devstack/doc/source/index.rst
Steve Baker 249e36dec6 Remove lib/dib
diskimage-builder is a utility rather than a service, and is already
installed in devstack via pip when required.

lib/dib was created to allow an image to be created during a devstack
run for the heat functional tests, however this approach is no longer
being taken and there are no other known uses for lib/dib.

This change removes lib/dib and moves the pip mirror building to
lib/heat so that snapshot pip packages of the heat agent projects can
be made available to servers which the heat functional tests boot.

This also removes tripleo-image-elements, which has never
been utilised, and since images won't be created
during heat functional test runs it is no longer required.

Change-Id: Ic77f841437ea23c0645d3a34d9dd6bfd1ee28714
2015-03-06 10:57:52 +13:00

6.4 KiB

DevStack - an OpenStack Community Production

image

overview configuration plugins faq changes contributing

Quick Start

  1. Select a Linux Distribution

    Only Ubuntu 14.04 (Trusty), Fedora 20 and CentOS/RHEL 7 are documented here. OpenStack also runs and is packaged on other flavors of Linux such as OpenSUSE and Debian.

  2. Install Selected OS

    In order to correctly install all the dependencies, we assume a specific minimal version of the supported distributions to make it as easy as possible. We recommend using a minimal install of Ubuntu or Fedora server in a VM if this is your first time.

  3. Download DevStack

    git clone https://git.openstack.org/openstack-dev/devstack

    The devstack repo contains a script that installs OpenStack and templates for configuration files

  4. Configure

    We recommend at least a minimal configuration <configuration> be set up.

  5. Start the install

    cd devstack; ./stack.sh

    It takes a few minutes, we recommend reading the script while it is building.

Guides

Walk through various setups used by stackers

guides/single-vm guides/single-machine guides/multinode-lab guides/neutron guides/devstack-with-nested-kvm guides/nova

All-In-One Single VM

Run OpenStack in a VM <guides/single-vm>. The VMs launched in your cloud will be slow as they are running in QEMU (emulation), but it is useful if you don't have spare hardware laying around. [Read] <guides/single-vm>

All-In-One Single Machine

Run OpenStack on dedicated hardware <guides/single-machine> This can include a server-class machine or a laptop at home. [Read] <guides/single-machine>

Multi-Node Lab

Setup a multi-node cluster <guides/multinode-lab> with dedicated VLANs for VMs & Management. [Read] <guides/multinode-lab>

DevStack with Neutron Networking

Building a DevStack cluster with Neutron Networking <guides/neutron>. This guide is meant for building lab environments with a dedicated control node and multiple compute nodes.

DevStack with KVM-based Nested Virtualization

Procedure to setup DevStack with KVM-based Nested Virtualization <guides/devstack-with-nested-kvm>. With this setup, Nova instances will be more performant than with plain QEMU emulation.

Nova and devstack

Guide to working with nova features Nova and devstack <guides/nova>.

DevStack Documentation

Overview

An overview of DevStack goals and priorities <overview>

Configuration

Configuring and customizing the stack <configuration>

Plugins

Extending DevStack with new features <plugins>

Recent Changes

An incomplete summary of recent changes <changes>

FAQ

The DevStack FAQ <faq>

Contributing

Pitching in to make DevStack a better place <contributing>

Code

A look at the bits that make it all go

Scripts

Configuration

local.conf stackrc openrc exerciserc eucarc

Tools

Samples

Exercises