deb-manila/install-guide/source/install-controller-ubuntu.rst
Goutham Pacha Ravi dfbe3ea418 In-tree Install Guide
The OpenStack install guide team has recommended that projects
that are not part of the starter-kit:compute [1] (and a few other projects
like Cinder and Horizon) maintain their install guide in-tree. [2]

[1] http://governance.openstack.org/reference/tags/starter-kit_compute.html
[2] http://git.openstack.org/cgit/openstack/docs-specs/tree/specs/newton/project-specific-installguides.rst

Change-Id: I2b49fcfd99b3be40bb1ae7d7b8348abdb5b58b90
Co-Authored-By: Denis Cavalcante <dencaval@gmail.com>
Implements: blueprint manila-in-tree-install-guide
Partially-implements: blueprint projectspecificinstallguides
2016-08-12 08:06:38 -04:00

1.7 KiB

Install and configure controller node on Ubuntu

This section describes how to install and configure the Shared File Systems service, code-named manila, on the controller node that runs Ubuntu. This service requires at least one additional share node that manages file storage back ends.

Install and configure components

  1. Install the packages:

    # apt-get install manila-api manila-scheduler python-manilaclient
  2. Edit the /etc/manila/manila.conf file and complete the following actions:

    • In the [database] section, configure database access:

      [database]
      ...
      connection = mysql+pymysql://manila:MANILA_DBPASS@controller/manila

      Replace MANILA_DBPASS with the password you chose for the Shared File Systems database.

  1. Populate the Shared File Systems database:

    # su -s /bin/sh -c "manila-manage db sync" manila

    Note

    Ignore any deprecation messages in this output.

Finalize installation

  1. Restart the Shared File Systems services:

    # service manila-scheduler restart
    # service manila-api restart
  2. By default, the Ubuntu packages create an SQLite database. Because this configuration uses an SQL database server, you can remove the SQLite database file:

    # rm -f /var/lib/manila/manila.sqlite