kolla-ansible/docs/integration-guide.md
Daneyon Hansen fa51eb4b53 Fixes Nova NoVNC
Previously, vnc was not completely working properly because
nova.conf config flags were not properly implemented in t he correct
containers.

This patch moves the nova.conf config flags for vnc to the proper
containers. Additionally, the patch modifies the proxy client ip
param to be consistent with the param within nova.conf and adds
all the novnc params to docs.

Change-Id: I1944baca64ccd113bbca582784b08f90dc0eff69
2015-05-12 12:11:40 -07:00

9.0 KiB

Integrating with Kolla

This guide describes how to integrate with Kolla. The main integration path is via docker-compose using docker-compose YML files. Each container set has a common YML and associated openstack.env. The openstack.env file describes the command line environment to pass to the docker-compose yml files.

Why integrate with Kolla?

Integrating with Kolla takes a hard part of managing an OpenStack system, specifically managing the container images, and places the burden on a third party project. We strive to do an excellent job of providing world-class OpenStack containers at least as a reference architecture, and possibly as what may be desirable to deploy into live production.

Docker Command Line Arguments

Every container set YML file includes the necessary docker CLI operations needed to launch the container in a tidy YML file. Instead of guessing which set of command line operations are needed per container, the docker-compose YML file can be used directly and will pass the appropriate command line values to the container on container start.

The parameterized docker features used by kolla are:

  • --pid=host
  • --net=host
  • -v host:container
  • --privileged

These parameterized features are not exposed to the user. Instead they are executed via docker-compose.

Environment Variables

Rather then document which individual containers require specific configuration variables, Kolla integration requires passing all configuration variables to all containers. This allows a simple method of ensuring every type of node (controller, storage, compute) receives the same configuration.

