Red Hat recently open sourced Calamari, the management platform for Ceph. As a part of rolling this valuable tool out to the community we're taking some time to walk through the current functionality in an upcoming webinar on June 24thwww.inktank.com/webinars/?commid=115487 

Photo Credit: Flickr

For those who are unfamiliar with Calamari, it consists of two components:

  1. Backend: written in Python 2.6+, using Saltstack, ZeroRPC, gevent, Django, django-rest-framework, graphite, and more, it instantiates a new REST API for integration with other systems. It is designed to be much more comprehensive and should be the basis for new development efforts that wish to interact with a Ceph cluster.
  2. Frontend: a web browser UI implemented primarily in Javascript, it uses the Calamari REST API.

You should also know that Calamari:

  • Does not currently include deployment functionality, but long-term, it is expected to have hooks for deployment tools that include both ceph-deploy and other tools like Puppet, Chef, Juju, etc.
  • While the Ceph REST API is a low level interface where each URL maps directly to an equivalent command to the `ceph` CLI tool, the Calamari REST API presents a higher level interface where API consumers can manipulate objects using idiomatic GET/POST/PATCH operations without knowing the underlying Ceph commands. Calamari REST API produces interpreted data and is designed for many applications to be built on top of it.
  • You can use the Calamari backend to integrate Ceph with your own user interface.

For the full intro writeup about Ceph Calamari, check out the blog here:

http://ceph.com/community/ceph-calamari-goes-open-source/ 

If you're interested in learning more, don't miss the June 24th webinar demonstrating how you can monitor the health and performance of your Ceph cluster and perform RADOS management tasks!