Skip to content

Ansible role for linux storage management

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

jharuda/storage

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Linux Storage Role

This role allows users to configure local storage with minimal input.

As of now, the role supports managing file systems and mount entries on

  • unpartitioned disks
  • lvm (unpartitioned whole-disk physical volumes only)

Role Variables

storage_pools

The storage_pools variable is a list of pools to manage. Each pool contains a nested list of volume dicts as described below, as well as the following keys:

name

This specifies the name of the pool to manage/create as a string. (One example of a pool is an LVM volume group.)

type

This specifies the type of pool to manage. Valid values for type: lvm.

disks

A list which specifies the set of disks to use as backing storage for the pool. Supported identifiers include: device node (like /dev/sda or /dev/mapper/mpathb), device node basename (like sda or mpathb), /dev/disk/ symlink (like /dev/disk/by-id/wwn-0x5000c5005bc37f3f).

raid_level

When used with type: lvm it manages a volume group with a mdraid array of given level on it. Input disks are in this case used as RAID members. Accepted values are: linear, striped, raid0, raid1, raid4, raid5, raid6, raid10

volumes

This is a list of volumes that belong to the current pool. It follows the same pattern as the storage_volumes variable, explained below.

encryption

This specifies whether or not the pool will be encrypted using LUKS. WARNING: Toggling encryption for a pool is a destructive operation, meaning the pool itself will be removed as part of the process of adding/removing the encryption layer.

encryption_password

This string specifies a password or passphrase used to unlock/open the LUKS volume(s).

encryption_key

This string specifies the full path to the key file on the managed nodes used to unlock the LUKS volume(s). It is the responsibility of the user of this role to securely copy this file to the managed nodes, or otherwise ensure that the file is on the managed nodes.

encryption_cipher

This string specifies a non-default cipher to be used by LUKS.

encryption_key_size

This integer specifies the LUKS key size (in bytes).

encryption_luks_version

This integer specifies the LUKS version to use.

storage_volumes

The storage_volumes variable is a list of volumes to manage. Each volume has the following variables:

name

This specifies the name of the volume.

type

This specifies the type of volume on which the file system will reside. Valid values for type: lvm, disk or raid. The default is determined according to the OS and release (currently lvm).

disks

This specifies the set of disks to use as backing storage for the file system. This is currently only relevant for volumes of type disk, where the list must contain only a single item.

size

The size specifies the size of the file system. The format for this is intended to be human-readable, e.g.: "10g", "50 GiB".

fs_type

This indicates the desired file system type to use, e.g.: "xfs", "ext4", "swap". The default is determined according to the OS and release (currently xfs for all the supported systems).

fs_label

The fs_label is a string to be used for a file system label.

fs_create_options

The fs_create_options specifies custom arguments to mkfs as a string.

mount_point

The mount_point specifies the directory on which the file system will be mounted.

mount_options

The mount_options specifies custom mount options as a string, e.g.: 'ro'.

raid_level

Specifies RAID level when type is raid. Accepted values are: linear, striped, raid0, raid1, raid4, raid5, raid6, raid10

raid_device_count

When type is raid specifies number of active RAID devices.

raid_spare_count

When type is raid specifies number of spare RAID devices.

raid_metadata_version

When type is raid specifies RAID metadata version as a string, e.g.: '1.0'.

raid_chunk_size

When type is raid specifies RAID chunk size as a string, e.g.: '512 KiB'. Chunk size has to be multiple of 4 KiB.

encryption

This specifies whether or not the volume will be encrypted using LUKS. WARNING: Toggling encryption for a volume is a destructive operation, meaning all data on that volume will be removed as part of the process of adding/removing the encryption layer.

encryption_password

This string specifies a password or passphrase used to unlock/open the LUKS volume.

encryption_key

This string specifies the full path to the key file on the managed nodes used to unlock the LUKS volume(s). It is the responsibility of the user of this role to securely copy this file to the managed nodes, or otherwise ensure that the file is on the managed nodes.

encryption_cipher

This string specifies a non-default cipher to be used by LUKS.

encryption_key_size

This integer specifies the LUKS key size (in bits).

encryption_luks_version

This integer specifies the LUKS version to use.

storage_safe_mode

When true (the default), an error will occur instead of automatically removing existing devices and/or formatting.

Example Playbook

- hosts: all

  roles:
    - name: linux-system-roles.storage
      storage_pools:
        - name: app
          disks:
            - sdb
            - sdc
          volumes:
            - name: shared
              size: "100 GiB"
              mount_point: "/mnt/app/shared"
              #fs_type: xfs
              state: present
            - name: users
              size: "400g"
              fs_type: ext4
              mount_point: "/mnt/app/users"
      storage_volumes:
        - name: images
          type: disk
          disks: ["mpathc"]
          mount_point: /opt/images
          fs_label: images

License

MIT

About

Ansible role for linux storage management

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Python 77.6%
  • Shell 21.5%
  • HTML 0.9%