Joe Talerico b219d23cc0 Collectd agent work
Currently looking to integrate Collectd into Browbeat
+ Install epel onto the hosts
+ Added collectd config files
+ Added collectd.conf
+ Play to do the install..
+ Play tested, works
+ fixed missing configs
+ (akrzos) added filter.conf, moved static config files to files folder, cleaned up collectd playbook
+ (kambiz) fixed the gen_hostfile.sh to include the previous fix on heat-admin key.  (regression!)
+ (kambiz) added selinux bits for collectd to run permissive without going full permissive
+ (kambiz) added a policy for running sample exec plugin via collectd as nobody (may need some fine tuning)

Change-Id: Ied873a7f3e91a13a9462df41334268322c7123a2
2016-02-03 20:21:05 +01:00
2016-02-03 20:21:05 +01:00
2016-01-08 09:02:17 -05:00
2016-01-29 16:11:04 -05:00
2016-01-29 16:11:04 -05:00
2016-01-29 21:24:34 +01:00
2016-01-30 12:28:01 -05:00
2015-12-09 08:45:09 -05:00
2016-01-29 21:24:34 +01:00
2016-01-29 21:24:34 +01:00

Table of Contents

Browbeat

This started as a project to help determine the number of database connections a given OpenStack deployment uses. It has since grown into a set of Ansible playbooks to help check deployments for known issues, install tools and change parameters of the overcloud.

Before running browbeat

  • Execute the ansible/gen_hostfile.sh script (builds the ssh config)
  • Install Tools (rally , shaker, connmon, etc)
  • Configure browbeat.cfg to match your tests

How to run Browbeat?

On the Red Hat OpenStack Director host, as the Stack user jump into a venv w/ Rally and you simply run:

./browbeat.py --help

What is necessary?

  • Red Hat OpenStack Director
    • Why? We use passwordless ssh to reach each controller instance and compute instance.
  • OpenStack Rally
    • Why? We are using Rally to stress the control plane of the env.
  • Ansible
    • Why? We started with using bash to make changes to the Overcloud, creating complex sed/awks that we get for free with Ansible (for the most part). If you prefer to not use Ansible, the older versions (no longer maintained) of the browbeat.sh can be found in a older commit.

Detailed Install, Check and Run

Installing Browbeat and running the Overcloud checks can be performed either from your local machine or from the undercloud. The local machine install/check assumes you have ansible installed already.

Install Browbeat from your local machine

From your local machine:

$ ssh-copy-id stack@<undercloud-ip>
$ git clone https://github.com/jtaleric/browbeat.git
$ cd browbeat/ansible
$ ./gen_hostfile.sh <undercloud-ip> ~/.ssh/config
$ vi install/group_vars/all # Make sure to edit the dns_server to the correct ip address
$ ansible-playbook -i hosts install/browbeat.yml

(Optional) Install shaker:

$ ansible-playbook -i hosts install/shaker.yml

(Optional) Install connmon:

$ ansible-playbook -i hosts install/connmon.yml

(Optional) Install pbench:

$ ansible-playbook -i hosts install/connmon.yml
  • pbench install is under improvement at this time and likely requires additional setup to complete install.

Run Overcloud checks

$ ansible-playbook -i hosts check/site.yml

Your Overcloud check output is located in check/bug_report.log

Run performance stress tests through browbeat on the undercloud:

$ ssh undercloud-root
[root@ospd ~]# su - stack
[stack@ospd ~]$ screen -S browbeat
[stack@ospd ~]$ . browbeat-venv/bin/activate
(browbeat-venv)[stack@ospd ~]$ cd browbeat/
(browbeat-venv)[stack@ospd browbeat]$ vi browbeat-config.yaml # Edit browbeat-config.yaml to control how many stress tests are run.
(browbeat-venv)[stack@ospd browbeat]$ ./browbeat.py -w
...
(browbeat-venv)[stack@ospd browbeat]$ ./graphing/rallyplot.py test01

Install Browbeat directly on undercloud:

From your undercloud:

$ ssh undercloud-root
[root@ospd ~]# su - stack
[stack@ospd ~]$ git clone https://github.com/jtaleric/browbeat.git
[stack@ospd ~]$ cd browbeat/ansible
[stack@ospd ansible]$ ./gen_hostfile.sh localhost ~/.ssh/config
[stack@ospd ansible]$ sudo easy_install pip
[stack@ospd ansible]$ sudo pip install ansible
[stack@ospd ansible]$ vi install/group_vars/all # Make sure to edit the dns_server to the correct ip address
[stack@ospd ansible]$ ansible-playbook -i hosts install/browbeat.yml

(Optional) Install shaker:

[stack@ospd ansible]$ ansible-playbook -i hosts install/shaker.yml

(Optional) Install connmon:

[stack@ospd ansible]$ ansible-playbook -i hosts install/connmon.yml

(Optional) Install pbench:

[stack@ospd ansible]$ ansible-playbook -i hosts install/connmon.yml
  • pbench install is under improvement at this time and likely requires additional setup to complete install.

Run Overcloud checks

[stack@ospd ansible]$ ansible-playbook -i hosts check/site.yml

Your Overcloud check output is located in check/bug_report.log

Run performance stress tests through browbeat:

[stack@ospd ansible]$ . ../../browbeat-venv/bin/activate
(browbeat-venv)[stack@ospd ansible]$ cd ..
(browbeat-venv)[stack@ospd browbeat]$ vi browbeat-config.yaml # Edit browbeat.cfg to control how many stress tests are run.
(browbeat-venv)[stack@ospd browbeat]$ ./browbeat.py -w
...
(browbeat-venv)[stack@ospd browbeat]$ ./graphing/rallyplot.py test01

Contributing

Contributions are most welcome! Pull requests need to be submitted using the gerrit code review system. Firstly, you need to login to GerritHub using your GitHub credentials and need to authorize GerritHub to access your account. Once you are logged in click you user name in the top-right corner, go to 'Settings' and under 'SSH Public Keys' you need to paste your public key. You can view your public key using:

$ cat ~/.ssh/id_\{r or d\}sa.pub

Set your username and email for git:

$ git config --global user.email "example@example.com"
$ git config --global user.name "example"

Next, Clone the github repository:

$ git clone https://github.com/jtaleric/browbeat.git

You need to have git-review in order to be able to submit patches using the gerrit code review system. You can install it using:

$ yum install git-review

To set up your cloned repository to work with gerrit:

[user@laptop browbeat]$ git review -s

Make your changes and then commit them. Use:

[user@laptop browbeat]$ git review

The first time you are submitting a patch, you will be requested for a user name which is typically your GerritHub user name(same as GitHub user name).

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Performance monitoring and testing of OpenStack
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