Option "notification_driver" from group "DEFAULT" is deprecated. Use option "driver" from group "oslo_messaging_notifications" Reference link: [1] https://github.com/openstack/oslo.messaging/blob/master/ oslo_messaging/notify/notifier.py#L34 Closes-Bug: #1535611 Change-Id: Iaf88167e18e2b212323cdb7b0f0945906c57aa4d
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Installing and Running Manually
Prepare Environment
Install Prerequisites
First you need to install a number of packages with your OS package manager. The list of packages depends on the OS you use.
Ubuntu
sudo apt-get install python-pip python-dev \
libmysqlclient-dev libpq-dev \
libxml2-dev libxslt1-dev \
libffi-dev
Fedora
Note
Fedora support wasn't thoroughly tested. We do not guarantee that Murano will work on Fedora.
sudo yum install gcc python-setuptools python-devel python-pip
CentOS
sudo yum install gcc python-setuptools python-devel
sudo easy_install pip
Install tox
sudo pip install tox
Install And Configure Database
Murano can use various database types on backend. For development purposes SQLite is enough in most cases. For production installations you should use MySQL or PostgreSQL databases.
Warning
Although Murano could use PostgreSQL database on backend, it wasn't thoroughly tested and should be used with caution.
To use MySQL database you should install it and create an empty database first:
apt-get install python-mysqldb mysql-server
mysql -u root -p
mysql> CREATE DATABASE murano;
mysql> GRANT ALL PRIVILEGES ON murano.* TO 'murano'@'localhost' \
IDENTIFIED BY 'MURANO_DBPASS';
mysql> exit;
Install the API service and Engine
Create a folder which will hold all Murano components.
mkdir ~/murano
Clone the Murano git repository to the management server.
cd ~/murano git clone git://git.openstack.org/openstack/murano
Set up Murano config file
Murano has common config file for API and Engine services.
First, generate sample configuration file, using tox
cd ~/murano/murano tox -e genconfig
And make a copy of it for further modifications
cd ~/murano/murano/etc/murano ln -s murano.conf.sample murano.conf
Edit
murano.conf
with your favorite editor. Below is an example which contains basic settings your are likely need to configure.Note
The example below uses SQLite database. Edit [database] section if you want to use other database type.
[DEFAULT] debug = true verbose = true rabbit_host = %RABBITMQ_SERVER_IP% rabbit_userid = %RABBITMQ_USER% rabbit_password = %RABBITMQ_PASSWORD% rabbit_virtual_host = %RABBITMQ_SERVER_VIRTUAL_HOST% driver = messagingv2 ... [database] backend = sqlalchemy connection = sqlite:///murano.sqlite ... [keystone] auth_url = 'http://%OPENSTACK_HOST_IP%:5000/v2.0' ... [keystone_authtoken] auth_uri = 'http://%OPENSTACK_HOST_IP%:5000/v2.0' 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% ... [murano] url = http://%YOUR_HOST_IP%:8082 [rabbitmq] host = %RABBITMQ_SERVER_IP% login = %RABBITMQ_USER% password = %RABBITMQ_PASSWORD% virtual_host = %RABBITMQ_SERVER_VIRTUAL_HOST% [networking] default_dns = 8.8.8.8 # In case openstack neutron has no default # DNS configured
Create a virtual environment and install Murano prerequisites. We will use tox for that. Virtual environment will be created under .tox directory.
cd ~/murano/murano tox
Create database tables for Murano.
cd ~/murano/murano tox -e venv -- murano-db-manage \ --config-file ./etc/murano/murano.conf upgrade
Open a new console and launch Murano API. A separate terminal is required because the console will be locked by a running process.
cd ~/murano/murano tox -e venv -- murano-api --config-file ./etc/murano/murano.conf
Import Core Murano Library.
cd ~/murano/murano pushd ./meta/io.murano zip -r ../../io.murano.zip * popd tox -e venv -- murano --murano-url http://localhost:8082 \ package-import --is-public io.murano.zip
Open a new console and launch Murano Engine. A separate terminal is required because the console will be locked by a running process.
cd ~/murano/murano tox -e venv -- murano-engine --config-file ./etc/murano/murano.conf
Register in Keystone
To make murano API available to all OpenStack users, you need to register the Application Catalog service within the Identity service.
Add
application-catalog
service:keystone service-create --name murano --type application-catalog --description "Application Catalog for OpenStack"
Provide an endpoint for that service:
keystone endpoint-create --region RegionOne --service-id <MURANO-SERVICE-ID> --publicurl http://<murano-ip>:8082 --internalurl http://<murano-ip>:8082 --adminurl http://<murano-ip>:8082
where
MURANO-SERVICE-ID
is the unique service number that you can find in thekeystone service-create
output.
Note
URLs (publicurl, internalurl and adminurl) may be different depending on your environment.
Install Murano Dashboard
Murano API & Engine services provide the core of Murano. However, your need a control plane to use it. This section describes how to install and run Murano Dashboard.
Clone the repository with Murano Dashboard.
cd ~/murano git clone git://git.openstack.org/openstack/murano-dashboard
Clone horizon repository
git clone git://git.openstack.org/openstack/horizon
Create venv and install muranodashboard as editable module.
cd horizon tox -e venv -- pip install -e ../murano-dashboard
Copy muranodashboard plugin file.
This step enables murano panel in horizon dashboard.
cp ../murano-dashboard/muranodashboard/local/_50_murano.py openstack_dashboard/local/enabled/
Prepare local settings.
To get more information, check out official horizon documentation.
cp openstack_dashboard/local/local_settings.py.example openstack_dashboard/local/local_settings.py
Customize local settings according to OpenStack installation.
...= '*' ALLOWED_HOSTS # Provide OpenStack Lab credentials = '%OPENSTACK_HOST_IP%' OPENSTACK_HOST ... # Set secret key to prevent it's generation = 'random_string' SECRET_KEY ... = DEBUG DEBUG_PROPAGATE_EXCEPTIONS
Also, it's better to change default session backend from browser cookies to database to avoid issues with forms during creating applications:
...= { DATABASES 'default': { 'ENGINE': 'django.db.backends.sqlite3', 'NAME': 'murano-dashboard.sqlite', } } = 'django.contrib.sessions.backends.db' SESSION_ENGINE
If you do not plan to get murano service from keystone application catalog, provide where murano-api service is running:
...= 'http://localhost:8082' MURANO_API_URL
Perform database synchronization.
Optional step. Needed in case you set up database as a session backend.
tox -e venv -- python manage.py migrate --noinput
You can reply 'no' since for development purpose separate user is not needed.
Run Django server at 127.0.0.1:8000 or provide different IP and PORT parameters.
tox -e venv -- python manage.py runserver <IP:PORT>
Development server will be restarted automatically on every code change.
Open dashboard using url http://localhost:8000
Import Murano Applications
Applications are needed to be imported to fill the catalog. It can be done via dashboard, but also possible via CLI:
Clone Murano Apps repository.
cd ~/murano git clone git://git.openstack.org/openstack/murano-apps
Import every package you need from this repository, using the command below.
cd ~/murano/murano pushd ../murano-apps/Docker/Applications/%APP-NAME%/package zip -r ~/murano/murano/app.zip * popd tox -e venv -- murano --murano-url http://localhost:8082 package-import app.zip