From 06353bdb5d828b9d9de729a184d1bf7a71717c5b Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Monty Taylor Date: Sat, 20 Apr 2019 17:31:56 +0000 Subject: [PATCH] Remove running your own doc This is just so massively out of date fixing it isn't worth it. Change-Id: Ica122f4579de90c05f4b9327aa04945bbc381daf --- doc/source/index.rst | 2 - doc/source/running-your-own.rst | 379 -------------------------------- 2 files changed, 381 deletions(-) delete mode 100644 doc/source/running-your-own.rst diff --git a/doc/source/index.rst b/doc/source/index.rst index 8d459dcb3b..a9448952fa 100644 --- a/doc/source/index.rst +++ b/doc/source/index.rst @@ -19,7 +19,6 @@ Contents: * :doc:`third_party` * :doc:`unofficial_project_hosting` - * :doc:`running-your-own` * :doc:`contribute-cloud` .. toctree:: @@ -34,7 +33,6 @@ Contents: .. toctree:: :hidden: - running-your-own unofficial_project_hosting third_party contribute-cloud diff --git a/doc/source/running-your-own.rst b/doc/source/running-your-own.rst deleted file mode 100644 index fc48794535..0000000000 --- a/doc/source/running-your-own.rst +++ /dev/null @@ -1,379 +0,0 @@ -:title: Running your own CI infrastructure - -.. _running-your-own: - -.. warning:: Parts of this file are out of date - -Running your own CI infrastructure -################################## - -The OpenStack CI infrastructure is designed to be shared amongst other projects -wanting a scalable cloud based CI system. We're delighted when someone wants to -reuse what we're building. - -To avoid having lots of meta references in the rest of the system -documentation, we document most things targeted specifically for use in the -OpenStack CI system itself. This chapter acts as a patch to the rest of our -documentation explaining how to reuse the OpenStack CI infrastructure for -another project. - -Requirements -============ - -* You need a cloud of some sort, all our tooling is built for - OpenStack clouds :). - -* A service account for your CI systems within that cloud/clouds. - -* Optionally a service account for your Jenkins nodes (separation of concerns - - this account has its credentials loaded into the cloud itself). You can run - with one account, but then you risk a larger cascade compromise if there is - a bug in nodepool. - -* A domain for your servers to live in; puppet is hostname based, having - everything in sync is just easier. - -* A git repository that you can store your code in :). - -Initial setup -============= - -#. Manually boot a machine or VM with 2G+ of ram to be the puppetmaster. - Average memory consumption is between 1GB-1.5GB. - -#. Clone the CI config repository and adjust it as necessary. Avoiding forks - and overriding the default config from Infra is a good practice to - customize your CI system. The CI config is split in 2 projects: - a) `system-config `_ - Contains information on how systems are operated. - b) `project-config `_ - Contains configuration data used by OpenStack projects and services. - For more details on the config repo split, read the following spec: - http://specs.openstack.org/openstack-infra/infra-specs/specs/config-repo-split.html. - -#. Follow http://docs.openstack.org/infra/system-config/puppet.html#id2 and use your repository - in addition to the OpenStack CI repository. This is appropriate to stay in - sync with OpenStack Infra team rolling out new functionality and at the same - time applying the necessary customizations through the config overrides. - This step consists in configuring puppetmaster to load CI config into - modulepath for both Infra projects and your custom CI repository. - The necessary changes are explained in the sections below. - -Changes required -================ - -To run your own infrastructure we recommend you to clone the entire tree and reuse -the system and project configurations from the OpenStack Infrastructure repositories. -Your config overrides will be applied on top of these settings by replacing hostnames -and class names throughout. - -site.pp -~~~~~~~ - -This file lists the specific servers you are running. Minimally you need a -puppetmaster, jenkins, and then one or more slaves with appropriate distro choices. -To use all the choices for running your tests, you also need zuul, nodepool, and -puppetBoard. Unless you have a specific need to setup your own gerrit review system, -your CI system can consume events from the upstream gerrit and test OpenStack changes. - -A minimal site.pp can be useful to start with to get up and running. E.g. -delete all but the puppetmaster and default definitions. -Create a node entry for each server registered on puppetmaster and the define -the class it belongs to. The parameters will depend on each server and you can -use the configuration used by the Infra team as a template. - -Example:: - - node 'jenkins.example.com' { - class { 'your-company_openstack_project::jenkins': - jenkins_jobs_password => hiera('jenkins_password'), - <...