Environment Variable KEY/VALUE pairs

DEBUG_LOGGING=<true|false> - Defaults to false. Enable/disable debug level logging for all OpenStack services.
VERBOSE_LOGGING=<true|false> - Defaults to true. Enable/disable verbose level logging for all OpenStack services.
NOVA_LOG_DIR=<none> - Defaults to none. The base directory used for relative Nova --log-file paths.
NEUTRON_LOG_DIR<none> - Defaults to none. The base directory used for relative Neutron --log-file paths.
NOVA_API_LOG_FILE=<none> Defaults to none. Name of Nova API log file to output to. If no default is set, logging will go to stdout.
NOVA_CONDUCTOR_LOG_FILE=<none> Defaults to none. Name of Nova Conductor log file to output to. If no default is set, logging will go to stdout.
NOVA_SCHEDULER_LOG_FILE=<none> Defaults to none. Name of Nova Scheduler log file to output to. If no default is set, logging will go to stdout.
NOVA_COMPUTE_LOG_FILE=<none> Defaults to none. Name of Nova Compute log file to output to. If no default is set, logging will go to stdout.
NEUTRON_SERVER_LOG_FILE=<none> Defaults to none. Name of Neutron Server log file to output to. If no default is set, logging will go to stdout.
NEUTRON_L3_AGENT_LOG_FILE=<none> Defaults to none. Name of Neutron L3 Agent log file to output to. If no default is set, logging will go to stdout.
NEUTRON_LINUXBRIDGE_AGENT_LOG_FILE=<none> Defaults to none. Name of Neutron Linux Bridge Agent log file to output to. If no default is set, logging will go to stdout.
NEUTRON_METADATA_AGENT_LOG_FILE=<none> Defaults to none. Name of Neutron Metadata Agent log file to output to. If no default is set, logging will go to stdout.
ADMIN_USER_PASSWORD=<steakfordinner> - The admin user password
ADMIN_TENANT_NAME=<admin> - tenant name
FLAT_INTERFACE=<eth1> - nova networking flat interface device name
GLANCE_API_SERVICE_HOST=<IP> - address where glance API is running>
GLANCE_DB_NAME=<glance> - DB name of glance service
GLANCE_DB_PASSWORD=<password> - <Glance DB password>
GLANCE_DB_USER=<glance> - User name of glance in the database
GLANCE_KEYSTONE_PASSWORD=<password> - Keystone DB password
GLANCE_KEYSTONE_USER=<keystone> - Glance Keystone User
GLANCE_REGISTRY_SERVICE_HOST=<glance IP> Glance registry service host
KEYSTONE_ADMIN_PASSWORD=<password>
KEYSTONE_ADMIN_SERVICE_HOST=<IP> - IP Address of Keystone Host
KEYSTONE_ADMIN_SERVICE_PORT=<5000> - Port where Keystone operates
KEYSTONE_ADMIN_TOKEN=<keystone-secret> - A token used to access Keystone
KEYSTONE_AUTH_PROTOCOL=<http> - The keystone authentication protocol
KEYSTONE_DB_PASSWORD=<password> - The password used to access Keystone in the DB
KEYSTONE_PUBLIC_SERVICE_HOST=<IP> - The IP address where Keystone is running
MARIADB_ROOT_PASSWORD=<mariadb root password> - defines the MariaDB root password
MARIADB_SERVICE_HOST=<IP> - The IP Address where Mariadb is running
NETWORK_MANAGER=<nova|neutron> - Use Nova or Neutron networking
NOVA_API_SERVICE_HOST=<IP> - The IP Address where the Nova API Service is hosted
METADATA_HOST=<IP> - The IP address of the Nova Metadata service
ENABLED_APIS=<ec2,osapi_compute,metadata> - Enabled Nova API services.
NOVA_DB_NAME=<nova> - The name of the nova entry in the database
NOVA_DB_PASSWORD=<password> - The password used to access nova
NOVA_DB_USER=<nova> - The name of the nova DB password
NOVA_EC2_API_SERVICE_HOST=<IP> - The IP Address where the Nova EC2 API is hosted
arn't these two the same?
NOVA_EC2_SERVICE_HOST=<IP> _ The IP Address where the Nova EC2 service is hosted
NOVA_VNCSERVER_PROXYCLIENT_ADDRESS=<IP> The IP address for the VNC Proxy Client to use
NOVA_VNCSERVER_LISTEN_ADDRESS=<IP> The IP address for the VNC Server to use
NOVA_NOVNC_BASE_ADDRESS=<IP/DNS Name> The IP/DNS Name to use for the NOVNC Base URL
NOVA_NOVNC_PROXY_PORT=<6080> The TCP port used by Nova NoVNC
NOVA_KEYSTONE_PASSWORD=<password> - The Nova keystone password
NOVA_KEYSTONE_USER=<nova> - The Nova keystone username
NEUTRON_DB_NAME=<neutron> - The name of the Neutron database
NEUTRON_DB_USER=<neutron> - The name used by Neutron to access the Neutron database
NEUTRON_DB_PASSWORD=<password> The password used by Neutron to access the Neutron database
NEUTRON_KEYSTONE_USER=<neutron> - The name used by Neutron to communicate with Keystone
NEUTRON_KEYSTONE_PASSWORD=<neutron> - The password used by Neutron to communicate with Keystone
NEUTRON_SERVER_SERVICE_HOST=<$HOST_IP> - The IP address/hostname used to commuicate with the Neutron API
NEUTRON_SHARED_SECRET=<sharedsecret> - The shared secret used between Neutron/Nova to secure metadata communication
NEUTRON_API_PASTE_CONFIG=</usr/share/neutron/api-paste.ini> - Location of Neutron's API paste config file
TYPE_DRIVERS=<flat,vxlan> - List of network type driver entrypoints to be loaded
TENANT_NETWORK_TYPES=<flat,vxlan> - List of network_types to allocate as tenant networks
MECHANISM_DRIVERS=<linuxbridge,l2population> - List of networking mechanism driver entrypoints to be loaded
NEUTRON_FLAT_NETWORK_NAME=<physnet1> - List of physical_network names with which flat networks can be created
NEUTRON_FLAT_NETWORK_INTERFACE=<eth1> - List of physical interface names that connect to physical_networks
HEAT_DB_NAME=<heat> - The heat DB name
HEAT_DB_PASSWORD=<kolla> - The heat db password
HEAT_KEYSTONE_PASSWORD=<heat> - The keystone password for the heat user
HEAT_API_SERVICE_HOST=<IP> - The IP Address where the Heat API service is hosted
HEAT_API_CFN_SERVICE_HOST=<IP> - The IP Address where Heat users will contact the heat-engine in search for meta data
HEAT_API_CFN_URL_HOST=<IP> - The IP Address where Heat virtual machines will contact the heat-engine to signal wait conditions
PUBLIC_INTERFACE=<eth1> - The nova public interface
PUBLIC_IP=<Host IP Address> - The IP Address of this host
RABBITMQ_PASS=<rabbit> - The rabbitmq password used to join AMQP
RABBITMQ_SERVICE_HOST=<IP> - The IP Address where the Rabbit service is running
RABBITMQ_USER=<rabbit> - The RabbitMQ user name
RABBIT_PASSWORD=<password> - The RabbitMQ password
RABBIT_USERID=<rabbit> - The RabbitMQ user id on the host
MAGNUM_DB_NAME=<magnum> - The Magnum database name
MAGNUM_DB_PASSWORD=<kolla> - The Magnum database password
MAGNUM_KEYSTONE_PASSWORD=<magnum> - The Magnum keystone password
MAGNUM_API_SERVICE_HOST=<IP> - The Magnum Host IP address
MAGNUM_API_SERVICE_PORT=<9511> - The Magnum port

Minimum environment variable setup guide.

Launching a container set

Pick out a simple container set and launch it as follows:

$ docker-compose -f compose/rabbitmq.yml up -d

The third party deployment engine should launch the appropriate containers for the appropriate nodes. Note the rabbitmq.yml used in the example above expects an openstack.env file present in the current working directory. This file will be passed as environment data to the container and configure the container appropriately.

Conclusion

Integrating with Kolla is as sample as creating an openstack.env file, having a deployment tool write the openstack.env file and .yml files to the nodes are targeted for deployment, and running docker-compose as described in the above documentation.