Upgrade Guide

Red Hat Ceph Storage 6

Upgrading a Red Hat Ceph Storage Cluster

Red Hat Ceph Storage Documentation Team

Abstract

This document provides instructions on upgrading a Red Hat Ceph Storage cluster running Red Hat Enterprise Linux on AMD64 and Intel 64 architectures.
Red Hat is committed to replacing problematic language in our code, documentation, and web properties. We are beginning with these four terms: master, slave, blacklist, and whitelist. Because of the enormity of this endeavor, these changes will be implemented gradually over several upcoming releases. For more details, see our CTO Chris Wright's message.

Chapter 1. Upgrade a Red Hat Ceph Storage cluster using cephadm

As a storage administrator, you can use the cephadm Orchestrator to upgrade Red Hat Ceph Storage 5 and later.

Note

Upgrading directly from Red Hat Ceph Storage 4 to Red Hat Ceph Storage 6 is not supported.

The automated upgrade process follows Ceph best practices. For example:

  • The upgrade order starts with Ceph Managers, Ceph Monitors, then other daemons.
  • Each daemon is restarted only after Ceph indicates that the cluster will remain available.

The storage cluster health status is likely to switch to HEALTH_WARNING during the upgrade. When the upgrade is complete, the health status should switch back to HEALTH_OK.

Warning

If you have a Red Hat Ceph Storage 6 cluster with multi-site configured, do not upgrade to the latest version of 6.1.z1 as there are issues with data corruption on encrypted objects when objects replicate to the disaster recovery (DR) site.

Note

You do not get a message once the upgrade is successful. Run ceph versions and ceph orch ps commands to verify the new image ID and the version of the storage cluster.

Warning

The Ceph iSCSI gateway is removed from Red Hat Ceph Storage 6. Therefore, you need to manage the iSCSI LUNs before upgrading from Red Hat Ceph Storage 5 to Red Hat Ceph Storage 6.

When you upgrade a Red Hat Ceph Storage cluster from RHCS 5 to RHCS 6, RBD images that were exported through iSCSI are preserved, therefore data is not lost. However, because all iSCSI targets disappear with the upgrade, data is temporarily inaccessible. To recover data, you can map such RBD images with rbd device map command or export them to a file with rbd export command.

1.1. Compatibility considerations between RHCS and podman versions

podman and Red Hat Ceph Storage have different end-of-life strategies that might make it challenging to find compatible versions.

Red Hat recommends to use the podman version shipped with the corresponding Red Hat Enterprise Linux version for Red Hat Ceph Storage. See the Red Hat Ceph Storage: Supported configurations knowledge base article for more details. See the Contacting Red Hat support for service section in the Red Hat Ceph Storage Troubleshooting Guide for additional assistance.

The following table shows version compatibility between Red Hat Ceph Storage 6 and versions of podman.

CephPodman     
 

1.9

2.0

2.1

2.2

3.0

>3.0

Red Hat Ceph Storage 6

false

true

true

false

true

true

Warning

To use Podman with Red Hat Ceph Storage 5 and later, you must use a version of Podman that is 2.0.0 or higher.

1.2. Upgrading the Red Hat Ceph Storage cluster

You can use ceph orch upgrade command for upgrading a Red Hat Ceph Storage 5.0 cluster.

Prerequisites

  • A running Red Hat Ceph Storage cluster 5.
  • Red Hat Enterprise Linux 9.0 or later with ansible-core bundled into AppStream.
  • Root-level access to all the nodes.
  • Ansible user with sudo and passwordless ssh access to all nodes in the storage cluster.
  • At least two Ceph Manager nodes in the storage cluster: one active and one standby.
Important

Upgrade to the latest version of Red Hat Ceph Storage 5.3.z5 prior to upgrading to the latest version Red Hat Ceph Storage 6.1.

Note

Red Hat Ceph Storage 5 also includes a health check function that returns a DAEMON_OLD_VERSION warning if it detects that any of the daemons in the storage cluster are running multiple versions of RHCS. The warning is triggered when the daemons continue to run multiple versions of Red Hat Ceph Storage beyond the time value set in the mon_warn_older_version_delay option. By default, the mon_warn_older_version_delay option is set to 1 week. This setting allows most upgrades to proceed without falsely seeing the warning. If the upgrade process is paused for an extended time period, you can mute the health warning:

ceph health mute DAEMON_OLD_VERSION --sticky

After the upgrade has finished, unmute the health warning:

ceph health unmute DAEMON_OLD_VERSION

Procedure

  1. Enable the Ceph Ansible repositories on the Ansible administration node:

    Red Hat Enterprise Linux 9

    subscription-manager repos --enable=rhceph-6-tools-for-rhel-9-x86_64-rpms

  2. Update the cephadm and cephadm-ansible package:

    Example

    [root@admin ~]# dnf update cephadm
    [root@admin ~]# dnf update cephadm-ansible

  3. Navigate to the /usr/share/cephadm-ansible/ directory:

    Example

    [root@admin ~]# cd /usr/share/cephadm-ansible

  4. Run the preflight playbook with the upgrade_ceph_packages parameter set to true on the bootstrapped host in the storage cluster:

    Syntax

    ansible-playbook -i INVENTORY_FILE cephadm-preflight.yml --extra-vars "ceph_origin=rhcs upgrade_ceph_packages=true"

    Example

    [ceph-admin@admin cephadm-ansible]$ ansible-playbook -i /etc/ansible/hosts cephadm-preflight.yml --extra-vars "ceph_origin=rhcs upgrade_ceph_packages=true"

    This package upgrades cephadm on all the nodes.

  5. Log into the cephadm shell:

    Example

    [root@host01 ~]# cephadm shell

  6. Ensure all the hosts are online and that the storage cluster is healthy:

    Example

    [ceph: root@host01 /]# ceph -s

  7. Set the OSD noout, noscrub, and nodeep-scrub flags to prevent OSDs from getting marked out during upgrade and to avoid unnecessary load on the cluster:

    Example

    [ceph: root@host01 /]# ceph osd set noout
    [ceph: root@host01 /]# ceph osd set noscrub
    [ceph: root@host01 /]# ceph osd set nodeep-scrub

  8. Check service versions and the available target containers:

    Syntax

    ceph orch upgrade check IMAGE_NAME

    Example

    [ceph: root@host01 /]# ceph orch upgrade check registry.redhat.io/rhceph/rhceph-6-rhel9:latest

    Note

    The image name is applicable for both Red Hat Enterprise Linux 8 and Red Hat Enterprise Linux 9.

  9. Upgrade the storage cluster:

    Syntax

    ceph orch upgrade start IMAGE_NAME

    Example

    [ceph: root@host01 /]# ceph orch upgrade start registry.redhat.io/rhceph/rhceph-6-rhel9:latest

    Note

    To perform a staggered upgrade, see Performing a staggered upgrade.

    While the upgrade is underway, a progress bar appears in the ceph status output.

    Example

    [ceph: root@host01 /]# ceph status
    [...]
    progress:
        Upgrade to 17.2.6-70.el9cp (1s)
          [............................]

  10. Verify the new IMAGE_ID and VERSION of the Ceph cluster:

    Example

    [ceph: root@host01 /]# ceph versions
    [ceph: root@host01 /]# ceph orch ps

    Note

    If you are not using the cephadm-ansible playbooks, after upgrading your Ceph cluster, you must upgrade the ceph-common package and client libraries on your client nodes.

    Example

    [root@client01 ~] dnf update ceph-common

    Verify you have the latest version:

    Example

    [root@client01 ~] ceph --version

  11. When the upgrade is complete, unset the noout, noscrub, and nodeep-scrub flags:

    Example

    [ceph: root@host01 /]# ceph osd unset noout
    [ceph: root@host01 /]# ceph osd unset noscrub
    [ceph: root@host01 /]# ceph osd unset nodeep-scrub

1.3. Upgrading the Red Hat Ceph Storage cluster in a disconnected environment

You can upgrade the storage cluster in a disconnected environment by using the --image tag.

You can use ceph orch upgrade command for upgrading a Red Hat Ceph Storage 5 cluster.

Important

Red Hat Enterprise Linux 9 and later does not support the cephadm-ansible playbook.

Prerequisites

  • A running Red Hat Ceph Storage cluster 5.
  • Red Hat Enterprise Linux 9.0 or later with ansible-core bundled into AppStream.
  • Root-level access to all the nodes.
  • Ansible user with sudo and passwordless ssh access to all nodes in the storage cluster.
  • At least two Ceph Manager nodes in the storage cluster: one active and one standby.
  • Register the nodes to CDN and attach subscriptions.
  • Check for the customer container images in a disconnected environment and change the configuration, if required. See the Changing configurations of custom container images for disconnected installations section in the Red Hat Ceph Storage Installation Guide for more details.

By default, the monitoring stack components are deployed based on the primary Ceph image. For disconnected environment of the storage cluster, you have to use the latest available monitoring stack component images.

Table 1.1. Custom image details for monitoring stack

Monitoring stack componentImage details

Prometheus

registry.redhat.io/openshift4/ose-prometheus:v4.12

Grafana

registry.redhat.io/rhceph-6-dashboard-rhel9:latest

Node-exporter

registry.redhat.io/openshift4/ose-prometheus-node-exporter:v4.12

AlertManager

registry.redhat.io/openshift4/ose-prometheus-alertmanager:v4.12

HAProxy

registry.redhat.io/rhceph/rhceph-haproxy-rhel9:latest

Keepalived

registry.redhat.io/rhceph/keepalived-rhel9:latest

SNMP Gateway

registry.redhat.io/rhceph/snmp-notifier-rhel9:latest

Procedure

  1. Enable the Ceph Ansible repositories on the Ansible administration node:

    Red Hat Enterprise Linux 9

    subscription-manager repos --enable=rhceph-6-tools-for-rhel-9-x86_64-rpms

  2. Update the cephadm and cephadm-ansible package.

    Example

    [root@admin ~]# dnf update cephadm
    [root@admin ~]# dnf update cephadm-ansible

  3. Run the preflight playbook with the upgrade_ceph_packages parameter set to true and the ceph_origin parameter set to custom on the bootstrapped host in the storage cluster:

    Syntax

    ansible-playbook -i INVENTORY_FILE cephadm-preflight.yml --extra-vars "ceph_origin=custom upgrade_ceph_packages=true"

    Example

    [ceph-admin@admin ~]$ ansible-playbook -i /etc/ansible/hosts cephadm-preflight.yml --extra-vars "ceph_origin=custom upgrade_ceph_packages=true"

    This package upgrades cephadm on all the nodes.

  4. Log into the cephadm shell:

    Example

    [root@node0 ~]# cephadm shell

  5. Ensure all the hosts are online and that the storage cluster is healthy:

    Example

    [ceph: root@node0 /]# ceph -s

  6. Set the OSD noout, noscrub, and nodeep-scrub flags to prevent OSDs from getting marked out during upgrade and to avoid unnecessary load on the cluster:

    Example

    [ceph: root@host01 /]# ceph osd set noout
    [ceph: root@host01 /]# ceph osd set noscrub
    [ceph: root@host01 /]# ceph osd set nodeep-scrub

  7. Check service versions and the available target containers:

    Syntax

    ceph orch upgrade check IMAGE_NAME

    Example

    [ceph: root@node0 /]# ceph orch upgrade check LOCAL_NODE_FQDN:5000/rhceph/rhceph-6-rhel9

  8. Upgrade the storage cluster:

    Syntax

    ceph orch upgrade start IMAGE_NAME

    Example

    [ceph: root@node0 /]# ceph orch upgrade start LOCAL_NODE_FQDN:5000/rhceph/rhceph-6-rhel9

    While the upgrade is underway, a progress bar appears in the ceph status output.

    Example

    [ceph: root@node0 /]# ceph status
    [...]
    progress:
        Upgrade to 17.2.6-70.el9cp (1s)
          [............................]

  9. Verify the new IMAGE_ID and VERSION of the Ceph cluster:

    Example

    [ceph: root@node0 /]# ceph version
    [ceph: root@node0 /]# ceph versions
    [ceph: root@node0 /]# ceph orch ps

  10. When the upgrade is complete, unset the noout, noscrub, and nodeep-scrub flags:

    Example

    [ceph: root@host01 /]# ceph osd unset noout
    [ceph: root@host01 /]# ceph osd unset noscrub
    [ceph: root@host01 /]# ceph osd unset nodeep-scrub

Additional Resources

Chapter 2. Upgrading a host operating system from RHEL 8 to RHEL 9

You can perform a Red Hat Ceph Storage host operating system upgrade from Red Hat Enterprise Linux 8 to Red Hat Enterprise Linux 9 using the Leapp utility.

Prerequisites

  • A running Red Hat Ceph Storage 5 cluster.

The following are the supported combinations of containerized Ceph daemons. For more information, see the How colocation works and its advantages section in the Red Hat Ceph Storage Installation Guide.

  • Ceph Metadata Server (ceph-mds), Ceph OSD (ceph-osd), and Ceph Object Gateway (radosgw)
  • Ceph Monitor (ceph-mon) or Ceph Manager (ceph-mgr), Ceph OSD (ceph-osd), and Ceph Object Gateway (radosgw)
  • Ceph Monitor (ceph-mon), Ceph Manager (ceph-mgr), Ceph OSD (ceph-osd), and Ceph Object Gateway (radosgw)

Procedure

  1. Deploy Red Hat Ceph Storage 5 on Red Hat Enterprise Linux 8 with service.
Note

Verify that the cluster contains two admin nodes, so that while performing host upgrade in one admin node (with _admin label), the second admin can be used for managing clusters.

