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actions.yaml | ||
bindep.txt | ||
build-requirements.txt | ||
charm-helpers-hooks.yaml | ||
charmcraft.yaml | ||
config.yaml | ||
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hardening.yaml | ||
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LICENSE | ||
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metadata.yaml | ||
osci.yaml | ||
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README.md | ||
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requirements.txt | ||
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tox.ini |
Overview
The neutron-gateway charm deploys the data plane of Neutron, the core OpenStack service that provides software defined networking (SDN) for Nova instances. This provides the Neutron Gateway service, which in turn supplies two key services: L3 network routing and DHCP. The charm works alongside other Juju-deployed OpenStack applications; in particular: neutron-openvswitch, nova-compute, and nova-cloud-controller.
Note
: Starting with OpenStack Train, the neutron-gateway and neutron-openvswitch charm combination can be replaced by the OVN charms (e.g. ovn-central, ovn-chassis, and neutron-api-plugin-ovn).
Usage
Configuration
This section covers common and/or important configuration options. See file
config.yaml
for the full list of options, along with their descriptions and
default values. See the Juju documentation for details
on configuring applications.
data-port
A bridge that Neutron Gateway will bind to, given in the form of a space-delimited bridge:port mapping (e.g. 'br-ex:ens8'). The port will be added to its corresponding bridge.
Note
: If network device names are not consistent between hosts (e.g. 'eth1' and 'ens8') a list of values can be provided where a MAC address is used in the place of a device name. The charm will iterate through the list and configure the first matching interface.
The specified bridge(s) should match the one(s) defined in the
bridge-mappings
option.
Flat or VLAN network types are supported.
The device itself must not have any L3 configuration. In MAAS, it must have an IP mode of 'Unconfigured'.
bridge-mappings
A space-delimited list of ML2 data provider:bridge mappings (e.g.
'physnet1:br-ex'). The specified bridge(s) should match the one(s) defined in
the data-port
option.
openstack-origin
The openstack-origin
option states the software sources. A common value is an
OpenStack UCA release (e.g. 'cloud:bionic-ussuri' or 'cloud:focal-victoria').
See Ubuntu Cloud Archive. The underlying host's existing apt
sources will be used if this option is not specified (this behaviour can be
explicitly chosen by using the value of 'distro').
Deployment
These deployment instructions assume the following pre-existing applications: neutron-api, nova-cloud-controller, and rabbitmq-server.
Important
: For Neutron Gateway to function properly, the nova-cloud-controller charm must have its
network-manager
option set to 'Neutron'.
Deploy Neutron Gateway:
juju deploy neutron-gateway
juju add-relation neutron-gateway:quantum-network-service nova-cloud-controller:quantum-network-service
juju add-relation neutron-gateway:neutron-plugin-api neutron-api:neutron-plugin-api
juju add-relation neutron-gateway:amqp rabbitmq-server:amqp
Port configuration
Network ports are configured with the bridge-mappings
and data-port
options
but the neutron-api charm also has several relevant options (e.g.
flat-network-providers
, vlan-ranges
, etc.). Additionally, the network
topology can be further defined with supplementary openstack
client commands.
Example 1
This configuration has a single external network and is typically used when
floating IP addresses are combined with a GRE private network.
Charm option values (YAML):
neutron-gateway:
bridge-mappings: physnet1:br-ex
data-port: br-ex:eth1
neutron-api:
flat-network-providers: physnet1
Supplementary commands:
openstack network create --provider-network-type flat \
--provider-physical-network physnet1 --external \
external
openstack router set router1 --external-gateway external
Example 2
This configuration is for two networks, where an internal private network is
directly connected to the gateway with public IP addresses but a floating IP
address range is also offered.
Charm option values (YAML):
neutron-gateway:
bridge-mappings: physnet1:br-data external:br-ex
data-port: br-data:eth1 br-ex:eth2
neutron-api:
flat-network-providers: physnet1 external
Example 3
This configuration has two external networks, where one is for public instance
addresses and one is for floating IP addresses. Both networks are on the same
physical network connection (but they might be on different VLANs).
Charm option values (YAML):
neutron-gateway:
bridge-mappings: physnet1:br-data
data-port: br-data:eth1
neutron-api:
flat-network-providers: physnet1
Supplementary commands:
openstack network create --provider-network-type vlan \
--provider-segment 400 \
--provider-physical-network physnet1 --share \
external
openstack network create --provider-network-type vlan \
--provider-segment 401 \
--provider-physical-network physnet1 --share --external \
floating
openstack router set router1 --external-gateway floating
legacy ext-port
option
The ext-port
option is deprecated and is superseded by the data-port
option. The ext-port
option always created a bridge called 'br-ex' for
external networks that was used implicitly by external router interfaces.
The following will occur if both the data-port
and ext-port
options are
set:
- the neutron-gateway unit will be marked as 'blocked' to indicate that the charm is misconfigured
- the
ext-port
option will be ignored - a warning will be logged
Instance MTU
When using Open vSwitch plugin with GRE tunnels the default MTU of 1500 can
cause packet fragmentation due to GRE overhead. One solution to this problem is
to increase the MTU on physical hosts and network equipment. When this is not
feasible the charm's instance-mtu
option can be used to reduce instance MTU
via DHCP:
juju config neutron-gateway instance-mtu=1400
Note
: The
instance-mtu
option is supported starting with OpenStack Havana.
Actions
This section covers Juju actions supported by the charm.
Actions allow specific operations to be performed on a per-unit basis. To
display action descriptions run juju actions --schema neutron-gateway
. If the
charm is not deployed then see file actions.yaml
.
cleanup
get-status-dhcp
get-status-lb
get-status-routers
openstack-upgrade
pause
restart-services
resume
restart-services
run-deferred-hooks
security-checklist
show-deferred-events
Deferred service events
Operational or maintenance procedures applied to a cloud often lead to the restarting of various OpenStack services and/or the calling of certain charm hooks. Although normal, such events can be undesirable due to the service interruptions they can cause.
The deferred service events feature provides the operator the choice of preventing these service restarts and hook calls from occurring, which can then be resolved at a more opportune time.
See the Deferred service events page in the OpenStack Charms Deployment Guide for an in-depth treatment of this feature.
Documentation
The OpenStack Charms project maintains two documentation guides:
- OpenStack Charm Guide: for project information, including development and support notes
- OpenStack Charms Deployment Guide: for charm usage information
Bugs
Please report bugs on Launchpad.