Merge "Add basic upgrade documentation"

This commit is contained in:
Jenkins 2016-08-12 22:35:28 +00:00 committed by Gerrit Code Review
commit 84ee0d93e8
2 changed files with 66 additions and 0 deletions

View File

@ -51,6 +51,7 @@ Getting Started
installing
configuration
upgrading
performance
apache-httpd
policy_mapping

65
doc/source/upgrading.rst Normal file
View File

@ -0,0 +1,65 @@
..
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may
not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain
a copy of the License at
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT
WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the
License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations
under the License.
==================
Upgrading Keystone
==================
This is a high-level description of our upgrade strategy built around
``keystone-manage db_sync``. It assumes that you are willing to have downtime
of your control plane during the upgrade process. With keystone unavailable, no
other OpenStack services will be able to authenticate requests, effectively
preventing the rest of the control plane from functioning normally.
.. NOTE::
The details of these steps are entirely dependent on the details of your
specific deployment, such as your chosen application server and database
management system. Use it only as a guide when implementing your own
upgrade process.
1. Plan!
* Read and ensure you understand the `release notes
http://docs.openstack.org/releasenotes/keystone/`_ for the next release.
* Resolve any outstanding deprecation warnings in your logs. Some
deprecation cycles are as short as a single release, so it's possible to
break a deployment if you leave *any* outstanding warnings. It might be a
good idea to re-read the release notes for the previous release (or two!).
* Prepare your new configuration files, including ``keystone.conf``,
``logging.conf``, ``policy.json``, ``keystone-paste.ini``, and anything
else in ``/etc/keystone/``, by customizing the corresponding files from
the next release.
2. Stop all keystone processes. Otherwise, you'll risk multiple releases of
keystone trying to write to the database at the same time.
3. Make a backup of your database. Keystone does not support downgrading the
database, so restoring from a full backup is your only option for recovery
in the event of an upgrade failure.
4. Upgrade all keystone nodes to the next release.
5. Update your configuration files (``/etc/keystone/``) with those
corresponding from the latest release.
6. Run ``keystone-manage db_sync`` from any one node to upgrade both the
database schema and run any corresponding database migrations.
7. Run ``keystone-manage doctor`` to diagnose symptoms of common deployment
issues and receive instructions for resolving them.
8. Start all keystone processes.