For full instructions, see Red Hat Ceph Storage installation in the Red Hat Ceph Storage Installation Guide and Deploying the Ceph daemons using the service specifications in the Operations guide.

  1. Set the noout flag on the Ceph OSD.

    Example

    [ceph: root@host01 /]# ceph osd set noout

  2. Perform host upgrade one node at a time using the Leapp utility.

    1. Put respective node maintenance mode before performing host upgrade using Leapp.

      Syntax

      ceph orch host maintenance enter HOST

      Example

      ceph orch host maintenance enter host01

    2. Enable the ceph tools repo manually when executing the Leapp command with the --enablerepo parameter.

      Example

      leapp upgrade --enablerepo rhceph-5-tools-for-rhel-9-x86_64-rpms

    3. Refer to Upgrading RHEL 8 to RHEL 9 within the Red Hat Enterprise Linux product documentation on the Red Hat Customer Portal.
  3. Verify the new IMAGE_ID and VERSION of the Ceph cluster:

    Example

    [ceph: root@node0 /]# ceph version
    [ceph: root@node0 /]# ceph orch ps

  4. Continue with the Red Hat Ceph Storage 5 to Red Hat Ceph Storage 6 upgrade by following the Upgrading the Red Hat Ceph Storage cluster steps in the Red Hat Ceph Storage Upgrade Guide.

Chapter 3. Upgrading RHCS 5 to RHCS 6 involving RHEL 8 to RHEL 9 upgrades

Upgrade from Red Hat Ceph Storage 5 to Red Hat Ceph Storage 6. The upgrade includes an upgrade from Red Hat Enterprise Linux 8 to Red Hat Enterprise Linux 9.

Important

Upgrade to the latest version of Red Hat Ceph Storage 5.3.z5 prior to upgrading to the latest version Red Hat Ceph Storage 6.1.

Prerequisites

  • A running Red Hat Ceph Storage 5 cluster on Red Hat Enterprise Linux 8.
  • Backup of Ceph binary (/usr/sbin/cephadm), ceph.pub (/etc/ceph), and the Ceph cluster’s public SSH keys from the admin node.

Procedure

  1. Upgrade the Red Hat Enterprise Linux version on all hosts of the cluster. For a detailed procedure, see Upgrading a host operating system from RHEL 8 to RHEL 9 to know the steps.
  2. After the Red Hat Enterprise Linux upgrade, register the Red Hat Ceph Storage nodes to the CDN and add the necessary repositories. For a detailed procedure, see Registering the Red Hat Ceph Storage nodes to the CDN and attaching subscriptions.
  3. Update the Red Hat Ceph Storage. For a detailed procedure, see Upgrade a Red Hat Ceph Storage cluster using cephadm.

Chapter 4. Upgrading RHCS 5 to RHCS 6 involving RHEL 8 to RHEL 9 upgrades with stretch mode enabled

You can perform an upgrade from Red Hat Ceph Storage 5 to Red Hat Ceph Storage 6 involving Red Hat Enterprise Linux 8 to Red Hat Enterprise Linux 9 with the stretch mode enabled.

Important

Upgrade to the latest version of Red Hat Ceph Storage 5.3.z5 prior to upgrading to the latest version Red Hat Ceph Storage 6.1.

Prerequisites

  • Red Hat Ceph Storage 5 on Red Hat Enterprise Linux 8 with necessary hosts and daemons running with stretch mode enabled.
  • Backup of Ceph binary (/usr/sbin/cephadm), ceph.pub (/etc/ceph), and the Ceph cluster’s public SSH keys from the admin node.
Note

Arbiter monitor cannot be drained or removed from the host. Hence, the arbiter mon needs to be re-provisioned to another tie-breaker node, and then drained or removed from host as described in Replacing the tiebreaker with a new monitor

Procedure

  1. Log into the Cephadm shell:

    Example

    [ceph: root@host01 /]# cephadm shell

  2. Label a second node as the admin in the cluster to manage the cluster when the admin node is re-provisioned.

    Syntax

    ceph orch host label add HOSTNAME admin

    Example

    [ceph: root@host01 /]# ceph orch host label add host02 admin

  3. Set the noout flag.

    Example

    [ceph: root@host01 /]# ceph osd set noout

  4. Drain all the daemons from the host:

    Syntax

    ceph orch host drain HOSTNAME --force

    Example

    [ceph: root@host01 /]# ceph orch host drain host02 --force

    The _no_schedule label is automatically applied to the host which blocks deployment.

