add networking write up for devstack

This explains the current state of networking in devstack, and a
couple of scenarios that people might want to try out for local
testing.

Change-Id: I2be35f4345bf9306c981ef6f0186b48da7d06772
This commit is contained in:
Sean Dague 2016-08-12 07:21:59 -04:00
parent 9b8b922872
commit bc883df1c2
3 changed files with 100 additions and 1 deletions

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@ -120,7 +120,8 @@ Going further
-------------
Learn more about our :doc:`configuration system <configuration>` to
customize devstack for your needs.
customize devstack for your needs. Including making adjustments to the
default :doc:`networking <networking>`.
Read :doc:`guides <guides>` for specific setups people have (note:
guides are point in time contributions, and may not always be kept

97
doc/source/networking.rst Normal file
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=====================
DevStack Networking
=====================
An important part of the DevStack experience is networking that works
by default for created guests. This might not be optimal for your
particular testing environment, so this document tries it's best to
explain what's going on.
Defaults
========
If you don't specify any configuration you will get the following:
* neutron (including l3 with openvswitch)
* private project networks for each openstack project
* a floating ip range of 172.24.4.0/24 with the gateway of 172.24.4.1
* the demo project configured with fixed ips on 10.0.0.0/24
* a ``br-ex`` interface controlled by neutron for all it's networking
(this is not connected to any physical interfaces).
* DNS resolution for guests based on the resolv.conf for you host
* an ip masq rule that allows created guests to route out
This creates an environment which is isolated to the single
host. Guests can get to the external network for package
updates. Tempest tests will work in this environment.
.. note::
By default all OpenStack environments have security group rules
which block all inbound packets to guests. If you want to be able
to ssh / ping your created guests you should run the following.
.. code-block:: bash
openstack security group rule create --proto icmp --dst-port 0 default
openstack security group rule create --proto tcp --dst-port 22 default
Locally Accessible Guests
=========================
If you want to make you guests accessible other machines on your
network, we have to connect ``br-ex`` to a physical interface.
Dedicated Guest Interface
-------------------------
If you have 2 or more interfaces on your devstack server, you can
allocate an interface to neutron to fully manage. This **should not**
be the same interface you use to ssh into the devstack server itself.
This is done by setting with the ``PUBLIC_INTERFACE`` attribute.
.. code-block:: bash
[[local|localrc]]
PUBLIC_INTERFACE=eth1
That will put all layer 2 traffic from your guests onto the main
network. When running in this mode the ip masq rule is **not** added
in your devstack, you are responsible for making routing work on your
local network.
Shared Guest Interface
----------------------
.. warning::
This is not a recommended configuration. Because of interactions
between ovs and bridging, if you reboot your box with active
networking you may loose network connectivity to your system.
If you need your guests accessible on the network, but only have 1
interface (using something like a NUC), you can share your one
network. But in order for this to work you need to manually set a lot
of addresses, and have them all exactly correct.
.. code-block:: bash
[[local|localrc]]
PUBLIC_INTERFACE=eth0
HOST_IP=10.42.0.52
FLOATING_RANGE=10.42.0.52/24
PUBLIC_NETWORK_GATEWAY=10.42.0.1
Q_FLOATING_ALLOCATION_POOL=start=10.42.0.250,end=10.42.0.254
In order for this scenario to work the floating ip network must match
the default networking on your server. This breaks HOST_IP detection,
as we exclude the floating range by default, so you have to specify
that manually.
The ``PUBLIC_NETWORK_GATEWAY`` is the gateway that server would normally
use to get off the network. ``Q_FLOATING_ALLOCATION_POOL`` controls
the range of floating ips that will be handed out. As we are sharing
your existing network, you'll want to give it a slice that your local
dhcp server is not allocating. Otherwise you could easily have
conflicting ip addresses, and cause havoc with your local network.

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overview
configuration
networking
plugins
plugin-registry
faq