> - } - } - -modules/openstack_project -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - -This tree defines the shape of servers (some of which are unique, some of which -are scaled horizontally, thus the separation). To run your own infrastructure we -recommend you copy the entire tree, delete (or simply ignore) any servers you won't -run, and replace hostnames and class names with yours throughout. Some templates can -be used as-is by leaving their references to point within the openstack_project tree. - -Bootstrapping -~~~~~~~~~~~~~ -The minimum set of things to port across is: - -* modules/openstack_project/manifests/params.pp - -* modules/openstack_project/manifests/server.pp - -* modules/openstack_project/manifests/template.pp - -* modules/openstack_project/manifests/automatic_upgrades.pp - -* modules/openstack_project/manifests/base.pp - May need additional changes beyond the search/replace? - - User list. - -* modules/openstack_project/manifests/users.pp - -* modules/openstack_project/manifests/puppetmaster.pp - -* modules/openstack_project/templates/puppet.conf.erb - -* The default node definition in site.pp - -* The puppetmaster definition in site.pp - -Then follow the :ref:`puppet-master` instructions for bringing up a -puppetmaster, replacing openstack_project with your project name. -You'll need to populate hiera at the end with the minimum set of keys: - -* sysadmins - -Copy in your cloud credentials to /root/ci-launch - e.g. to -``$projectname-rs.sh`` for a rackspace cloud. - -Stage 2 -~~~~~~~ - -N/A - -Stage 3 - gerrit -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - -Gerrit is a combined master repository management and code review system. See -the :ref:`gerrit` documentation for the common operational tasks for it. - -To set it up, you'll need a small png 167px x 56x with a project logo for -branding and a 485px × 161px png as the top of page background. You can of -course alter the appearance and css to your hearts content. - -In addition you need to set a dozen or so hiera variables (see site.pp), these -will require manually creating keys and passwords. - -Migrate the manifests: - -* modules/openstack_project/manifests/gerrit.pp. Note that this is a thin shim - over a generic gerrit module: you'll be forking most of this and maintaining - it indefinitely. If you don't want a CLA, be sure to elide those portions. - Replace the file paths for branding files you've replaced. Many of the - scripts can be used from openstack_projects though (which ones is yet to be - determined). - - * All the '=> absent' cronjobs can be elided: they are cleanup for older - versions of this manifest. - - * the LP links that reference openstack specifically should instead point to - your project (or project group) on Launchpad [or wherever you want them]. - - * openstackwatch creates an rss feed of the unified changes from many - projects - it is entirely optional. - - * The cla files should be skipped or forked; they are specific to OpenStack. - - * The title and page-bkg are OpenStack specific and should be replaced. - - * The GerritSite.css is OpenStack specific - it references the - openstack-page-bkg image. - - * The gerritsyncusers cron reference can be dropped. - - * The sync_launchpad_users cron reference can be dropped. - - * You need to modify the puppet path for gerrit acls - they should come from - your project - make the directory but you can leave it empty (except for a - . file to let git add it). The `Project Creator's Guide `_ - covers how it gets populated when your infrastructure is working. - - * Ditto projects.yaml and projects.ini, which is passed in from your - review.pp - something like $PROJECT/files/review.projects.yaml - and $PROJECT/templates/review.projects.ini.erb - - * set_agreements is a database migration tool for gerrit CLAs; not needed - unless you have CLAs. - -* modules/openstack_project/manifests/review.pp. - - * Start with just local replication, plus github if you have a - github organisation already. - - * Ditto starting without gerritbot. - - * Be sure to update projects_file - that is openstack specific. - The defaults at the top all need to be updated. You probably want to start - with no initial projects until gerrit is happy for you, and update the - defaults to match your project. The gerrit user and commit defaults should - be changed, as should the homepage, but the rest should be fine. - -Create any acl config files for your project. - -Update site.pp to reference the new gerrit manifest. See review.pp for -documentation on the hiera keys. - -SSH keys can be made via ssh-keygen, you will need passwordless keys to be able -to restart without manual intervention. See the ssh-keygen man page for more -information. but in short:: - - ssh-keygen -t rsa -P '' -f ssh_host_rsa_key - ssh-keygen -t dsa -P '' -f ssh_host_dsa_key - ssh-keygen -t rsa -P '' -f project_ssh_rsa_key - -You will need to get an ssl certificate - if you're testing you may want a self -signed one (but be sure to set ssl_chain_file to '' in review.pp in that case). -``http://lmgtfy.com/q=self+signed+certificate``. To put them in hiera you need -to use ``: |``:: - - foo: | - literal - contents - here - -Launch a node - be sure to pass --flavor "10G" to get a flavor with at -least 10G+ of RAM, as gerrit is configured for 8G of heap. - -Follow the :ref:`gerrit` documentation for instructions on getting gerrit -configured once installed. - -Finally, you should be able to follow the `Project Creator’s Guide `_ to setup a project at -this point. (Zuul and Jenkins jobs obviously won't work yet). - -Stage 4 - Zuul -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - -Zuul is the scheduler in the OpenStack CI system queuing and dispatching work -across multiple CI engines (via gearman). With a working code review system we -can now set up a scheduler. Once setup, new patches uploaded -to gerrit should be picked up and have a zuul verification fail (with 'LOST' -which indicates the Jenkins environment is gone). - -#. Create a zuul user (the upstream site.pp uses jenkins for - historical reasons): - - :: - - ssh-keygen -t rsa -P '' -f zuul_ssh_key - - cat zuul_ssh_key.pub | ssh -p 29418 $USER@$HOST gerrit create-account \ - --group "'Continuous Integration Tools'" \ - --full-name "'Zuul'" \ - --email zuul@lists.openstack.org \ - --ssh-key - zuul - -#. Add the private key you made to hiera as ``zuul_ssh_private_key_contents``. - -#. Migrate modules/openstack_project/zuul/layout.yaml. This file has both - broad structure such as pipelines which you'll want to preserve - as-is, and project specific entries that you'll want to delete. And probably - update the error links to point to your own wiki. - - Be sure to keep the ^.