Small sphinx syntax fixes, better wording, removed pronouns, and anything else we can think of. Change-Id: Id7ca8d4673f987d10b520cb1eab77802a043c223 Partially-implements: blueprint documentation-rework
9.7 KiB
Building Container Images
The kolla-build
command is responsible for building
docker images.
Note
When developing Kolla it can be useful to build images using files
located in a local copy of Kolla. Use the tools/build.py
script instead of kolla-build
command in all below
instructions.
Generating kolla-build.conf
Install tox and generate the build configuration. The build configuration is designed to hold advanced customizations when building containers.
Create kolla-build.conf using the following steps. :
pip install tox
tox -e genconfig
The location of the generated configuration file is
etc/kolla/kolla-build.conf
, You can also copy it to
/etc/kolla
. The default location is one of
/etc/kolla/kolla-build.conf
or
etc/kolla/kolla-build.conf
.
Guide
In general, images are built like this:
kolla-build
By default, the above command would build all images based on CentOS image.
The operator can change the base distro with the -b
option:
kolla-build -b ubuntu
There are following distros available for building images:
- fedora
- centos
- oraclelinux
- ubuntu
To push the image after building, add --push
:
kolla-build --push
It is possible to build only a subset of images by specifying them on the command line:
kolla-build keystone
In this case, the build script builds all images which name contains the 'keystone' string along with their dependencies.
Multiple names may be specified on the command line:
kolla-build keystone nova
kolla-build
uses kollaglue
as default
Docker namespace. This is controlled with the -n
command
line option. To push images to a dockerhub repository named
mykollarepo
:
kolla-build -n mykollarepo --push
To push images to a local registry, use --registry
flag:
kolla-build --registry 172.22.2.81:4000 --push
To trigger the build script to pull images from a local registry, the Docker configuration needs to be modified. See Docker Insecure Registry Config.
The build configuration can be customized using a config file, the
default location being one of /etc/kolla/kolla-build.conf
or etc/kolla/kolla-build.conf
. This file can be generated
using the following command:
tox -e genconfig
Build OpenStack from Source
When building images, there are two methods of the OpenStack install.
One is binary
. Another is source
. The
binary
means that OpenStack will be installed from apt/yum.
And the source
means that OpenStack will be installed from
source code. The default method of the OpenStack install is
binary
. It can be changed to source
using the
-t
option:
kolla-build -t source
The locations of OpenStack source code are written in
etc/kolla/kolla-build.conf
. Now the source type supports
url
, git
, and local
. The location
of the local
source type can point to either a directory
containing the source code or to a tarball of the source. The
local
source type permits to make the best use of the
docker cache.
etc/kolla/kolla-build.conf
looks like:
[glance-base]
type = url
location = http://tarballs.openstack.org/glance/glance-master.tar.gz
[keystone]
type = git
location = https://github.com/openstack/keystone
reference = stable/kilo
[heat-base]
type = local
location = /home/kolla/src/heat
[ironic-base]
type = local
location = /tmp/ironic.tar.gz
To build RHEL containers, it is necessary to use the -i (include header) feature to include registration with RHN of the container runtime operating system. To obtain a RHN username/password/pool id, contact Red Hat.
First create a file called rhel-include:
RUN subscription-manager register --user=<user-name> --password=<password> \
&& subscription-manager attach --pool <pool-id>
Then build RHEL containers:
kolla-build -b rhel -i ./rhel-include
Custom Repos
The build method allows the operator to build containers from custom repos. The repos are accepted as a list of comma separated values and can be in the form of .repo, .rpm, or a url. See examples below.
Update rpm_setup_config in /etc/kolla/kolla-build.conf:
rpm_setup_config = http://trunk.rdoproject.org/centos7/currrent/delorean.repo,http://trunk.rdoproject.org/centos7/delorean-deps.repo
If specifying a .repo file, each .repo file will need to exist in the same directory as the base Dockerfile (kolla/docker/base):
rpm_setup_config = epel.repo,delorean.repo,delorean-deps.repo
Plugin Functionality
Note
The following functionality currently exists only for Neutron. Other services will be made pluggable in Kolla in the near future.
