devstack/README.md

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DevStack is a set of scripts and utilities to quickly deploy an OpenStack cloud.
# Goals
* To quickly build dev OpenStack environments in a clean Ubuntu or Fedora environment
* To describe working configurations of OpenStack (which code branches work together? what do config files look like for those branches?)
* To make it easier for developers to dive into OpenStack so that they can productively contribute without having to understand every part of the system at once
* To make it easy to prototype cross-project features
* To sanity-check OpenStack builds (used in gating commits to the primary repos)
Read more at http://devstack.org (built from the gh-pages branch)
IMPORTANT: Be sure to carefully read `stack.sh` and any other scripts you execute before you run them, as they install software and may alter your networking configuration. We strongly recommend that you run `stack.sh` in a clean and disposable vm when you are first getting started.
# DevStack on Xenserver
If you would like to use Xenserver as the hypervisor, please refer to the instructions in `./tools/xen/README.md`.
# DevStack on Docker
If you would like to use Docker as the hypervisor, please refer to the instructions in `./tools/docker/README.md`.
# Versions
The devstack master branch generally points to trunk versions of OpenStack components. For older, stable versions, look for branches named stable/[release] in the DevStack repo. For example, you can do the following to create a diablo OpenStack cloud:
git checkout stable/diablo
./stack.sh
You can also pick specific OpenStack project releases by setting the appropriate `*_BRANCH` variables in `localrc` (look in `stackrc` for the default set). Usually just before a release there will be milestone-proposed branches that need to be tested::
GLANCE_REPO=https://github.com/openstack/glance.git
GLANCE_BRANCH=milestone-proposed
# Start A Dev Cloud
Installing in a dedicated disposable vm is safer than installing on your dev machine! To start a dev cloud:
./stack.sh
When the script finishes executing, you should be able to access OpenStack endpoints, like so:
* Horizon: http://myhost/
* Keystone: http://myhost:5000/v2.0/
We also provide an environment file that you can use to interact with your cloud via CLI:
# source openrc file to load your environment with osapi and ec2 creds
. openrc
# list instances
nova list
If the EC2 API is your cup-o-tea, you can create credentials and use euca2ools:
# source eucarc to generate EC2 credentials and set up the environment
. eucarc
# list instances using ec2 api
euca-describe-instances
# Customizing
You can override environment variables used in `stack.sh` by creating file name `localrc`. It is likely that you will need to do this to tweak your networking configuration should you need to access your cloud from a different host.
# Database Backend
Multiple database backends are available. The available databases are defined in the lib/databases directory.
`mysql` is the default database, choose a different one by putting the following in `localrc`:
disable_service mysql
enable_service postgresql
`mysql` is the default database.
# RPC Backend
Multiple RPC backends are available. Currently, this
includes RabbitMQ (default), Qpid, and ZeroMQ. Your backend of
choice may be selected via the `localrc`.
Note that selecting more than one RPC backend will result in a failure.
Example (ZeroMQ):
ENABLED_SERVICES="$ENABLED_SERVICES,-rabbit,-qpid,zeromq"
Example (Qpid):
ENABLED_SERVICES="$ENABLED_SERVICES,-rabbit,-zeromq,qpid"
# Apache Frontend
Apache web server is enabled for wsgi services by setting `APACHE_ENABLED_SERVICES` in your localrc. But remember to enable these services at first as above.
Example:
APACHE_ENABLED_SERVICES+=keystone,swift
# Swift
Swift is disabled by default. When enabled, it is configured with
only one replica to avoid being IO/memory intensive on a small
vm. When running with only one replica the account, container and
object services will run directly in screen. The others services like
replicator, updaters or auditor runs in background.
If you would like to enable Swift you can add this to your `localrc` :
enable_service s-proxy s-object s-container s-account
If you want a minimal Swift install with only Swift and Keystone you
can have this instead in your `localrc`:
disable_all_services
enable_service key mysql s-proxy s-object s-container s-account
If you only want to do some testing of a real normal swift cluster
with multiple replicas you can do so by customizing the variable
`SWIFT_REPLICAS` in your `localrc` (usually to 3).
# Swift S3
If you are enabling `swift3` in `ENABLED_SERVICES` devstack will
install the swift3 middleware emulation. Swift will be configured to
act as a S3 endpoint for Keystone so effectively replacing the
`nova-objectstore`.
Only Swift proxy server is launched in the screen session all other
services are started in background and managed by `swift-init` tool.
# Neutron
Basic Setup
In order to enable Neutron a single node setup, you'll need the
following settings in your `localrc` :
disable_service n-net
enable_service q-svc
enable_service q-agt
enable_service q-dhcp
enable_service q-l3
enable_service q-meta
enable_service neutron
# Optional, to enable tempest configuration as part of devstack
enable_service tempest
Then run `stack.sh` as normal.
devstack supports adding specific Neutron configuration flags to the service, Open vSwitch plugin and LinuxBridge plugin configuration files. To make use of this feature, the following variables are defined and can be configured in your `localrc` file:
Variable Name Config File Section Modified
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Q_SRV_EXTRA_OPTS Plugin `OVS` (for Open Vswitch) or `LINUX_BRIDGE` (for LinuxBridge)
Q_AGENT_EXTRA_AGENT_OPTS Plugin AGENT
Q_AGENT_EXTRA_SRV_OPTS Plugin `OVS` (for Open Vswitch) or `LINUX_BRIDGE` (for LinuxBridge)
Q_SRV_EXTRA_DEFAULT_OPTS Service DEFAULT
An example of using the variables in your `localrc` is below:
Q_AGENT_EXTRA_AGENT_OPTS=(tunnel_type=vxlan vxlan_udp_port=8472)
Q_SRV_EXTRA_OPTS=(tenant_network_type=vxlan)
devstack also supports configuring the Neutron ML2 plugin. The ML2 plugin can run with the OVS, LinuxBridge, or Hyper-V agents on compute hosts. A simple way to configure the ml2 plugin is shown below:
# VLAN configuration
Q_PLUGIN=ml2
ENABLE_TENANT_VLANS=True
# GRE tunnel configuration
Q_PLUGIN=ml2
ENABLE_TENANT_TUNNELS=True
# VXLAN tunnel configuration
Q_PLUGIN=ml2
Q_ML2_TENANT_NETWORK_TYPE=vxlan
The above will default in devstack to using the OVS on each compute host. To change this, set the `Q_AGENT` variable to the agent you want to run (e.g. linuxbridge).
