Jean-Philippe Evrard 847b0a1110 Fix mistral metal deploy
In AIO CI deploy, we are relying on aio_metal.yml.example to
determine what to set in the runtime env.d (it is copied there,
verbatim).

Sadly we added in env.d the support for mistral, without editing
this file. So, by default, the integrated will use lxc, as the
group for mistral will not have is_metal: true. Therefore
the lxc_hosts group will also be populated, and the deployment
is then using lxc for just this container. It is not respecting
the requirement for running 'on metal'.

This should fix it.

Change-Id: Icf29be45ceba24b31ff471157b630e23661709a5
2019-05-21 11:48:47 +00:00
2019-05-16 15:39:13 -05:00
2019-05-21 11:48:47 +00:00
2019-05-16 15:39:13 -05:00
2019-05-19 13:59:26 +00:00
2019-05-19 13:59:26 +00:00
2019-05-20 12:44:04 +00:00
2019-04-19 19:48:42 +00:00
2017-03-02 11:51:03 +00:00
2019-05-18 09:57:28 +02:00
2018-12-04 10:08:33 +00:00

Team and repository tags

image

OpenStack-Ansible

OpenStack-Ansible is an official OpenStack project which aims to deploy production environments from source in a way that makes it scalable while also being simple to operate, upgrade, and grow.

For an overview of the mission, repositories and related Wiki home page, please see the formal Home Page for the project.

For those looking to test OpenStack-Ansible using an All-In-One (AIO) build, please see the Quick Start guide.

For more detailed Installation and Operator documentation, please see the Deployment Guide.

If OpenStack-Ansible is missing something you'd like to see included, then we encourage you to see the Developer Documentation for more details on how you can get involved.

Developers wishing to work on the OpenStack-Ansible project should always base their work on the latest code, available from the master GIT repository at Source.

If you have some questions, or would like some assistance with achieving your goals, then please feel free to reach out to us on the OpenStack Mailing Lists (particularly openstack-discuss) or on IRC in #openstack-ansible on the freenode network.

OpenStack-Ansible Roles

OpenStack-Ansible offers separate role repositories for each individual role that OpenStack-Ansible supports. For individual role configuration options, see the Role Documentation.

An individual role's source code can be found at: https://opendev.org/openstack/openstack-ansible-<ROLENAME>.

Resources

Description
Ansible playbooks for deploying OpenStack.
Readme 139 MiB
Languages
Python 61.6%
Shell 26.9%
Jinja 11.4%
Smarty 0.1%