Plugin functionality is available for the source build type only.
Certain OpenStack services support third party plugins, e.g. Neutron's pluggable L2 drivers.
Kolla supports downloading pip installable archives as part of the build, which will then be picked up and installed in the relevant image.
To instruct Kolla to use these, add a section to
/etc/kolla/kolla-build.conf
in the following format:
[<image>-plugin-<plugin-name>]
Where <image>
is the image that the plugin should
be installed into, and <plugin-name>
is the chosen
plugin identifier.
For example, to install the Cisco L2 plugin for Neutron into the
neutron-server image, the operator would add the following block to
/etc/kolla/kolla-build.conf
:
[neutron-server-plugin-networking-cisco]
type = git
location = https://github.com/openstack/networking-cisco
reference = master
Known issues
Can't build base image because docker fails to install systemd.
There are some issues between docker and AUFS. The simple workaround to avoid the issue is that add
-s devicemapper
toDOCKER_OPTS
. Get more information about the issue from DockerBug.Mirrors are unreliable.
Some of the mirrors Kolla uses can be unreliable. As a result occasionally some containers fail to build. To rectify build problems, the build tool will automatically attempt three retries of a build operation if the first one fails. The retry count is modified with the
--retries
option.
Docker Local Registry
It is recommended to set up local registry for Kolla developers or deploying multinode. The reason using a local registry is deployment performance will operate at local network speeds, typically gigabit networking. Beyond performance considerations, the Operator would have full control over images that are deployed. If there is no local registry, nodes pull images from Docker Hub when images are not found in local caches.
Setting up Docker Local Registry
Running Docker registry is easy. Just use the following command:
docker run -d -p 4000:5000 --restart=always --name registry registry
The default port of Docker registry is 5000. But the 5000 port is also the port of keystone-api. To avoid conflict, use 4000 port as Docker registry port.
Now the Docker registry service is running.
Docker Insecure Registry Config
For docker to pull images, it is necessary to modify the Docker configuration. The guide assumes that the IP of the machine running Docker registry is 172.22.2.81.
In Ubuntu, add --insecure-registry 172.22.2.81:4000
to
DOCKER_OPTS
in /etc/default/docker
.
In CentOS, uncomment INSECURE_REGISTRY
and set
INSECURE_REGISTRY
to
--insecure-registry 172.22.2.81:4000
in
/etc/sysconfig/docker
.
And restart the docker service.
To build and push images to local registry, use the following command:
kolla-build --registry 172.22.2.81:4000 --push
Kolla-ansible with Local Registry
To make kolla-ansible pull images from local registry, set
"docker_registry"
to "172.22.2.81:4000"
in
"/etc/kolla/globals.yml"
. Make sure Docker is allowed to
pull images from insecure registry. See Docker Insecure Registry
Config.
Building behind a proxy
The build script supports augmenting the Dockerfiles under build via so called header and footer files. Statements in the header file are included at the top of the base image, while those in footer are included at the bottom of every Dockerfile in the build.
A common use case for this is to insert http_proxy settings into the images to fetch packages during build, and then unset them at the end to avoid having them carry through to the environment of the final images. Note however, it's not possible to drop the info completely using this method; it will still be visible in the layers of the image.
To use this feature, create a file called .header
, with
the following content for example:
ENV http_proxy=https://evil.corp.proxy:80
ENV https_proxy=https://evil.corp.proxy:80
Then create another file called .footer
, with the
following content:
ENV http_proxy=""
ENV https_proxy=""
Finally, pass them to the build script using the -i
and
-I
flags:
kolla-build -i .header -I .footer
Besides this configuration options, the script will automatically read these environment variables. If the host system proxy parameters match the ones going to be used, no other input parameters will be needed. These are the variables that will be picked up from the user env:
HTTP_PROXY, http_proxy, HTTPS_PROXY, https_proxy, FTP_PROXY,
ftp_proxy, NO_PROXY, no_proxy
Also these variables could be overwritten using
--build-args
, which have precedence.