  5. Check if all the daemons are removed from the storage cluster:

    Syntax

    ceph orch ps HOSTNAME

    Example

    [ceph: root@host01 /]# ceph orch ps host02

  6. Check the status of OSD removal:

    Example

    [ceph: root@host01 /]# ceph orch osd rm status

    When no placement groups (PG) are left on the OSD, the OSD is decommissioned and removed from the storage cluster.

  7. Zap the devices so that if the hosts being drained have OSDs present, then they can be used to re-deploy OSDs when the host is added back.

    Syntax

    ceph orch device zap HOSTNAME DISK [--force]

    Example

    [ceph: root@host01 /]# ceph orch device zap ceph-host02 /dev/vdb [--force]
    
    zap successful for /dev/vdb on ceph-host02

  8. Remove the host from the cluster:

    Syntax

    ceph orch host rm HOSTNAME --force

    Example

    [ceph: root@host01 /]# ceph orch host rm host02 --force

  9. Re-provision the respective hosts from RHEL 8 to RHEL 9 as described in Upgrading from RHEL 8 to RHEL 9.
  10. Run the preflight playbook with the --limit option:

    Syntax

    ansible-playbook -i INVENTORY_FILE cephadm-preflight.yml --limit NEWHOST_NAME

    Example

    [ceph: root@host01 /]# ansible-playbook -i hosts cephadm-preflight.yml --extra-vars "ceph_origin={storage-product}" --limit host02

    The preflight playbook installs podman, lvm2, chronyd, and cephadm on the new host. After installation is complete, cephadm resides in the /usr/sbin/ directory.

  11. Extract the cluster’s public SSH keys to a folder:

    Syntax

    ceph cephadm get-pub-key ~/PATH

    Example

    [ceph: root@host01 /]# ceph cephadm get-pub-key ~/ceph.pub

  12. Copy Ceph cluster’s public SSH keys to the re-provisioned node:

    Syntax

    ssh-copy-id -f -i ~/PATH root@HOST_NAME_2

    Example

    [ceph: root@host01 /]# ssh-copy-id -f -i ~/ceph.pub root@host02

    1. Optional: If the removed host has a monitor daemon, then, before adding the host to the cluster, add the --unmanaged flag to monitor deployment.

      Syntax

      ceph orch apply mon PLACEMENT --unmanaged

  13. Add the host again to the cluster and add the labels present earlier:

    Syntax

    ceph orch host add HOSTNAME IP_ADDRESS --labels=LABELS

    1. Optional: If the removed host had a monitor daemon deployed originally, the monitor daemon needs to be added back manually with the location attributes as described in Replacing the tiebreaker with a new monitor.

      Syntax

      ceph mon add HOSTNAME IP LOCATION

      Example

      [ceph: root@host01 /]# ceph mon add ceph-host02 10.0.211.62 datacenter=DC2

      Syntax

      ceph orch daemon add mon HOSTNAME

      Example

      [ceph: root@host01 /]# ceph orch daemon add mon ceph-host02

  14. Verify the daemons on the re-provisioned host running successfully with the same ceph version:

    Syntax

    ceph orch ps

  15. Set back the monitor daemon placement to managed.

    Note

    This step needs to be done one by one.

    Syntax

    ceph orch apply mon PLACEMENT

  16. Repeat the above steps for all hosts.
  17. Follow the same approach to re-provision admin nodes and use a second admin node to manage clusters.
  18. Add the backup files again to the node.
  19. . Add admin nodes again to cluster using the second admin node. Set the mon deployment to unmanaged.
  20. Follow Replacing the tiebreaker with a new monitor to add back the old arbiter mon and remove the temporary mon created earlier.
  21. Unset the noout flag.

    Syntax

    ceph osd unset noout

  22. Verify the Ceph version and the cluster status to ensure that all demons are working as expected after the Red Hat Enterprise Linux upgrade.
  23. Now that the RHEL OS is successfully upgraded, follow Upgrade a Red Hat Ceph Storage cluster using cephadm to perform Red Hat Ceph Storage 5 to Red Hat Ceph Storage 6 Upgrade.

