doc/rados/configuration/msgr2.rst
.. _msgr2:
The messenger v2 protocol, or msgr2, is the second major revision on Ceph's on-wire protocol. It brings with it several key features:
Ceph daemons can now bind to multiple ports, allowing both legacy Ceph clients and new v2-capable clients to connect to the same cluster.
By default, monitors now bind to the new IANA-assigned port 3300
(ce4h or 0xce4) for the new v2 protocol, while also binding to the
old default port 6789 for the legacy v1 protocol.
.. _address_formats:
Prior to Nautilus, all network addresses were rendered like
1.2.3.4:567/89012 where there was an IP address, a port, and a
nonce to uniquely identify a client or daemon on the network.
Starting with Nautilus, we now have three different address types:
v2:1.2.3.4:578/89012 identifies a daemon binding to a
port speaking the new v2 protocolv1:1.2.3.4:578/89012 identifies a daemon binding to a
port speaking the legacy v1 protocol. Any address that was
previously shown with any prefix is now shown as a v1: address.any:1.2.3.4:578/89012 identifies a client that can
speak either version of the protocol. Prior to nautilus, clients would appear as
1.2.3.4:0/123456, where the port of 0 indicates they are clients
and do not accept incoming connections. Starting with Nautilus,
these clients are now internally represented by a TYPE_ANY
address, and still shown with no prefix, because they may
connect to daemons using the v2 or v1 protocol, depending on what
protocol(s) the daemons are using.Because daemons now bind to multiple ports, they are now described by a vector of addresses instead of a single address. For example, dumping the monitor map on a Nautilus cluster now includes lines like::
epoch 1 fsid 50fcf227-be32-4bcb-8b41-34ca8370bd16 last_changed 2019-02-25 11:10:46.700821 created 2019-02-25 11:10:46.700821 min_mon_release 14 (nautilus) 0: [v2:10.0.0.10:3300/0,v1:10.0.0.10:6789/0] mon.foo 1: [v2:10.0.0.11:3300/0,v1:10.0.0.11:6789/0] mon.bar 2: [v2:10.0.0.12:3300/0,v1:10.0.0.12:6789/0] mon.baz
The bracketed list or vector of addresses means that the same daemon can be reached on multiple ports (and protocols). Any client or other daemon connecting to that daemon will use the v2 protocol (listed first) if possible; otherwise it will back to the legacy v1 protocol. Legacy clients will only see the v1 addresses and will continue to connect as they did before, with the v1 protocol.
Starting in Nautilus, the mon_host configuration option and -m <mon-host> command line options support the same bracketed address
vector syntax.
Bind configuration options ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Two new configuration options control whether the v1 and/or v2 protocol is used:
ms_bind_msgr1 [default: true] controls whether a daemon binds
to a port speaking the v1 protocolms_bind_msgr2 [default: true] controls whether a daemon binds
to a port speaking the v2 protocolSimilarly, two options control whether IPv4 and IPv6 addresses are used:
ms_bind_ipv4 [default: true] controls whether a daemon binds
to an IPv4 addressms_bind_ipv6 [default: false] controls whether a daemon binds
to an IPv6 addressThe v2 protocol supports two connection modes:
crc mode provides:
crc mode does not provide:
secure mode provides:
In Nautilus, secure mode uses the AES-GCM <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Galois/Counter_Mode>_ stream cipher,
which is generally very fast on modern processors (e.g., faster than
a SHA-256 cryptographic hash).
Connection mode configuration options ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
For most connections, there are options that control which modes are used:
.. confval:: ms_cluster_mode .. confval:: ms_service_mode .. confval:: ms_client_mode
There are a parallel set of options that apply specifically to monitors, allowing administrators to set different (usually more secure) requirements on communication with the monitors.
.. confval:: ms_mon_cluster_mode .. confval:: ms_mon_service_mode .. confval:: ms_mon_client_mode
The v2 protocol supports two compression modes:
force mode provides:
none mode provides:
Compression mode configuration options ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
For all connections, there is an option that controls compression usage in secure mode
.. confval:: ms_compress_secure
There is a parallel set of options that apply specifically to OSDs, allowing administrators to set different requirements on communication between OSDs.
.. confval:: ms_osd_compress_mode .. confval:: ms_osd_compress_min_size .. confval:: ms_osd_compression_algorithm
By default, ms_bind_msgr2 is true starting with Nautilus 14.2.z.
However, until the monitors start using v2, only limited services will
start advertising v2 addresses.
For most users, the monitors are binding to the default legacy port 6789
for the v1 protocol. When this is the case, enabling v2 is as simple as:
.. prompt:: bash $
ceph mon enable-msgr2
If the monitors are bound to non-standard ports, you will need to
specify an additional port for v2 explicitly. For example, if your
monitor mon.a binds to 1.2.3.4:1111, and you want to add v2 on
port 1112:
.. prompt:: bash $
ceph mon set-addrs a [v2:1.2.3.4:1112,v1:1.2.3.4:1111]
Once the monitors bind to v2, each daemon will start advertising a v2 address when it is next restarted.
.. _msgr2_ceph_conf:
Prior to Nautilus, a CLI user or daemon will normally discover the
monitors via the mon_host option in /etc/ceph/ceph.conf. The
syntax for this option has expanded starting with Nautilus to allow
support the new bracketed list format. For example, an old line
like::
mon_host = 10.0.0.1:6789,10.0.0.2:6789,10.0.0.3:6789
Can be changed to::
mon_host = [v2:10.0.0.1:3300/0,v1:10.0.0.1:6789/0],[v2:10.0.0.2:3300/0,v1:10.0.0.2:6789/0],[v2:10.0.0.3:3300/0,v1:10.0.0.3:6789/0]
However, when default ports are used (3300 and 6789), they can
be omitted::
mon_host = 10.0.0.1,10.0.0.2,10.0.0.3
Once v2 has been enabled on the monitors, ceph.conf may need to be
updated to either specify no ports (this is usually simplest), or
explicitly specify both the v2 and v1 addresses. Note, however, that
the new bracketed syntax is only understood by Nautilus and later, so
do not make that change on hosts that have not yet had their ceph
packages upgraded.
When you are updating ceph.conf, note the new ceph config generate-minimal-conf command (which generates a barebones config
file with just enough information to reach the monitors) and the
ceph config assimilate-conf (which moves config file options into
the monitors' configuration database) may be helpful. For example,::
[global] fsid = 0e5a806b-0ce5-4bc6-b949-aa6f68f5c2a3 mon_host = [v2:10.0.0.1:3300/0,v1:10.0.0.1:6789/0]
For a detailed description of the v2 wire protocol, see :ref:msgr2-protocol.