kolla-ansible/doc/multinode.rst
Michal (inc0) Jastrzebski fa2b96297c Point to boostrap-servers playbook in quickstart
Since initial setup is arguably the hardest part of kolla deployment,
let's show people our new plabybook to lower the barrier of entry.

TrivialFix

Change-Id: I6edf355772b5705207cdecfbe8c45672a63badf0
2016-09-21 15:08:57 +00:00

3.9 KiB

Multinode Deployment of Kolla

Deploy a registry (required for multinode)

A Docker registry is a locally hosted registry that replaces the need to pull from the Docker Hub to get images. Kolla can function with or without a local registry, however for a multinode deployment a registry is required.

The Docker registry prior to version 2.3 has extremely bad performance because all container data is pushed for every image rather than taking advantage of Docker layering to optimize push operations. For more information reference pokey registry.

The Kolla community recommends using registry 2.3 or later. To deploy registry with version greater than 2.3, do the following:

docker run -d -p 4000:5000 --restart=always --name registry registry:2

Note

Kolla looks for the Docker registry to use port 4000. (Docker default is port 5000)

After starting the registry, it is necessary to instruct Docker that it will be communicating with an insecure registry. To enable insecure registry communication on CentOS, modify the /etc/sysconfig/docker file to contain the following where 192.168.1.100 is the IP address of the machine where the registry is currently running:

# CentOS
INSECURE_REGISTRY="--insecure-registry 192.168.1.100:4000"

For Ubuntu, check whether its using upstart or systemd.

# stat /proc/1/exe
File: '/proc/1/exe' -> '/lib/systemd/systemd'

Edit /etc/default/docker and add:

# Ubuntu
DOCKER_OPTS="--insecure-registry 192.168.1.100:4000"

If Ubuntu is using systemd, additional settings needs to be configured. Copy docker's systemd unit file to /etc/systemd/system/ directory:

cp /lib/systemd/system/docker.service /etc/systemd/system/docker.service

Next, modify /etc/systemd/system/docker.service, add environmentFile variable and add $DOCKER_OPTS to the end of ExecStart in [Service] section:

# CentOS
[Service]
MountFlags=shared
EnvironmentFile=/etc/sysconfig/docker
ExecStart=/usr/bin/docker daemon $INSECURE_REGISTRY

# Ubuntu
[Service]
EnvironmentFile=-/etc/default/docker
ExecStart=/usr/bin/docker daemon -H fd:// $DOCKER_OPTS

Restart docker by executing the following commands:

# CentOS or Ubuntu with systemd
systemctl daemon-reload
systemctl restart docker

# Ubuntu with upstart or sysvinit
sudo service docker restart

Edit the Inventory File

The ansible inventory file contains all the information needed to determine what services will land on which hosts. Edit the inventory file in the kolla directory ansible/inventory/multinode or if kolla was installed with pip, it can be found in /usr/share/kolla.

Add the ip addresses or hostnames to a group and the services associated with that group will land on that host:

# These initial groups are the only groups required to be modified. The
# additional groups are for more control of the environment.
[control]
# These hostname must be resolvable from your deployment host
control01
192.168.122.24

For more advanced roles, the operator can edit which services will be associated in with each group. Keep in mind that some services have to be grouped together and changing these around can break your deployment:

[kibana:children]
control

[elasticsearch:children]
control

[haproxy:children]
network

Deploying Kolla

First, check that the deployment targets are in a state where Kolla may deploy to them:

kolla-ansible prechecks -i <path/to/multinode/inventory/file>

For additional environment setup see the deploying-kolla.

Run the deployment:

kolla-ansible deploy -i <path/to/multinode/inventory/file>