Variable Name Notes
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Q_AGENT This specifies which agent to run with the ML2 Plugin (either `openvswitch` or `linuxbridge`).
Q_ML2_PLUGIN_MECHANISM_DRIVERS The ML2 MechanismDrivers to load. The default is none. Note, ML2 will work with the OVS and LinuxBridge agents by default.
Q_ML2_PLUGIN_TYPE_DRIVERS The ML2 TypeDrivers to load. Defaults to all available TypeDrivers.
Q_ML2_PLUGIN_GRE_TYPE_OPTIONS GRE TypeDriver options. Defaults to none.
Q_ML2_PLUGIN_VXLAN_TYPE_OPTIONS VXLAN TypeDriver options. Defaults to none.
Q_ML2_PLUGIN_VLAN_TYPE_OPTIONS VLAN TypeDriver options. Defaults to none.
Q_AGENT_EXTRA_AGENT_OPTS Extra configuration options to pass to the OVS or LinuxBridge Agent.
# Heat
Heat is disabled by default. To enable it you'll need the following settings
in your `localrc` :
enable_service heat h-api h-api-cfn h-api-cw h-eng
Heat can also run in standalone mode, and be configured to orchestrate
on an external OpenStack cloud. To launch only Heat in standalone mode
you'll need the following settings in your `localrc` :
disable_all_services
enable_service rabbit mysql heat h-api h-api-cfn h-api-cw h-eng
HEAT_STANDALONE=True
KEYSTONE_SERVICE_HOST=...
KEYSTONE_AUTH_HOST=...
# Tempest
If tempest has been successfully configured, a basic set of smoke tests can be run as follows:
$ cd /opt/stack/tempest
$ nosetests tempest/scenario/test_network_basic_ops.py
# Multi-Node Setup
A more interesting setup involves running multiple compute nodes, with Neutron networks connecting VMs on different compute nodes.
You should run at least one "controller node", which should have a `stackrc` that includes at least:
disable_service n-net
enable_service q-svc
enable_service q-agt
enable_service q-dhcp
enable_service q-l3
enable_service q-meta
enable_service neutron
You likely want to change your `localrc` to run a scheduler that will balance VMs across hosts:
SCHEDULER=nova.scheduler.simple.SimpleScheduler
You can then run many compute nodes, each of which should have a `stackrc` which includes the following, with the IP address of the above controller node:
ENABLED_SERVICES=n-cpu,rabbit,g-api,neutron,q-agt
SERVICE_HOST=[IP of controller node]
MYSQL_HOST=$SERVICE_HOST
RABBIT_HOST=$SERVICE_HOST
Q_HOST=$SERVICE_HOST
MATCHMAKER_REDIS_HOST=$SERVICE_HOST
# Cells
Cells is a new scaling option with a full spec at http://wiki.openstack.org/blueprint-nova-compute-cells.
To setup a cells environment add the following to your `localrc`:
enable_service n-cell
Be aware that there are some features currently missing in cells, one notable one being security groups. The exercises have been patched to disable functionality not supported by cells.
# Local Configuration
Historically DevStack has used ``localrc`` to contain all local configuration and customizations. More and more of the configuration variables available for DevStack are passed-through to the individual project configuration files. The old mechanism for this required specific code for each file and did not scale well. This is handled now by a master local configuration file.
# local.conf
The new config file ``local.conf`` is an extended-INI format that introduces a new meta-section header that provides some additional information such as a phase name and destination config filename:
[[ <phase> | <filename> ]]
where <phase> is one of a set of phase names defined by ``stack.sh`` and <filename> is the project config filename. The filename is eval'ed in the stack.sh context so all environment variables are available and may be used. Using the project config file variables in the header is strongly suggested (see example of NOVA_CONF below). If the path of the config file does not exist it is skipped.
The defined phases are:
* local - extracts ``localrc`` from ``local.conf`` before ``stackrc`` is sourced
* post-config - runs after the layer 2 services are configured and before they are started
* extra - runs after services are started and before any files in ``extra.d`` are executes
The file is processed strictly in sequence; meta-sections may be specified more than once but if any settings are duplicated the last to appear in the file will be used.
[[post-config|$NOVA_CONF]]
[DEFAULT]
use_syslog = True
[osapi_v3]
enabled = False
A specific meta-section ``local:localrc`` is used to provide a default localrc file. This allows all custom settings for DevStack to be contained in a single file. ``localrc`` is not overwritten if it exists to preserve compatability.
[[local|localrc]]
FIXED_RANGE=10.254.1.0/24
ADMIN_PASSWORD=speciale
LOGFILE=$DEST/logs/stack.sh.log
Note that ``Q_PLUGIN_CONF_FILE`` is unique in that it is assumed to _NOT_ start with a ``/`` (slash) character. A slash will need to be added:
[[post-config|/$Q_PLUGIN_CONF_FILE]]