openstack-manuals/doc/admin-guide-cloud/source/objectstorage_account_reaper.rst
Lujin Luo c00afe88ee Fixed grammar mistakes in Cloud Administrator Guide
This patch fixed some grammar mistakes in Object Storage section
and Networking section to avoid misunderstanding.

Change-Id: Id9520a142355e38f57589b2b32e2dbde5c700817
2015-10-14 10:18:00 +09:00

2.3 KiB

Account reaper

In the background, the account reaper removes data from the deleted accounts.

A reseller marks an account for deletion by issuing a DELETE request on the account's storage URL. This action sets the status column of the account_stat table in the account database and replicas to DELETED, marking the account's data for deletion.

Typically, a specific retention time or undelete are not provided. However, you can set a delay_reaping value in the [account-reaper] section of the account-server.conf file to delay the actual deletion of data. At this time, to undelete you have to update the account database replicas directly, set the status column to an empty string and update the put_timestamp to be greater than the delete_timestamp.

Note

It is on the development to-do list to write a utility that performs this task, preferably through a REST call.

The account reaper runs on each account server and scans the server occasionally for account databases marked for deletion. It only fires up on the accounts for which the server is the primary node, so that multiple account servers aren't trying to do it simultaneously. Using multiple servers to delete one account might improve the deletion speed but requires coordination to avoid duplication. Speed really is not a big concern with data deletion, and large accounts aren't deleted often.

Deleting an account is simple. For each account container, all objects are deleted and then the container is deleted. Deletion requests that fail will not stop the overall process but will cause the overall process to fail eventually (for example, if an object delete times out, you will not be able to delete the container or the account). The account reaper keeps trying to delete an account until it is empty, at which point the database reclaim process within the db_replicator will remove the database files.

A persistent error state may prevent the deletion of an object or container. If this happens, you will see a message in the log, for example:

"Account <name> has not been reaped since <date>"

You can control when this is logged with the reap_warn_after value in the [account-reaper] section of the account-server.conf file. The default value is 30 days.