Pavlo Shchelokovskyy f3b1be7bde Add preliminary support for standalone ironic
currently ironic chart is quite entangled with the presense of
other openstack services (Glance, Neutron, Swift).

Ironic is capable of running completely standalone, and while
the keystone and some neutron-related pieces are implemented as jobs
and can be turned off in manifests and dependencies sections of values,
others are scripts running as initContainers and are not the easy to
switch off.

This patch adds more key/values to the bootstrap key,
which allows to turn off Neutron-, Swift- and Glance-related pieces
while keeping possibility that some other networking, image or
object_store actions appropriate for standalone case may be needed.

Change-Id: Icccbdbce81ca350042f33f5e86bb942064839267
2019-03-22 17:04:08 +02:00
2019-03-06 04:09:58 +00:00
2018-05-13 22:17:57 -05:00
2017-04-11 07:03:45 -05:00
2016-11-12 14:26:57 -05:00
2019-02-28 10:52:18 +01:00
2019-02-27 14:51:15 +08:00
2019-01-05 09:22:36 +00:00

OpenStack-Helm

Mission

The goal of OpenStack-Helm is to provide a collection of Helm charts that simply, resiliently, and flexibly deploy OpenStack and related services on Kubernetes.

Communication

  • Join us on Slack - #openstack-helm
  • Join us on IRC: #openstack-helm on freenode
  • Community IRC Meetings: [Every Tuesday @ 3PM UTC], #openstack-meeting-4 on freenode
  • Meeting Agenda Items: Agenda

Storyboard

Bugs and enhancements are tracked via OpenStack-Helm's Storyboard.

Installation and Development

Please review our documentation. For quick installation, evaluation, and convenience, we have a kubeadm based all-in-one solution that runs in a Docker container. The Kubeadm-AIO set up can be found here.

This project is under active development. We encourage anyone interested in OpenStack-Helm to review our Installation documentation. Feel free to ask questions or check out our current Storyboard backlog.

To evaluate a multinode installation, follow the Bare Metal install guide.

Repository

Developers wishing to work on the OpenStack-Helm project should always base their work on the latest code, available from the OpenStack-Helm git repository.

OpenStack-Helm git repository

Description
Helm charts for deploying OpenStack on Kubernetes
Readme 126 MiB
Languages
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Shell 16.8%
Python 1.3%
Jinja 0.2%
Makefile 0.2%