======================== Test environment example ======================== Here is an example test environment for a working OpenStack-Ansible (OSA) deployment with a small number of servers. This example environment has the following characteristics: * One infrastructure (control plane) host (8 vCPU, 8 GB RAM, 60 GB HDD) * One compute host (8 vCPU, 8 GB RAM, 60 GB HDD) * One Network Interface Card (NIC) for each host * A basic compute kit environment, with the Image (glance) and Compute (nova) services set to use file-backed storage. * Internet access via the router address 172.29.236.1 on the Management Network .. image:: ../figures/arch-layout-test.png :width: 100% :alt: Test environment host layout Network configuration ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Network CIDR/VLAN assignments ----------------------------- The following CIDR and VLAN assignments are used for this environment. +-----------------------+-----------------+------+ | Network | CIDR | VLAN | +=======================+=================+======+ | Management Network | 172.29.236.0/22 | 10 | +-----------------------+-----------------+------+ | Tunnel (VXLAN) Network| 172.29.240.0/22 | 30 | +-----------------------+-----------------+------+ | Storage Network | 172.29.244.0/22 | 20 | +-----------------------+-----------------+------+ IP assignments -------------- The following host name and IP address assignments are used for this environment. +------------------+----------------+-------------------+----------------+ | Host name | Management IP | Tunnel (VxLAN) IP | Storage IP | +==================+================+===================+================+ | infra1 | 172.29.236.11 | | | +------------------+----------------+-------------------+----------------+ | compute1 | 172.29.236.12 | 172.29.240.12 | 172.29.244.12 | +------------------+----------------+-------------------+----------------+ | storage1 | 172.29.236.13 | | 172.29.244.13 | +------------------+----------------+-------------------+----------------+ Host network configuration -------------------------- Each host will require the correct network bridges to be implemented. The following is the ``/etc/network/interfaces`` file for ``infra1``. .. note:: If your environment does not have ``eth0``, but instead has ``p1p1`` or some other interface name, ensure that all references to ``eth0`` in all configuration files are replaced with the appropriate name. The same applies to additional network interfaces. .. literalinclude:: ../../../../etc/network/interfaces.d/openstack_interface.cfg.test.example Deployment configuration ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Environment layout ------------------ The ``/etc/openstack_deploy/openstack_user_config.yml`` file defines the environment layout. The following configuration describes the layout for this environment. .. literalinclude:: ../../../../etc/openstack_deploy/openstack_user_config.yml.test.example Environment customizations -------------------------- The optionally deployed files in ``/etc/openstack_deploy/env.d`` allow the customization of Ansible groups. This allows the deployer to set whether the services will run in a container (the default), or on the host (on metal). For this environment you do not need the ``/etc/openstack_deploy/env.d`` folder as the defaults set by OpenStack-Ansible are suitable. User variables -------------- The ``/etc/openstack_deploy/user_variables.yml`` file defines the global overrides for the default variables. For this environment, if you want to use the same IP address for the internal and external endpoints, you will need to ensure that the internal and public OpenStack endpoints are served with the same protocol. This is done with the following content: .. literalinclude:: ../../../../etc/openstack_deploy/user_variables.yml.test.example