Chapter 5. Staggered upgrade

As a storage administrator, you can upgrade Red Hat Ceph Storage components in phases rather than all at once. Starting with Red Hat Ceph Storage 5.2, the ceph orch upgrade command enables you to specify options to limit which daemons are upgraded by a single upgrade command.

Note

If you want to upgrade from a version that does not support staggered upgrades, you must first manually upgrade the Ceph Manager (ceph-mgr) daemons. For more information on performing a staggered upgrade from previous releases, see Performing a staggered upgrade from previous releases.

Warning

The Ceph iSCSI gateway is removed from Red Hat Ceph Storage 6. Therefore, you need to manage the iSCSI LUNs before upgrading from Red Hat Ceph Storage 5 to Red Hat Ceph Storage 6.

When you upgrade a Red Hat Ceph Storage cluster from RHCS 5 to RHCS 6, RBD images that were exported through iSCSI are preserved, therefore data is not lost. However, because all iSCSI targets disappear with the upgrade, data is temporarily inaccessible. To recover data, you can map such RBD images with rbd device map command or export them to a file with rbd export command.

5.1. Staggered upgrade options

Starting with Red Hat Ceph Storage 5.2, the ceph orch upgrade command supports several options to upgrade cluster components in phases. The staggered upgrade options include:

  • --daemon_types: The --daemon_types option takes a comma-separated list of daemon types and will only upgrade daemons of those types. Valid daemon types for this option include mgr, mon, crash, osd, mds, rgw, rbd-mirror, cephfs-mirror, and nfs.
  • --services: The --services option is mutually exclusive with --daemon-types, only takes services of one type at a time, and will only upgrade daemons belonging to those services. For example, you cannot provide an OSD and RGW service simultaneously.
  • --hosts: You can combine the --hosts option with --daemon_types, --services, or use it on its own. The --hosts option parameter follows the same format as the command line options for orchestrator CLI placement specification.
  • --limit: The --limit option takes an integer greater than zero and provides a numerical limit on the number of daemons cephadm will upgrade. You can combine the --limit option with --daemon_types, --services, or --hosts. For example, if you specify to upgrade daemons of type osd on host01 with a limit set to 3, cephadm will upgrade up to three OSD daemons on host01.

5.1.1. Performing a staggered upgrade

As a storage administrator, you can use the ceph orch upgrade options to limit which daemons are upgraded by a single upgrade command.

Cephadm strictly enforces an order for the upgrade of daemons that is still present in staggered upgrade scenarios. The current upgrade order is:

  1. Ceph Manager nodes
  2. Ceph Monitor nodes
  3. Ceph-crash daemons
  4. Ceph OSD nodes
  5. Ceph Metadata Server (MDS) nodes
  6. Ceph Object Gateway (RGW) nodes
  7. Ceph RBD-mirror node
  8. CephFS-mirror node
  9. Ceph NFS nodes
Note

If you specify parameters that upgrade daemons out of order, the upgrade command blocks and notes which daemons you need to upgrade before you proceed.

Example

[ceph: root@host01 /]# ceph orch upgrade start --image  registry.redhat.io/rhceph/rhceph-6-rhel9:latest --hosts host02

Error EINVAL: Cannot start upgrade. Daemons with types earlier in upgrade order than daemons on given host need upgrading.
Please first upgrade mon.ceph-host01

Note

There is no required order for restarting the instances. Red Hat recommends restarting the instance pointing to the pool with primary images followed by the instance pointing to the mirrored pool.

Prerequisites

  • A cluster running Red Hat Ceph Storage 5.2 or later.
  • Root-level access to all the nodes.
  • At least two Ceph Manager nodes in the storage cluster: one active and one standby.

Procedure

  1. Log into the cephadm shell:

    Example

    [root@host01 ~]# cephadm shell

  2. Ensure all the hosts are online and that the storage cluster is healthy:

    Example

    [ceph: root@host01 /]# ceph -s

  3. Set the OSD noout, noscrub, and nodeep-scrub flags to prevent OSDs from getting marked out during upgrade and to avoid unnecessary load on the cluster:

    Example

    [ceph: root@host01 /]# ceph osd set noout
    [ceph: root@host01 /]# ceph osd set noscrub
    [ceph: root@host01 /]# ceph osd set nodeep-scrub

  4. Check service versions and the available target containers:

    Syntax

    ceph orch upgrade check IMAGE_NAME

    Example

    [ceph: root@host01 /]# ceph orch upgrade check registry.redhat.io/rhceph/rhceph-6-rhel9:latest

    Note

    The image name is applicable for both Red Hat Enterprise Linux 8 and Red Hat Enterprise Linux 9.

