shared among multiple storage pools to let the volume scheduler choose where new volumes are allocated. - The rest of the options will be repeated for each storage pool in a
given array: the appropriate Cinder driver name; IP address or hostname
of the array management interface; the username and password of an array
user account with
manage
privileges; and the iSCSI IP addresses for the array if using the iSCSI transport protocol.
In the examples below, two back ends are defined, one for pool A and one for pool B, and a common
volume_backend_name
is used so that a single volume type definition can be used to allocate volumes from both pools.iSCSI example back-end entries
[pool-a] dothill_backend_name = A volume_backend_name = dothill-array volume_driver = cinder.volume.drivers.dothill.dothill_iscsi.DotHillISCSIDriver san_ip = 10.1.2.3 san_login = manage san_password = !manage dothill_iscsi_ips = 10.2.3.4,10.2.3.5 [pool-b] dothill_backend_name = B volume_backend_name = dothill-array volume_driver = cinder.volume.drivers.dothill.dothill_iscsi.DotHillISCSIDriver san_ip = 10.1.2.3 san_login = manage san_password = !manage dothill_iscsi_ips = 10.2.3.4,10.2.3.5
Fibre Channel example back-end entries
[pool-a] dothill_backend_name = A volume_backend_name = dothill-array volume_driver = cinder.volume.drivers.dothill.dothill_fc.DotHillFCDriver san_ip = 10.1.2.3 san_login = manage san_password = !manage [pool-b] dothill_backend_name = B volume_backend_name = dothill-array volume_driver = cinder.volume.drivers.dothill.dothill_fc.DotHillFCDriver san_ip = 10.1.2.3 san_login = manage san_password = !manage
- The
If any
volume_backend_name
value refers to a vdisk rather than a virtual pool, add an additional statementdothill_backend_type = linear
to that back-end entry.If HTTPS is not enabled in the array, include
dothill_api_protocol = http
in each of the back-end definitions.If HTTPS is enabled, you can enable certificate verification with the option
dothill_verify_certificate=True
. You may also use thedothill_verify_certificate_path
parameter to specify the path to a CA_BUNDLE file containing CAs other than those in the default list.Modify the
[DEFAULT]
section of thecinder.conf
file to add anenabled_backends
parameter specifying the back-end entries you added, and adefault_volume_type
parameter specifying the name of a volume type that you will create in the next step.Example of [DEFAULT] section changes
[DEFAULT] # ... enabled_backends = pool-a,pool-b default_volume_type = dothill # ...
Create a new volume type for each distinct
volume_backend_name
value that you added to cinder.conf. The example below assumes that the samevolume_backend_name=dothill-array
option was specified in all of the entries, and specifies that the volume typedothill
can be used to allocate volumes from any of them.Example of creating a volume type
$ openstack volume type create dothill $ openstack volume type set --property volume_backend_name=dothill-array dothill
After modifying
cinder.conf
, restart thecinder-volume
service.
Driver-specific options
The following table contains the configuration options that are specific to the Dot Hill drivers.