Provided by: ceph-common_12.2.13-0ubuntu0.18.04.11_amd64 bug

NAME

       rados - rados object storage utility

SYNOPSIS

       rados [ -m monaddr ] [ mkpool | rmpool foo ] [ -p | --pool
       pool ] [ -s | --snap snap ] [ -i infile ] [ -o outfile ]
       command ...

DESCRIPTION

       rados  is  a  utility  for  interacting  with  a  Ceph  object  storage cluster (RADOS), part of the Ceph
       distributed storage system.

OPTIONS

       -p pool, --pool pool
              Interact with the given pool. Required by most commands.

       --pgid As an alternative to --pool, --pgid also allow users to specify the PG id  to  which  the  command
              will be directed. With this option, certain commands like ls allow users to limit the scope of the
              command to the given PG.

       -s snap, --snap snap
              Read from the given pool snapshot. Valid for all pool-specific read operations.

       -i infile
              will specify an input file to be passed along as  a  payload  with  the  command  to  the  monitor
              cluster. This is only used for specific monitor commands.

       -o outfile
              will  write  any  payload returned by the monitor cluster with its reply to outfile. Only specific
              monitor commands (e.g. osd getmap) return a payload.

       -c ceph.conf, --conf=ceph.conf
              Use ceph.conf configuration file instead of the default /etc/ceph/ceph.conf to  determine  monitor
              addresses during startup.

       -m monaddress[:port]
              Connect to specified monitor (instead of looking through ceph.conf).

       -b block_size
              Set the block size for put/get/append ops and for write benchmarking.

       --striper
              Uses the striping API of rados rather than the default one.  Available for stat, get, put, append,
              truncate, rm, ls and all xattr related operation

GLOBAL COMMANDS

       lspools
              List object pools

       df     Show utilization statistics, including disk usage (bytes)  and  object  counts,  over  the  entire
              system and broken down by pool.

       mkpool foo
              Create a pool with name foo.

       rmpool foo [ foo --yes-i-really-really-mean-it ]
              Delete the pool foo (and all its data).

       list-inconsistent-pg pool
              List inconsistent PGs in given pool.

       list-inconsistent-obj pgid
              List inconsistent objects in given PG.

       list-inconsistent-snapset pgid
              List inconsistent snapsets in given PG.

POOL SPECIFIC COMMANDS

       get name outfile
              Read object name from the cluster and write it to outfile.

       put name infile [--offset offset]
              Write object name with start offset (default:0) to the cluster with contents from infile.

       append name infile
              Append object name to the cluster with contents from infile.

       rm name
              Remove object name.

       listwatchers name
              List the watchers of object name.

       ls outfile
              List  objects  in  the  given  pool  and  write  to  outfile.  Instead of --pool if --pgid will be
              specified, ls will only list the objects in the given PG.

       lssnap List snapshots for given pool.

       clonedata srcname dstname --object-locator key
              Clone object byte data from srcname to dstname.  Both objects must be stored with the locator  key
              key  (usually  either  srcname  or  dstname).   Object  attributes and omap keys are not copied or
              cloned.

       mksnap foo
              Create pool snapshot named foo.

       rmsnap foo
              Remove pool snapshot named foo.

       bench seconds mode [ -b objsize ] [ -t threads ]
              Benchmark for seconds. The mode can be write, seq, or rand. seq  and  rand  are  read  benchmarks,
              either  sequential  or random. Before running one of the reading benchmarks, run a write benchmark
              with the --no-cleanup option. The default object size is 4 MB, and the default number of simulated
              threads  (parallel  writes)  is  16.  The  --run-name  <label> option is useful for benchmarking a
              workload  test  from  multiple  clients.  The  <label>  is  an  arbitrary  object  name.   It   is
              "benchmark_last_metadata"  by  default,  and  is used as the underlying object name for "read" and
              "write" ops.  Note: -b objsize option is valid only in write mode.  Note: write and  seq  must  be
              run on the same host otherwise the objects created by write will have names that will fail seq.

       cleanup [ --run-name run_name ] [ --prefix prefix ]
              Clean up a previous benchmark operation.  Note: the default run-name is "benchmark_last_metadata"

       listxattr name
              List all extended attributes of an object.

       getxattr name attr
              Dump the extended attribute value of attr of an object.

       setxattr name attr value
              Set the value of attr in the extended attributes of an object.

       rmxattr name attr
              Remove attr from the extended attributes of an object.

       listomapkeys name
              List all the keys stored in the object map of object name.

       listomapvals name
              List  all  key/value  pairs  stored  in  the  object map of object name.  The values are dumped in
              hexadecimal.

       getomapval [ --omap-key-file file ] name key [ out-file ]
              Dump the hexadecimal value of key in the object map of object  name.   If  the  optional  out-file
              argument is not provided, the value will be written to standard output.

       setomapval [ --omap-key-file file ] name key [ value ]
              Set  the  value  of  key  in  the object map of object name. If the optional value argument is not
              provided, the value will be read from standard input.

       rmomapkey [ --omap-key-file file ] name key
              Remove key from the object map of object name.

       getomapheader name
              Dump the hexadecimal value of the object map header of object name.

       setomapheader name value
              Set the value of the object map header of object name.

EXAMPLES

       To view cluster utilization:

          rados df

       To get a list object in pool foo sent to stdout:

          rados -p foo ls -

       To get a list of objects in PG 0.6:

          rados --pgid 0.6 ls

       To write an object:

          rados -p foo put myobject blah.txt

       To create a snapshot:

          rados -p foo mksnap mysnap

       To delete the object:

          rados -p foo rm myobject

       To read a previously snapshotted version of an object:

          rados -p foo -s mysnap get myobject blah.txt.old

       To list inconsistent objects in PG 0.6:

          rados list-inconsistent-obj 0.6 --format=json-pretty

AVAILABILITY

       rados is part of Ceph, a massively scalable, open-source, distributed storage system. Please refer to the
       Ceph documentation at http://ceph.com/docs for more information.

SEE ALSO

       ceph(8)

COPYRIGHT

       2010-2023,  Inktank  Storage,  Inc.  and  contributors. Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution Share
       Alike 3.0 (CC-BY-SA-3.0)