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114 lines
5 KiB
Markdown
114 lines
5 KiB
Markdown
# Garage
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Garage is a lightweight S3-compatible distributed object store, with the following goals:
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- As self-contained as possible
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- Easy to set up
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- Highly resilient to network failures, network latency, disk failures, sysadmin failures
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- Relatively simple
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- Made for multi-datacenter deployments
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Non-goals include:
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- Extremely high performance
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- Complete implementation of the S3 API
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- Erasure coding (our replication model is simply to copy the data as is on several nodes)
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Our main use case is to provide a distributed storage layer for small-scale self hosted services such as [Deuxfleurs](https://deuxfleurs.fr).
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## Development
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1. Setup a rust/cargo environment
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2. Run `cargo build` to build the project
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3. Run `RUST_BACKTRACE=1 RUST_LOG=garage=debug ./target/debug/garage server -c ./config.dev.toml` to launch a garage test instance (data will be saved in `/tmp`, no encryption, only one instance)
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## Setting up Garage
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Use the `genkeys.sh` script to generate TLS keys for encrypting communications between Garage nodes.
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The script takes no arguments and will generate keys in `pki/`.
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This script creates a certificate authority `garage-ca` which signs certificates for individual Garage nodes.
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Garage nodes from a same cluster authenticate themselves by verifying that they have certificates signed by the same certificate authority.
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Garage requires two locations to store its data: a metadata directory, and a data directory.
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The metadata directory is used to store metadata such as object lists, and should ideally be located on an SSD drive.
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The data directory is used to store the chunks of data of the objects stored in Garage.
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In a typical deployment the data directory is stored on a standard HDD.
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Garage does not handle TLS for its S3 API endpoint. This should be handled by adding a reverse proxy.
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Create a configuration file with the following structure:
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```
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block_size = 1048576 # objects are split in blocks of maximum this number of bytes
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metadata_dir = "/path/to/ssd/metadata/directory"
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data_dir = "/path/to/hdd/data/directory"
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rpc_bind_addr = "[::]:3901" # the port other Garage nodes will use to talk to this node
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bootstrap_peers = [
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# Ideally this list should contain the IP addresses of all other Garage nodes of the cluster.
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# Use Ansible or any kind of configuration templating to generate this automatically.
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"10.0.0.1:3901",
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"10.0.0.2:3901",
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"10.0.0.3:3901",
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]
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# optionnal: garage can find cluster nodes automatically using a Consul server
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# garage only does lookup but does not register itself, registration should be handled externally by e.g. Nomad
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consul_host = "localhost:8500" # optionnal: host name of a Consul server for automatic peer discovery
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consul_service_name = "garage" # optionnal: service name to look up on Consul
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max_concurrent_rpc_requests = 12
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data_replication_factor = 3
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meta_replication_factor = 3
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meta_epidemic_fanout = 3
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[rpc_tls]
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# NOT RECOMMENDED: you can skip this section if you don't want to encrypt intra-cluster traffic
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# Thanks to genkeys.sh, generating the keys and certificates is easy, so there is NO REASON NOT TO DO IT.
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ca_cert = "/path/to/garage/pki/garage-ca.crt"
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node_cert = "/path/to/garage/pki/garage.crt"
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node_key = "/path/to/garage/pki/garage.key"
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[s3_api]
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api_bind_addr = "[::1]:3900" # the S3 API port, HTTP without TLS. Add a reverse proxy for the TLS part.
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s3_region = "garage" # set this to anything. S3 API calls will fail if they are not made against the region set here.
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[s3_web]
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web_bind_addr = "[::1]:3902"
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```
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Build Garage using `cargo build --release`.
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Then, run it using either `./target/release/garage server -c path/to/config_file.toml` or `cargo run --release -- server -c path/to/config_file.toml`.
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Set the `RUST_LOG` environment to `garage=debug` to dump some debug information.
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Set it to `garage=trace` to dump even more debug information.
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Set it to `garage=warn` to show nothing except warnings and errors.
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## Setting up cluster nodes
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Once all your `garage` nodes are running, you will need to:
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1. check that they are correctly talking to one another;
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2. configure them with their physical location (in the case of a multi-dc deployment) and a number of "ring tokens" proportionnal to the storage space available on each node;
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3. create some S3 API keys and buckets;
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4. ???;
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5. profit!
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To run these administrative tasks, you will need to use the `garage` command line tool and it to connect to any of the cluster's nodes on the RPC port.
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The `garage` CLI also needs TLS keys and certificates of its own to authenticate and be authenticated in the cluster.
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A typicall invocation will be as follows:
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```
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./target/release/garage --ca-cert=pki/garage-ca.crt --client-cert=pki/garage-client.crt --client-key=pki/garage-client.key <...>
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```
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## Notes to self
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### What to repair
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- `tables`: to do a full sync of metadata, should not be necessary because it is done every hour by the system
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- `versions` and `block_refs`: very time consuming, usefull if deletions have not been propagated, improves garbage collection
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- `blocks`: very usefull to resync/rebalance blocks betweeen nodes
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