  5. Upgrade the storage cluster:

    1. To upgrade specific daemon types on specific hosts:

      Syntax

      ceph orch upgrade start --image IMAGE_NAME --daemon-types DAEMON_TYPE1,DAEMON_TYPE2 --hosts HOST1,HOST2

      Example

      [ceph: root@host01 /]# ceph orch upgrade start --image registry.redhat.io/rhceph/rhceph-6-rhel9:latest --daemon-types mgr,mon --hosts host02,host03

    2. To specify specific services and limit the number of daemons to upgrade:

      Syntax

      ceph orch upgrade start --image IMAGE_NAME --services SERVICE1,SERVICE2 --limit LIMIT_NUMBER

      Example

      [ceph: root@host01 /]# ceph orch upgrade start --image registry.redhat.io/rhceph/rhceph-6-rhel9:latest --services rgw.example1,rgw1.example2 --limit 2

      Note

      In staggered upgrade scenarios, if using a limiting parameter, the monitoring stack daemons, including Prometheus and node-exporter, are refreshed after the upgrade of the Ceph Manager daemons. As a result of the limiting parameter, Ceph Manager upgrades take longer to complete. The versions of monitoring stack daemons might not change between Ceph releases, in which case, they are only redeployed.

      Note

      Upgrade commands with limiting parameters validates the options before beginning the upgrade, which can require pulling the new container image. As a result, the upgrade start command might take a while to return when you provide limiting parameters.

  6. To see which daemons you still need to upgrade, run the ceph orch upgrade check or ceph versions command:

    Example

    [ceph: root@host01 /]# ceph orch upgrade check --image registry.redhat.io/rhceph/rhceph-6-rhel9:latest

  7. To complete the staggered upgrade, verify the upgrade of all remaining services:

    Syntax

    ceph orch upgrade start --image IMAGE_NAME

    Example

    [ceph: root@host01 /]# ceph orch upgrade start --image registry.redhat.io/rhceph/rhceph-6-rhel9:latest

Verification

  • Verify the new IMAGE_ID and VERSION of the Ceph cluster:

    Example

    [ceph: root@host01 /]# ceph versions
    [ceph: root@host01 /]# ceph orch ps

    1. When the upgrade is complete, unset the noout, noscrub, and nodeep-scrub flags:

      Example

      [ceph: root@host01 /]# ceph osd unset noout
      [ceph: root@host01 /]# ceph osd unset noscrub
      [ceph: root@host01 /]# ceph osd unset nodeep-scrub

5.1.2. Performing a staggered upgrade from previous releases

Starting with Red Hat Ceph Storage 5.2, you can perform a staggered upgrade on your storage cluster by providing the necessary arguments. If you want to upgrade from a version that does not support staggered upgrades, you must first manually upgrade the Ceph Manager (ceph-mgr) daemons. Once you have upgraded the Ceph Manager daemons, you can pass the limiting parameters to complete the staggered upgrade.

Important

Verify you have at least two running Ceph Manager daemons before attempting this procedure.

Prerequisites

  • A cluster running Red Hat Ceph Storage 5.0 or later.
  • At least two Ceph Manager nodes in the storage cluster: one active and one standby.

Procedure

  1. Log into the Cephadm shell:

    Example

    [root@host01 ~]# cephadm shell

  2. Determine which Ceph Manager is active and which are standby:

    Example

    [ceph: root@host01 /]# ceph -s
      cluster:
        id:     266ee7a8-2a05-11eb-b846-5254002d4916
        health: HEALTH_OK
    
    
      services:
        mon: 2 daemons, quorum host01,host02 (age 92s)
        mgr: host01.ndtpjh(active, since 16h), standbys: host02.pzgrhz

  3. Manually upgrade each standby Ceph Manager daemon:

    Syntax

    ceph orch daemon redeploy mgr.ceph-HOST.MANAGER_ID --image IMAGE_ID

    Example

    [ceph: root@host01 /]# ceph orch daemon redeploy mgr.ceph-host02.pzgrhz --image registry.redhat.io/rhceph/rhceph-6-rhel9:latest

  4. Fail over to the upgraded standby Ceph Manager:

    Example

    [ceph: root@host01 /]# ceph mgr fail

  5. Check that the standby Ceph Manager is now active:

    Example

    [ceph: root@host01 /]# ceph -s
      cluster:
        id:     266ee7a8-2a05-11eb-b846-5254002d4916
        health: HEALTH_OK
    
    
      services:
        mon: 2 daemons, quorum host01,host02 (age 1h)
        mgr: host02.pzgrhz(active, since 25s), standbys: host01.ndtpjh

