System for quickly installing an OpenStack cloud from upstream git for testing and development.
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yatinkarel c64ea4f213 Fix doc and user create script to set homedir permissions
RHEL based distros set homedir permissions to 700,
and Ubuntu 21.04+ to 750[1], i.e missing executable
permission for group or others, this results into failures
as defined in the below bug.

Since in doc we add useradd command, it's good to
add instructions to fix the permissions there itself
instead of getting failures during installation and then
fixing it.

Also update user create script to fix permissions
by adding executable bit to DEST directory if missing.

[1] https://discourse.ubuntu.com/t/private-home-directories-for-ubuntu-21-04-onwards/19533

Closes-Bug: #1966858
Change-Id: Id2787886433281238eb95ee11a75eddeef514293
2022-05-25 06:34:30 +00:00
data Fix comment in plugin-registry header 2016-08-31 10:07:06 +10:00
doc Fix doc and user create script to set homedir permissions 2022-05-25 06:34:30 +00:00
extras.d Async task support 2021-02-09 15:57:04 -08:00
files Merge "Made LVM backing disk persistent" 2022-03-02 15:04:47 +00:00
gate Mostly docs cleanups 2015-03-28 14:35:12 -05:00
inc Revert "Workaround for new pip 20.3 behavior" 2021-08-10 14:22:35 +10:00
lib remove unuseful local variable define 2022-03-26 14:22:23 +08:00
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roles ignore failures to copy the devstack cache 2022-03-09 20:17:31 +00:00
samples Fix default security group in samples/local.sh 2019-09-05 14:30:41 +00:00
tests Enable oslo.limit to be installed from git repo 2021-10-01 17:30:52 +00:00
tools Fix doc and user create script to set homedir permissions 2022-05-25 06:34:30 +00:00
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.zuul.yaml Add OpenStack two nodes nodeset for Centos 9 2022-04-06 15:24:09 +00:00
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CONTRIBUTING.rst [ussuri][goal] Update contributor documentation 2020-04-23 02:56:13 +00:00
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unstack.sh Write safe.directory items to system git config 2022-04-18 08:05:44 -07:00

DevStack is a set of scripts and utilities to quickly deploy an OpenStack cloud from git source trees.

Goals

  • To quickly build dev OpenStack environments in a clean Ubuntu or Fedora environment
  • To describe working configurations of OpenStack (which code branches work together? what do config files look like for those branches?)
  • To make it easier for developers to dive into OpenStack so that they can productively contribute without having to understand every part of the system at once
  • To make it easy to prototype cross-project features
  • To provide an environment for the OpenStack CI testing on every commit to the projects

Read more at https://docs.openstack.org/devstack/latest

IMPORTANT: Be sure to carefully read stack.sh and any other scripts you execute before you run them, as they install software and will alter your networking configuration. We strongly recommend that you run stack.sh in a clean and disposable vm when you are first getting started.

Versions

The DevStack master branch generally points to trunk versions of OpenStack components. For older, stable versions, look for branches named stable/[release] in the DevStack repo. For example, you can do the following to create a Pike OpenStack cloud:

git checkout stable/pike
./stack.sh

You can also pick specific OpenStack project releases by setting the appropriate *_BRANCH variables in the localrc section of local.conf (look in stackrc for the default set). Usually just before a release there will be milestone-proposed branches that need to be tested:

GLANCE_REPO=https://opendev.org/openstack/glance.git
GLANCE_BRANCH=milestone-proposed

Start A Dev Cloud

Installing in a dedicated disposable VM is safer than installing on your dev machine! Plus you can pick one of the supported Linux distros for your VM. To start a dev cloud run the following NOT AS ROOT (see DevStack Execution Environment below for more on user accounts):

./stack.sh

When the script finishes executing, you should be able to access OpenStack endpoints, like so:

We also provide an environment file that you can use to interact with your cloud via CLI:

# source openrc file to load your environment with OpenStack CLI creds
. openrc
# list instances
openstack server list

DevStack Execution Environment

DevStack runs rampant over the system it runs on, installing things and uninstalling other things. Running this on a system you care about is a recipe for disappointment, or worse. Alas, we're all in the virtualization business here, so run it in a VM. And take advantage of the snapshot capabilities of your hypervisor of choice to reduce testing cycle times. You might even save enough time to write one more feature before the next feature freeze...

stack.sh needs to have root access for a lot of tasks, but uses sudo for all of those tasks. However, it needs to be not-root for most of its work and for all of the OpenStack services. stack.sh specifically does not run if started as root.

DevStack will not automatically create the user, but provides a helper script in tools/create-stack-user.sh. Run that (as root!) or just check it out to see what DevStack's expectations are for the account it runs under. Many people simply use their usual login (the default 'ubuntu' login on a UEC image for example).

Customizing

DevStack can be extensively configured via the configuration file local.conf. It is likely that you will need to provide and modify this file if you want anything other than the most basic setup. Start by reading the configuration guide for details of the configuration file and the many available options.