kolla-ansible/docs/dev-quickstart.md
Jeff Peeler 65f89001d0 Document installation of docker-compose 1.3.0
Also, change all references from fig to docker-compose.

Change-Id: I6bff2ab57cd6a06293d0a6d130d1cf9bc885b712
Closes-bug: #1468999
2015-06-26 16:52:45 -04:00

132 lines
4.5 KiB
Markdown

# Developer Environment
If you are developing Kolla on an existing OpenStack cloud
that supports Heat, then follow the Heat template [README][].
Otherwise, follow the instructions below to manually create
your Kolla development environment.
[README]: https://github.com/stackforge/kolla/blob/master/devenv/README.md
## Installing Dependencies
NB: Kolla will not run on Fedora 22 or later. Fedora 22 compresses kernel
modules with the .xz compressed format. The guestfs system cannot read
these images because a dependent package supermin in CentOS needs to be
updated to add .xz compressed format support.
In order to run Kolla, it is mandatory to run a version of `docker-compose`
that includes pid: host support. Support was added in version 1.3.0 and is
specified in the requirements.txt. To install this and other potential future
dependencies:
git clone http://github.com/stackforge/kolla
cd kolla
sudo pip install -r requirements.txt
In order to run Kolla, it is mandatory to run a version of `docker`
that is 1.7.0-dev or later. Docker 1.5.0 has a defect in `--pid=host`
support where the libvirt container cannot be stopped. Docker 1.6.0 lacks
specific features needed by the master of Kolla. Docker 1.7.0-dev introduces
mount propogation which is necessary for Neutron thin containers
and bindmounting of the /dev filesystem which is mandatory for the cinder
container.
If a version of Docker less than 1.7.0-dev is running on your system, stop it:
sudo systemctl stop docker
sudo killall -9 docker
If using an RPM based system, use the Docker 1.7.0-dev RPMs provided by the
Fedora project:
sudo rpm -Uvh --nodeps https://kojipkgs.fedoraproject.org//packages/docker/1.7.0/6.git56481a3.fc23/x86_64/docker-1.7.0-6.git56481a3.fc23.x86_64.rpm
For Debian based systems, use the Docker installation tool provided by Docker,
Inc.:
curl -sSL https://test.docker.com/ | sh
For Ubuntu based systems, use the Docker installation tool provided by Docker,
Inc.:
curl -sSL https://test.docker.com/ubuntu | sh
Next, install the OpenStack python clients if they are not installed:
sudo yum install python-keystoneclient python-glanceclient \
python-novaclient python-heatclient python-neutronclient
Finally stop libvirt on the host machine. Only one copy of libvirt may be
running at a time.
service libvirtd stop
The basic starting environment will be created using `docker-compose`.
This environment will start up the OpenStack services listed in the
compose directory.
## Starting Kolla
To start, setup your environment variables.
$ cd kolla
$ ./tools/genenv
The `genenv` script will create a compose/openstack.env file
and an openrc file in your current directory. The openstack.env
file contains all of your initialized environment variables, which
you can edit for a different setup.
A mandatory step is customizing the FLAT_INTERFACE network interface
environment variable. The variable defaults to eth1. In some cases, the
second interface in a system may not be eth1, but a unique name. For
example with an Intel driver, the interface is enp1s0. The interface name
can be determined by executing the ifconfig tool. The second interface must
be a real interface, not a virtual interface. Make certain to store the
interface name in `compose/openstack.env`:
NEUTRON_FLAT_NETWORK_INTERFACE=enp1s0
FLAT_INTERFACE=enp1s0
Next, run the start command:
$ sudo ./tools/kolla start
Finally, run the status command:
$ sudo ./tools/kolla status
This will display information about all Kolla containers.
## Debugging Kolla
All Docker commands should be run from the directory of the Docker binary,
by default this is `/`.
The `start` command to Kolla is responsible for starting the containers
using `docker-compose -f <service-container> up -d`.
If you want to start a container set by hand use this template:
$ docker-compose -f glance-api-registry.yml up -d
You can determine a container's status by executing:
$ sudo ./docker ps -a
If any of the containers exited you can check the logs by executing:
$ sudo ./docker logs <container-id>
$ docker-compose logs <container-id>
If you want to start a individual service like `glance-api` manually, use
this template. This is a good method to test and troubleshoot an individual
container. Note some containers require special options. Reference the
compose yml specification for more details:
$ sudo ./docker run --name glance-api -d \
--net=host \
--env-file=compose/openstack.env \
kollaglue/fedora-rdo-glance-api:latest