  6. Verify that the active Ceph Manager is upgraded to the new version:

    Syntax

    ceph tell mgr.ceph-HOST.MANAGER_ID version

    Example

    [ceph: root@host01 /]# ceph tell mgr.host02.pzgrhz version
    {
        "version": "16.2.8-12.el8cp",
        "release": "pacific",
        "release_type": "stable"
    }

  7. Repeat steps 2 - 6 to upgrade the remaining Ceph Managers to the new version.
  8. Check that all Ceph Managers are upgraded to the new version:

    Example

    [ceph: root@host01 /]# ceph mgr versions
    {
        "ceph version 16.2.8-12.el8cp (600e227816517e2da53d85f2fab3cd40a7483372) pacific (stable)": 2
    }

  9. Once you upgrade all your Ceph Managers, you can specify the limiting parameters and complete the remainder of the staggered upgrade.

Additional Resources

Chapter 6. Monitoring and managing upgrade of the storage cluster

After running the ceph orch upgrade start command to upgrade the Red Hat Ceph Storage cluster, you can check the status, pause, resume, or stop the upgrade process. The health of the cluster changes to HEALTH_WARNING during an upgrade. If the host of the cluster is offline, the upgrade is paused.

Note

You have to upgrade one daemon type after the other. If a daemon cannot be upgraded, the upgrade is paused.

Prerequisites

  • A running Red Hat Ceph Storage cluster 5.
  • Root-level access to all the nodes.
  • At least two Ceph Manager nodes in the storage cluster: one active and one standby.
  • Upgrade for the storage cluster initiated.

Procedure

  1. Determine whether an upgrade is in process and the version to which the cluster is upgrading:

    Example

    [ceph: root@node0 /]# ceph orch upgrade status

    Note

    You do not get a message once the upgrade is successful. Run ceph versions and ceph orch ps commands to verify the new image ID and the version of the storage cluster.

  2. Optional: Pause the upgrade process:

    Example

    [ceph: root@node0 /]# ceph orch upgrade pause

  3. Optional: Resume a paused upgrade process:

    Example

    [ceph: root@node0 /]# ceph orch upgrade resume

  4. Optional: Stop the upgrade process:

    Example

    [ceph: root@node0 /]# ceph orch upgrade stop

Chapter 7. Troubleshooting upgrade error messages

The following table shows some cephadm upgrade error messages. If the cephadm upgrade fails for any reason, an error message appears in the storage cluster health status.

Error MessageDescription

UPGRADE_NO_STANDBY_MGR

Ceph requires both active and standby manager daemons to proceed, but there is currently no standby.

UPGRADE_FAILED_PULL

Ceph was unable to pull the container image for the target version. This can happen if you specify a version or container image that does not exist (e.g., 1.2.3), or if the container registry is not reachable from one or more hosts in the cluster.

Legal Notice

Copyright © 2024 Red Hat, Inc.
The text of and illustrations in this document are licensed by Red Hat under a Creative Commons Attribution–Share Alike 3.0 Unported license ("CC-BY-SA"). An explanation of CC-BY-SA is available at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/. In accordance with CC-BY-SA, if you distribute this document or an adaptation of it, you must provide the URL for the original version.
Red Hat, as the licensor of this document, waives the right to enforce, and agrees not to assert, Section 4d of CC-BY-SA to the fullest extent permitted by applicable law.
Red Hat, Red Hat Enterprise Linux, the Shadowman logo, the Red Hat logo, JBoss, OpenShift, Fedora, the Infinity logo, and RHCE are trademarks of Red Hat, Inc., registered in the United States and other countries.
Linux® is the registered trademark of Linus Torvalds in the United States and other countries.
Java® is a registered trademark of Oracle and/or its affiliates.
XFS® is a trademark of Silicon Graphics International Corp. or its subsidiaries in the United States and/or other countries.
MySQL® is a registered trademark of MySQL AB in the United States, the European Union and other countries.
Node.js® is an official trademark of Joyent. Red Hat is not formally related to or endorsed by the official Joyent Node.js open source or commercial project.
The OpenStack® Word Mark and OpenStack logo are either registered trademarks/service marks or trademarks/service marks of the OpenStack Foundation, in the United States and other countries and are used with the OpenStack Foundation's permission. We are not affiliated with, endorsed or sponsored by the OpenStack Foundation, or the OpenStack community.
All other trademarks are the property of their respective owners.