*$ job parameter. - -#. Migrate modules/openstack_project/manifests/zuul_prod.pp into your project - tree. - -#. Migrate modules/openstack_project/zuul/scoreboard.html into your tree. This - file is used for diagnosing intermittent failures : if you don't have flakey - tests you can just trim this from the zuul definition. - -#. Migrate the definition in site.pp to your project. - Note the jenkins -> zuul user and variable change. - You have no gearman workers yet, so make that list be empty. - -#. Launch it, using a 1GB node. - -Stage 5 - Jenkins Master(s) -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - -For Zuul to schedule work, it needs one or more Gearman connected Jenkins -masters. - -The minimum setup is one master, but if you will be permitting any code -submitter to trigger test runs, we recommend having two: one untrusted and one -trusted for doing release automation (where the released code integrity is -important). When doing bring-up, bringing up jenkins01 first is probably -best as that is the first of the horizontally-scalable untrusted masters, -which get the most load (as they run jobs from anyone). - -#. Make a jenkins master ssh key (shared across all jenkins masters): - - :: - - ssh-keygen -t rsa -P '' -f jenkins_ssh_key - -#. Make a self signed certificate for the jenkins site. - -#. Migrate modules/openstack_project/manifests/init.pp - This gets the public jenkins key embedded in it. - -#. Setup an equivalent to - modules/openstack_project/files/jenkins_job_builder/config for your project. - This is documented in the `Project Creator's Guide `_. You should copy hooks.yaml and - defaults.yaml across as-is, and if you want the stock set of python jobs - that OpenStack uses, the python-jobs.yaml and pypi-jobs.yaml files too. - Macros.yaml will need to be copied and customised. See the - jenkins-job-builder docs for information on customisation - failing to - customise isn't harmful, but you may find your jobs try to post errors to - the OpenStack logging site :). Finally setup the list of projects to build - in projects.yaml. The ``config`` job with the puppet-lint/syntax and - pyflakes job can be particularly useful for ensuring you can push updates - with confidence (which needs puppet-modules-jobs.yaml). - -#. Migrate modules/openstack_project/files/jenkins/jenkins.default unless you - are happy with a 12G java memory footprint (which only large busy sites will - need). - -#. Migrate modules/openstack_project/manifests/jenkins.pp - Be sure to replace gerrig with your actual service account user. - -#. Migrate jenkins01.openstack.org in site.pp. As we don't have zmq setup yet, - leave that list blank. Be sure to add this jenkins into the zuul gear list. - -#. Update hiera with the relevant parameters. - You'll need to get the jenkins_jobs_password from Jenkins (see - `http://docs.openstack.org/infra/jenkins-job-builder/installation.html#configuration-file`) - after Jenkins is up - start with it set to ''. You can use your own user or - make a dedicated user. - -#. Launch the node with a size larger than the jenkins size you specified. - -#. Setup Jenkins. - -At this stage doing a 'recheck' should still report LOST on a change. -But in the zuul debug.log in /var/log/zuul you should see a 'build xxx not -registered' being reported from gearman : this indicates you have never had an -executor register itself for that queue, and it's being ignored. - -Stage 6 - Static slaves -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - -The OpenStack CI infrastructure has two sets of Jenkins slaves : dynamically -managed via nodepool and statically managed by hand. A by-hand slave is easier -to bring up initially, so that's our next step. - -The platform specific slaves are named $platform-serial.slave.$PROJECT in -site.pp. For instance, Python2.6 is not widely available now, so it runs on -centos6-xx.slave.$platform nodes. - -#. Migrate modules/openstack_project/manifests/slave.pp - We reuse tmpcleanup as-is. - -#. Convert a slave definition in site.pp. Lets say - ``/^centos6-?\d+\.slave\.openstack\.org$/`` - -#. Launch a node, passing in --image and --flavor to get a node that you - want :). e.g:: - - launch-node.py centos6-1.slave.openstack.org --image $IMAGE --flavor "1G" \ - mydns - -#. Go into the Jenkins config and press 'test connection' on the gearman config - to register the new slave. - -Now, if you push a change, zuul should pick it up and run it on -jenkins, and you can get onto the interesting thing of debugging why -it fails. - -Later chapters will cover setting up the test storage servers so you can see -build history without logging into Jenkins.