kolla-ansible/doc/source/reference/message-queues/rabbitmq.rst
Radosław Piliszek d7cdad5325 Use more RMQ flags for less busy wait
As mentioned in the Iced014acee7e590c10848e73feca166f48b622dc
commit message, in Ussuri+ we can use ``+sbwtdcpu none
+sbwtdio none`` as well. This is due to relying on RMQ-provided
erlang in version 23.x.

This change adds the extra arguments by default.
It should be backported down to Ussuri before we do a release with
Iced014acee7e590c10848e73feca166f48b622dc.

Change-Id: I32e247a6cb34d7f6763b544f247fd408dce2b3a2
2021-07-28 19:14:43 +00:00

4.4 KiB

RabbitMQ

RabbitMQ is a message broker written in Erlang. It is currently the default provider of message queues in Kolla Ansible deployments.

TLS encryption

There are a number of channels to consider when securing RabbitMQ communication. Kolla Ansible currently supports TLS encryption of the following:

  • client-server traffic, typically between OpenStack services using the :oslo.messaging-doc:oslo.messaging </> library and RabbitMQ
  • RabbitMQ Management API and UI (frontend connection to HAProxy only)

Encryption of the following channels is not currently supported:

  • RabbitMQ cluster traffic between RabbitMQ server nodes
  • RabbitMQ CLI communication with RabbitMQ server nodes
  • RabbitMQ Management API and UI (backend connection from HAProxy to RabbitMQ)

Client-server

Encryption of client-server traffic is enabled by setting rabbitmq_enable_tls to true. Additionally, certificates and keys must be available in the following paths (in priority order):

Certificates:

  • "{{ kolla_certificates_dir }}/{{ inventory_hostname }}/rabbitmq-cert.pem"
  • "{{ kolla_certificates_dir }}/{{ inventory_hostname }}-cert.pem"
  • "{{ kolla_certificates_dir }}/rabbitmq-cert.pem"

Keys:

  • "{{ kolla_certificates_dir }}/{{ inventory_hostname }}/rabbitmq-key.pem"
  • "{{ kolla_certificates_dir }}/{{ inventory_hostname }}-key.pem"
  • "{{ kolla_certificates_dir }}/rabbitmq-key.pem"

The default for kolla_certificates_dir is /etc/kolla/certificates.

The certificates must be valid for the IP address of the host running RabbitMQ on the API network.

Additional TLS configuration options may be passed to RabbitMQ via rabbitmq_tls_options. This should be a dict, and the keys will be prefixed with ssl_options.. For example:

rabbitmq_tls_options:
  ciphers.1: ECDHE-ECDSA-AES256-GCM-SHA384
  ciphers.2: ECDHE-RSA-AES256-GCM-SHA384
  ciphers.3: ECDHE-ECDSA-AES256-SHA384
  honor_cipher_order: true
  honor_ecc_order: true

Details on configuration of RabbitMQ for TLS can be found in the RabbitMQ documentation.

When om_rabbitmq_enable_tls is true (it defaults to the value of rabbitmq_enable_tls), applicable OpenStack services will be configured to use oslo.messaging with TLS enabled. The CA certificate is configured via om_rabbitmq_cacert (it defaults to rabbitmq_cacert, which points to the system's trusted CA certificate bundle for TLS). Note that there is currently no support for using client certificates.

For testing purposes, Kolla Ansible provides the kolla-ansible certificates command, which will generate self-signed certificates for RabbitMQ if rabbitmq_enable_tls is true.

Management API and UI

The management API and UI are accessed via HAProxy, exposed only on the internal VIP. As such, traffic to this endpoint is encrypted when kolla_enable_tls_internal is true. See tls-configuration.

Passing arguments to RabbitMQ server's Erlang VM

Erlang programs run in an Erlang VM (virtual machine) and use the Erlang runtime. The Erlang VM can be configured.

Kolla Ansible makes it possible to pass arguments to the Erlang VM via the usage of the rabbitmq_server_additional_erl_args variable. The contents of it are appended to the RABBITMQ_SERVER_ADDITIONAL_ERL_ARGS environment variable which is passed to the RabbitMQ server startup script. Kolla Ansible already configures RabbitMQ server for IPv6 (if necessary). Any argument can be passed there as documented in https://www.rabbitmq.com/runtime.html

The default value for rabbitmq_server_additional_erl_args is +S 2:2 +sbwt none +sbwtdcpu none +sbwtdio none.

By default RabbitMQ starts N schedulers where N is the number of CPU cores, including hyper-threaded cores. This is fine when you assume all CPUs are dedicated to RabbitMQ. Its not a good idea in a typical Kolla Ansible setup. Here we go for two scheduler threads (+S 2:2). More details can be found here: https://www.rabbitmq.com/runtime.html#scheduling and here: https://erlang.org/doc/man/erl.html#emulator-flags

The +sbwt none +sbwtdcpu none +sbwtdio none arguments prevent busy waiting of the scheduler, for more details see: https://www.rabbitmq.com/runtime.html#busy-waiting.