David Turner wrote:
Yes, when creating an EC profile, it automatically creates a CRUSH rule
specific for that EC profile. You are also correct that 2+1 doesn't
really have any resiliency built in. 2+2 would allow 1 node to go down
while still having your data accessible. It will use 2x data to raw as
Is not EC 2+2 the same as 2x replication (i.e. RAID1) ?
Is not EC benefit and intention to allow equivalent replication
factors be chosen between >1 and <2 ?
That's why it is recommended to have m<k in EC algorithm
parameters. Because when you have m==k, it is equivalent to 2x
replication, with m==2k - to 3x replication and so on.
And correspondingly, with m==1 you have equivalent reliability
of RAID5, with m==2 - that of RAID6, and you start to have more
"interesting" reliability factors only when you could allow m>2
and k>m. Overall, your reliability in Ceph is measured as a
cluster rebuild/performance degradation time in case of
up-to m OSDs failure, provided that no more than m OSDs
(or larger failure domains) have failed at once.
Sure, EC is beneficial only when you have enough failure domains
(i.e. hosts). My criterion is that you should have more hosts
than you have individual OSDs within a single host.
I.e. at least 8 (and better >8) hosts when you have 8 OSDs
per host.
opposed to the 1.5x of 2+1, but it gives you resiliency. The example in
your command of 3+2 is not possible with your setup. May I ask why you
want EC on such a small OSD count? I'm guessing to not use as much
storage on your SSDs, but I would just suggest going with replica with
such a small cluster. If you have a larger node/OSD count, then you can
start seeing if EC is right for your use case, but if this is production
data... I wouldn't risk it.
When setting the crush rule, it wants the name of it, ssdrule, not 2.
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