mirror of https://github.com/minio/minio.git
99 lines
5.3 KiB
Markdown
99 lines
5.3 KiB
Markdown
*Federation feature is deprecated and should be avoided for future deployments*
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# Federation Quickstart Guide [![Slack](https://slack.min.io/slack?type=svg)](https://slack.min.io)
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This document explains how to configure MinIO with `Bucket lookup from DNS` style federation.
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## Get started
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### 1. Prerequisites
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Install MinIO - [MinIO Quickstart Guide](https://docs.min.io/docs/minio-quickstart-guide).
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### 2. Run MinIO in federated mode
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Bucket lookup from DNS federation requires two dependencies
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- etcd (for bucket DNS service records)
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- CoreDNS (for DNS management based on populated bucket DNS service records, optional)
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## Architecture
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![bucket-lookup](https://github.com/minio/minio/blob/master/docs/federation/lookup/bucket-lookup.png?raw=true)
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### Environment variables
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#### MINIO_ETCD_ENDPOINTS
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This is comma separated list of etcd servers that you want to use as the MinIO federation back-end. This should
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be same across the federated deployment, i.e. all the MinIO instances within a federated deployment should use same
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etcd back-end.
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#### MINIO_DOMAIN
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This is the top level domain name used for the federated setup. This domain name should ideally resolve to a load-balancer
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running in front of all the federated MinIO instances. The domain name is used to create sub domain entries to etcd. For
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example, if the domain is set to `domain.com`, the buckets `bucket1`, `bucket2` will be accessible as `bucket1.domain.com`
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and `bucket2.domain.com`.
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#### MINIO_PUBLIC_IPS
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This is comma separated list of IP addresses to which buckets created on this MinIO instance will resolve to. For example,
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a bucket `bucket1` created on current MinIO instance will be accessible as `bucket1.domain.com`, and the DNS entry for
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`bucket1.domain.com` will point to IP address set in `MINIO_PUBLIC_IPS`.
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*Note*
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- This field is mandatory for standalone and erasure code MinIO server deployments, to enable federated mode.
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- This field is optional for distributed deployments. If you don't set this field in a federated setup, we use the IP addresses of
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hosts passed to the MinIO server startup and use them for DNS entries.
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### Run Multiple Clusters
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> cluster1
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```sh
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export MINIO_ETCD_ENDPOINTS="http://remote-etcd1:2379,http://remote-etcd2:4001"
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export MINIO_DOMAIN=domain.com
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export MINIO_PUBLIC_IPS=44.35.2.1,44.35.2.2,44.35.2.3,44.35.2.4
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minio server http://rack{1...4}.host{1...4}.domain.com/mnt/export{1...32}
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```
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> cluster2
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```sh
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export MINIO_ETCD_ENDPOINTS="http://remote-etcd1:2379,http://remote-etcd2:4001"
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export MINIO_DOMAIN=domain.com
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export MINIO_PUBLIC_IPS=44.35.1.1,44.35.1.2,44.35.1.3,44.35.1.4
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minio server http://rack{5...8}.host{5...8}.domain.com/mnt/export{1...32}
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```
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In this configuration you can see `MINIO_ETCD_ENDPOINTS` points to the etcd backend which manages MinIO's
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`config.json` and bucket DNS SRV records. `MINIO_DOMAIN` indicates the domain suffix for the bucket which
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will be used to resolve bucket through DNS. For example if you have a bucket such as `mybucket`, the
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client can use now `mybucket.domain.com` to directly resolve itself to the right cluster. `MINIO_PUBLIC_IPS`
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points to the public IP address where each cluster might be accessible, this is unique for each cluster.
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NOTE: `mybucket` only exists on one cluster either `cluster1` or `cluster2` this is random and
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is decided by how `domain.com` gets resolved, if there is a round-robin DNS on `domain.com` then
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it is randomized which cluster might provision the bucket.
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### 3. Upgrading to `etcdv3` API
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Users running MinIO federation from release `RELEASE.2018-06-09T03-43-35Z` to `RELEASE.2018-07-10T01-42-11Z`, should migrate the existing bucket data on etcd server to `etcdv3` API, and update CoreDNS version to `1.2.0` before updating their MinIO server to the latest version.
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Here is some background on why this is needed - MinIO server release `RELEASE.2018-06-09T03-43-35Z` to `RELEASE.2018-07-10T01-42-11Z` used etcdv2 API to store bucket data to etcd server. This was due to `etcdv3` support not available for CoreDNS server. So, even if MinIO used `etcdv3` API to store bucket data, CoreDNS wouldn't be able to read and serve it as DNS records.
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Now that CoreDNS [supports etcdv3](https://coredns.io/2018/07/11/coredns-1.2.0-release/), MinIO server uses `etcdv3` API to store bucket data to etcd server. As `etcdv2` and `etcdv3` APIs are not compatible, data stored using `etcdv2` API is not visible to the `etcdv3` API. So, bucket data stored by previous MinIO version will not be visible to current MinIO version, until a migration is done.
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CoreOS team has documented the steps required to migrate existing data from `etcdv2` to `etcdv3` in [this blog post](https://coreos.com/blog/migrating-applications-etcd-v3.html). Please refer the post and migrate etcd data to `etcdv3` API.
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### 4. Test your setup
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To test this setup, access the MinIO server via browser or [`mc`](https://docs.min.io/docs/minio-client-quickstart-guide). You’ll see the uploaded files are accessible from the all the MinIO endpoints.
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# Explore Further
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- [Use `mc` with MinIO Server](https://docs.min.io/docs/minio-client-quickstart-guide)
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- [Use `aws-cli` with MinIO Server](https://docs.min.io/docs/aws-cli-with-minio)
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- [Use `s3cmd` with MinIO Server](https://docs.min.io/docs/s3cmd-with-minio)
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- [Use `minio-go` SDK with MinIO Server](https://docs.min.io/docs/golang-client-quickstart-guide)
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- [The MinIO documentation website](https://docs.min.io)
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