kolla-ansible/doc/devenv-vagrant.rst
Lubosz Kosnik f6107f0929 Fixes typo in openstack command
openstack user-list changed
to proper form of openstack command

Change-Id: If409ab26bf6266e0790a2d2cce18d28adb844702
Closes-Bug: #1503711
2015-10-07 16:38:18 +02:00

4.0 KiB

Vagrant up!

This guide describes how to use Vagrant to assist in developing for Kolla.

Vagrant is a tool to assist in scripted creation of virtual machines. Vagrant takes care of setting up CentOS-based VMs for Kolla development, each with proper hardware like memory amount and number of network interfaces.

Getting Started

The Vagrant script implements All-in-One (AIO) or multi-node deployments. AIO is the default.

In the case of multi-node deployment, the Vagrant setup builds a cluster with the following nodes by default:

  • 3 control nodes
  • 1 compute node
  • 1 storage node (Note: ceph requires at least 3 storage nodes)
  • 1 network node
  • 1 operator node

The cluster node count can be changed by editing the Vagrantfile.

Kolla runs from the operator node to deploy OpenStack.

All nodes are connected with each other on the secondary NIC. The primary NIC is behind a NAT interface for connecting with the Internet. The third NIC is connected without IP configuration to a public bridge interface. This may be used for Neutron/Nova to connect to instances.

Start by downloading and installing the Vagrant package for the distro of choice. Various downloads can be found at the Vagrant downloads.

On Fedora 22 it is as easy as:

sudo dnf install vagrant ruby-devel libvirt-devel

Next install the hostmanager plugin so all hosts are recorded in /etc/hosts (inside each vm):

vagrant plugin install vagrant-hostmanager

Vagrant supports a wide range of virtualization technologies. This documentation describes libvirt. To install vagrant-libvirt plugin:

vagrant plugin install vagrant-libvirt

Setup NFS to permit file sharing between host and VMs. Contrary to rsync method, NFS allows both way synchronization and offers much better performances than VirtualBox shared folders. On Fedora 22:

sudo systemctl start nfs-server
firewall-cmd --permanent --add-port=2049/udp
firewall-cmd --permanent --add-port=2049/tcp
firewall-cmd --permanent --add-port=111/udp
firewall-cmd --permanent --add-port=111/tcp

Find a location in the system's home directory and checkout the Kolla repo:

git clone https://github.com/openstack/kolla.git ~/dev/kolla

Developers can now tweak the Vagrantfile or bring up the default AIO Centos7-based environment:

cd ~/dev/kolla/vagrant && vagrant up

The command vagrant status provides a quick overview of the VMs composing the environment.

Vagrant Up

Once Vagrant has completed deploying all nodes, the next step is to launch Kolla. First, connect with the operator node:

vagrant ssh operator

To speed things up, there is a local registry running on the operator. All nodes are configured so they can use this insecure repo to pull from, and use it as a mirror. Ansible may use this registry to pull images from.

All nodes have a local folder shared between the group and the hypervisor, and a folder shared between all nodes and the hypervisor. This mapping is lost after reboots, so make sure to use the command vagrant reload <node> when reboots are required. Having this shared folder provides a method to supply a different docker binary to the cluster. The shared folder is also used to store the docker-registry files, so they are save from destructive operations like vagrant destroy.

Building images

Once logged on the operator VM call the kolla-build utility:

kolla-build

kolla-build accept arguments as documented in image-building.

Deploying OpenStack with Kolla

Deploy AIO with:

sudo kolla-ansible deploy

Deploy multinode with:

sudo kolla-ansible deploy -i /usr/share/kolla/ansible/inventory/multinode

Validate OpenStack is operational:

source ~/openrc
openstack user list

Or navigate to http://10.10.10.254/ with a web browser.

Further Reading

All Vagrant documentation can be found at docs.vagrantup.com.