* Moves the remaining guides from the Draft folder * Removes already rewritten articles (Murano TroubleShooting and Debug Tips) * Restructures the main page * Fixes build errors * Adds minor editorial changes to some sections Change-Id: I1aa961f34860b22241b69d41045da445d223be06 Partial-Bug: #1603950
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Murano service broker for Cloud Foundry
Service broker overview
Service broker is a new murano component which implements Cloud Foundry Service Broker API.
This lets users build ‘hybrid’ infrastructures that are services like databases, message queues, key/value stores, and so on. This services can be uploaded and deployed with murano and made available to Cloud Foundry apps on demand. The result is lowered cost, shorter timetables, and quicker access to required tools — developers can ‘self serve’ by building any required service, then make it instantly available in Cloud Foundry.
Configure service broker
Manual installation
If you use local murano installation, you can configure and run murano service broker in a few simple steps:
Change into the murano directory:
cd ~/murano/murano
Generate the murano service broker config file. Murano service broker has a common config file for service broker API services. Using tox, generate a sample configuration file:
tox -e gencfconfig
Copy the configuration file for further modifications:
cd ~/murano/murano/etc/murano ln -s murano-cfapi.conf.sample murano-cfapi.conf
Edit
murano-cfapi.conf
. Below is an example of the basic settings you may need to configure.Note
The example below uses the SQLite database. Edit the [database] section to use another database.
[DEFAULT] debug = true verbose = true ... [database] backend = sqlalchemy connection = sqlite:///murano_cfapi.sqlite ... [keystone_authtoken] auth_uri = 'http://%OPENSTACK_HOST_IP%:5000/v3' auth_host = '%OPENSTACK_HOST_IP%' auth_port = 5000 auth_protocol = http admin_tenant_name = %OPENSTACK_ADMIN_TENANT% admin_user = %OPENSTACK_ADMIN_USER% admin_password = %OPENSTACK_ADMIN_PASSWORD% ... [cfapi] tenant = %TENANT_NAME% bind_host = %HOST_IP% bind_port = 8083 auth_url = 'http://%OPENSTACK_HOST_IP%:5000/v3'
Note
The
bind_host
IP should be in the same network as the Cloud Foundry instance.Create database tables for murano service broker:
cd ~/murano/murano tox -e venv -- murano-cfapi-db-manage \ --config-file ./etc/murano/murano-cfapi.conf upgrade
Launch the murano service broker API in a separate terminal:
cd ~/murano/murano tox -e venv -- murano-cfapi --config-file ./etc/murano/murano-cfapi.conf
Note
Run the command in a new terminal as the process will be running in the terminal until you terminate it, therefore, blocking the current terminal.
Devstack installation
It is really easy to enable service broker in your devstack
installation. You need simply update your local.conf
with the following:
[[local|localrc]] enable_plugin murano git://git.openstack.org/openstack/murano enable_service murano-cfapi
How to use service broker
After service broker is configured and started you have nothing to do with service broker from murano side - it is an adapter which is used by Cloud Foundry PaaS.
To access and use murano packages through Cloud Foundry, you need to perform following steps:
Log in to Cloud Foundry instance via ssh.
ssh -i <key_name> <username>@<hostname>
Log in to Cloud Foundry itself.
cf login -a https://api.<smthg>.xip.io -u <user_name> -p <password>
Add murano service broker.
cf create-service-broker <broker_name> <OS_USERNAME> <OS_PASSWORD> http://<service_broker_ip>:8083
Enable access to murano packages.
cf enable-service-access <service_name>
Warning
By default, access to all services is prohibited.
Note
You can use
service-access
command to see human-readable list of packages.Provision murano service through Cloud Foundry.
cf create-service 'Apache HTTP Server' default MyApacheInstance -c apache.json
{ "instance": { "flavor": "m1.medium", "?": { "type": "io.murano.resources.LinuxMuranoInstance" }, "keyname": "nstarodubtsev", "assignFloatingIp": "True", "name": <name_pattern>, "availabilityZone": "nova", "image": "1b9ff37e-dff3-4308-be08-9185705dad91" }, "enablePHP": "True" }
Known issues
Useful links
Here is the list of the links for Cloud Foundry documentation which you might need: