It is true that the existing instructions for other distributions can be adapted for SUSE, but we can make it even easier by providing instructions tailored for SUSE. Change-Id: Id50c3d663fc2bd527ec2fe5e26fd1d4692b971ce
22 KiB
Setup the drivers for the Bare Metal service
PXE setup
If you will be using PXE, it needs to be set up on the Bare Metal
service node(s) where ironic-conductor
is running.
Make sure the tftp root directory exist and can be written to by the user the
ironic-conductor
is running as. For example:sudo mkdir -p /tftpboot sudo chown -R ironic /tftpboot
Install tftp server and the syslinux package with the PXE boot images:
Ubuntu: (Up to and including 14.04) sudo apt-get install xinetd tftpd-hpa syslinux-common syslinux Ubuntu: (14.10 and after) sudo apt-get install xinetd tftpd-hpa syslinux-common pxelinux Fedora 21/RHEL7/CentOS7: sudo yum install tftp-server syslinux-tftpboot xinetd Fedora 22 or higher: sudo dnf install tftp-server syslinux-tftpboot xinetd SUSE: sudo zypper install tftp syslinux xinetd
Using xinetd to provide a tftp server setup to serve
/tftpboot
. Create or edit/etc/xinetd.d/tftp
as below:service tftp { protocol = udp port = 69 socket_type = dgram wait = yes user = root server = /usr/sbin/in.tftpd server_args = -v -v -v -v -v --map-file /tftpboot/map-file /tftpboot disable = no # This is a workaround for Fedora, where TFTP will listen only on # IPv6 endpoint, if IPv4 flag is not used. flags = IPv4 }
and restart xinetd service:
Ubuntu: sudo service xinetd restart Fedora/SUSE: sudo systemctl restart xinetd
Copy the PXE image to
/tftpboot
. The PXE image might be found at1:Ubuntu (Up to and including 14.04): sudo cp /usr/lib/syslinux/pxelinux.0 /tftpboot Ubuntu (14.10 and after): sudo cp /usr/lib/PXELINUX/pxelinux.0 /tftpboot SUSE: sudo cp /usr/share/syslinux/pxelinux.0 /tftpboot
If whole disk images need to be deployed via PXE-netboot, copy the chain.c32 image to
/tftpboot
to support it. The chain.c32 image might be found at:Ubuntu (Up to and including 14.04): sudo cp /usr/lib/syslinux/chain.c32 /tftpboot Ubuntu (14.10 and after): sudo cp /usr/lib/syslinux/modules/bios/chain.c32 /tftpboot Fedora/RHEL7/CentOS7: sudo cp /boot/extlinux/chain.c32 /tftpboot SUSE: sudo cp /usr/share/syslinux/chain.c32 /tftpboot/
If the version of syslinux is greater than 4 we also need to make sure that we copy the library modules into the
/tftpboot
directory2 3:Ubuntu: sudo cp /usr/lib/syslinux/modules/*/ldlinux.* /tftpboot
Create a map file in the tftp boot directory (
/tftpboot
):echo 're ^(/tftpboot/) /tftpboot/\2' > /tftpboot/map-file echo 're ^/tftpboot/ /tftpboot/' >> /tftpboot/map-file echo 're ^(^/) /tftpboot/\1' >> /tftpboot/map-file echo 're ^([^/]) /tftpboot/\1' >> /tftpboot/map-file
PXE UEFI setup
If you want to deploy on a UEFI supported bare metal, perform these additional steps on the ironic conductor node to configure the PXE UEFI environment.
Install Grub2 and shim packages:
Ubuntu: (14.04LTS and later) sudo apt-get install grub-efi-amd64-signed shim-signed Fedora 21/RHEL7/CentOS7: sudo yum install grub2-efi shim Fedora 22 or higher: sudo dnf install grub2-efi shim SUSE: sudo zypper install grub2-x86_64-efi shim
Copy grub and shim boot loader images to
/tftpboot
directory:Ubuntu: (14.04LTS and later) sudo cp /usr/lib/shim/shim.efi.signed /tftpboot/bootx64.efi sudo cp /usr/lib/grub/x86_64-efi-signed/grubnetx64.efi.signed \ /tftpboot/grubx64.efi Fedora: (21 and later) sudo cp /boot/efi/EFI/fedora/shim.efi /tftpboot/bootx64.efi sudo cp /boot/efi/EFI/fedora/grubx64.efi /tftpboot/grubx64.efi CentOS: (7 and later) sudo cp /boot/efi/EFI/centos/shim.efi /tftpboot/bootx64.efi sudo cp /boot/efi/EFI/centos/grubx64.efi /tftpboot/grubx64.efi SUSE: sudo cp /usr/lib64/efi/shim.efi /tftpboot/bootx64.efi sudo cp /usr/lib/grub2/x86_64-efi/grub.efi /tftpboot/grubx64.efi
Create master grub.cfg:
Ubuntu: Create grub.cfg under ``/tftpboot/grub`` directory. GRUB_DIR=/tftpboot/grub Fedora: Create grub.cfg under ``/tftpboot/EFI/fedora`` directory. GRUB_DIR=/tftpboot/EFI/fedora CentOS: Create grub.cfg under ``/tftpboot/EFI/centos`` directory. GRUB_DIR=/tftpboot/EFI/centos SUSE: Create grub.cfg under ``/tftpboot/boot/grub`` directory. GRUB_DIR=/tftpboot/boot/grub Create directory GRUB_DIR sudo mkdir -p $GRUB_DIR
This file is used to redirect grub to baremetal node specific config file. It redirects it to specific grub config file based on DHCP IP assigned to baremetal node.
../../ironic/drivers/modules/master_grub_cfg.txt
Change the permission of grub.cfg:
sudo chmod 644 $GRUB_DIR/grub.cfg
Update the bare metal node with
boot_mode
capability in node's properties field:ironic node-update <node-uuid> add properties/capabilities='boot_mode:uefi'
Make sure that bare metal node is configured to boot in UEFI boot mode and boot device is set to network/pxe.
NOTE:
pxe_ilo
driver supports automatic setting of UEFI boot mode and boot device on the bare metal node. So this step is not required forpxe_ilo
driver.
Note
For more information on configuring boot modes, see boot_mode_support.
Elilo: an alternative to Grub2
Elilo is a UEFI bootloader. It is an alternative to Grub2, although it isn't recommended since it is not being supported.
Download and untar the elilo bootloader version >= 3.16 from http://sourceforge.net/projects/elilo/:
sudo tar zxvf elilo-3.16-all.tar.gz
Copy the elilo boot loader image to
/tftpboot
directory:sudo cp ./elilo-3.16-x86_64.efi /tftpboot/elilo.efi
Update bootfile and template file configuration parameters for UEFI PXE boot in the Bare Metal Service's configuration file (/etc/ironic/ironic.conf):
[pxe] # Bootfile DHCP parameter for UEFI boot mode. (string value) uefi_pxe_bootfile_name=elilo.efi # Template file for PXE configuration for UEFI boot loader. # (string value) uefi_pxe_config_template=$pybasedir/drivers/modules/elilo_efi_pxe_config.template
iPXE setup
An alternative to PXE boot, iPXE was introduced in the Juno release (2014.2.0) of Bare Metal service.
If you will be using iPXE to boot instead of PXE, iPXE needs to be
set up on the Bare Metal service node(s) where
ironic-conductor
is running.
Make sure these directories exist and can be written to by the user the
ironic-conductor
is running as. For example:sudo mkdir -p /tftpboot sudo mkdir -p /httpboot sudo chown -R ironic /tftpboot sudo chown -R ironic /httpboot
Create a map file in the tftp boot directory (
/tftpboot
):echo 'r ^([^/]) /tftpboot/\1' > /tftpboot/map-file echo 'r ^(/tftpboot/) /tftpboot/\2' >> /tftpboot/map-file
Set up TFTP and HTTP servers.
These servers should be running and configured to use the local /tftpboot and /httpboot directories respectively, as their root directories. (Setting up these servers is outside the scope of this install guide.)
These root directories need to be mounted locally to the
ironic-conductor
services, so that the services can access them.The Bare Metal service's configuration file (/etc/ironic/ironic.conf) should be edited accordingly to specify the TFTP and HTTP root directories and server addresses. For example:
[pxe] # Ironic compute node's tftp root path. (string value) tftp_root=/tftpboot # IP address of Ironic compute node's tftp server. (string # value) tftp_server=192.168.0.2 [deploy] # Ironic compute node's http root path. (string value) http_root=/httpboot # Ironic compute node's HTTP server URL. Example: # http://192.1.2.3:8080 (string value) http_url=http://192.168.0.2:8080
Install the iPXE package with the boot images:
Ubuntu: apt-get install ipxe Fedora 21/RHEL7/CentOS7: yum install ipxe-bootimgs Fedora 22 or higher: dnf install ipxe-bootimgs
Note
SUSE does not provide a package containing iPXE boot images. If you are using SUSE or if the packaged version of the iPXE boot image doesn't work, you can download a prebuilt one from http://boot.ipxe.org or build one image from source, see http://ipxe.org/download for more information.
Copy the iPXE boot image (
undionly.kpxe
for BIOS andipxe.efi
for UEFI) to/tftpboot
. The binary might be found at:Ubuntu: cp /usr/lib/ipxe/{undionly.kpxe,ipxe.efi} /tftpboot Fedora/RHEL7/CentOS7: cp /usr/share/ipxe/{undionly.kpxe,ipxe.efi} /tftpboot
Enable/Configure iPXE in the Bare Metal Service's configuration file (/etc/ironic/ironic.conf):
[pxe] # Enable iPXE boot. (boolean value) ipxe_enabled=True # Neutron bootfile DHCP parameter. (string value) pxe_bootfile_name=undionly.kpxe # Bootfile DHCP parameter for UEFI boot mode. (string value) uefi_pxe_bootfile_name=ipxe.efi # Template file for PXE configuration. (string value) pxe_config_template=$pybasedir/drivers/modules/ipxe_config.template # Template file for PXE configuration for UEFI boot loader. # (string value) uefi_pxe_config_template=$pybasedir/drivers/modules/ipxe_config.template
It is possible to configure the Bare Metal service in such a way that nodes will boot into the deploy image directly from Object Storage. Doing this avoids having to cache the images on the ironic-conductor host and serving them via the ironic-conductor's HTTP server. This can be done if:
- the Image Service is used for image storage;
- the images in the Image Service are internally stored in Object Storage;
- the Object Storage supports generating temporary URLs for accessing
objects stored in it. Both the OpenStack Swift and RADOS Gateway provide
support for this.
- See Ceph Object Gateway support on how to configure the Bare Metal Service with RADOS Gateway as the Object Storage.
Configure this by setting the
[pxe]/ipxe_use_swift
configuration option toTrue
as follows:[pxe] # Download deploy images directly from swift using temporary # URLs. If set to false (default), images are downloaded to # the ironic-conductor node and served over its local HTTP # server. Applicable only when 'ipxe_enabled' option is set to # true. (boolean value) ipxe_use_swift=True
Although the HTTP server still has to be deployed and configured (as it will serve iPXE boot script and boot configuration files for nodes), such configuration will shift some load from ironic-conductor hosts to the Object Storage service which can be scaled horizontally.
Note that when SSL is enabled on the Object Storage service you have to ensure that iPXE firmware on the nodes can indeed boot from generated temporary URLs that use HTTPS protocol.
Restart the
ironic-conductor
process:Fedora/RHEL7/CentOS7/SUSE: sudo systemctl restart openstack-ironic-conductor Ubuntu: sudo service ironic-conductor restart
PXE multi-architecture setup
It is possible to deploy servers of different architecture by one
conductor. To use this feature, architecture-specific boot and template
files must be configured using the configuration options
[pxe]pxe_bootfile_name_by_arch
and
[pxe]pxe_config_template_by_arch
respectively, in the Bare
Metal service's configuration file (/etc/ironic/ironic.conf).
These two options are dictionary values; the key is the architecture
and the value is the boot (or config template) file. A node's
cpu_arch
property is used as the key to get the appropriate
boot file and template file. If the node's cpu_arch
is not
in the dictionary, the configuration options (in [pxe] group)
pxe_bootfile_name
, pxe_config_template
,
uefi_pxe_bootfile_name
and
uefi_pxe_config_template
will be used instead.
In the following example, since 'x86' and 'x86_64' keys are not in
the pxe_bootfile_name_by_arch
or
pxe_config_template_by_arch
options, x86 and x86_64 nodes
will be deployed by 'pxelinux.0' or 'bootx64.efi', depending on the
node's boot_mode
capability ('bios' or 'uefi'). However,
aarch64 nodes will be deployed by 'grubaa64.efi', and ppc64 nodes by
'bootppc64':
[pxe]
# Bootfile DHCP parameter. (string value)
pxe_bootfile_name=pxelinux.0
# On ironic-conductor node, template file for PXE
# configuration. (string value)
pxe_config_template = $pybasedir/drivers/modules/pxe_config.template
# Bootfile DHCP parameter for UEFI boot mode. (string value)
uefi_pxe_bootfile_name=bootx64.efi
# On ironic-conductor node, template file for PXE
# configuration for UEFI boot loader. (string value)
uefi_pxe_config_template=$pybasedir/drivers/modules/pxe_grub_config.template
# Bootfile DHCP parameter per node architecture. (dict value)
pxe_bootfile_name_by_arch=aarch64:grubaa64.efi,ppc64:bootppc64
# On ironic-conductor node, template file for PXE
# configuration per node architecture. For example:
# aarch64:/opt/share/grubaa64_pxe_config.template (dict value)
pxe_config_template_by_arch=aarch64:pxe_grubaa64_config.template,ppc64:pxe_ppc64_config.template
Networking service configuration
DHCP requests from iPXE need to have a DHCP tag called
ipxe
, in order for the DHCP server to tell the client to
get the boot.ipxe script via HTTP. Otherwise, if the tag isn't there,
the DHCP server will tell the DHCP client to chainload the iPXE image
(undionly.kpxe). The Networking service needs to be configured to create
this DHCP tag, since it isn't created by default.
Create a custom
dnsmasq.conf
file with a setting for the ipxe tag. For example, create the file/etc/dnsmasq-ironic.conf
with the content:# Create the "ipxe" tag if request comes from iPXE user class dhcp-userclass=set:ipxe,iPXE # Alternatively, create the "ipxe" tag if request comes from DHCP option 175 # dhcp-match=set:ipxe,175
In the Networking service DHCP Agent configuration file (typically located at /etc/neutron/dhcp_agent.ini), set the custom
/etc/dnsmasq-ironic.conf
file as the dnsmasq configuration file:[DEFAULT] dnsmasq_config_file = /etc/dnsmasq-ironic.conf
Restart the
neutron-dhcp-agent
process:service neutron-dhcp-agent restart
IPMI support
If using the IPMITool driver, the ipmitool
command must
be present on the service node(s) where ironic-conductor
is
running. On most distros, this is provided as part of the
ipmitool
package. Source code is available at http://ipmitool.sourceforge.net/
Note that certain distros, notably Mac OS X and SLES, install
openipmi
instead of ipmitool
by default. THIS
DRIVER IS NOT COMPATIBLE WITH openipmi
AS IT RELIES ON
ERROR HANDLING OPTIONS NOT PROVIDED BY THIS TOOL.
Check that you can connect to and authenticate with the IPMI
controller in your bare metal server by using ipmitool
:
ipmitool -I lanplus -H <ip-address> -U <username> -P <password> chassis power status
<ip-address> = The IP of the IPMI controller you want to access
Note:
- This is not the bare metal node's main IP. The IPMI controller should have its own unique IP.
- In case the above command doesn't return the power status of the
bare metal server, check for these:
ipmitool
is installed.- The IPMI controller on your bare metal server is turned on.
- The IPMI controller credentials passed in the command are right.
- The conductor node has a route to the IPMI controller. This can be checked by just pinging the IPMI controller IP from the conductor node.
Note
If there are slow or unresponsive BMCs in the environment, the retry_timeout configuration option in the [ipmi] section may need to be lowered. The default is fairly conservative, as setting this timeout too low can cause older BMCs to crash and require a hard-reset.
Bare Metal service supports sending IPMI sensor data to Telemetry
with pxe_ipmitool, agent_ipmitool, agent_ilo, iscsi_ilo, pxe_ilo, and
with pxe_irmc driver. By default, support for sending IPMI sensor data
to Telemetry is disabled. If you want to enable it, you should make the
following two changes in ironic.conf
:
notification_driver = messaging
in theDEFAULT
sectionsend_sensor_data = true
in theconductor
section
If you want to customize the sensor types which will be sent to
Telemetry, change the send_sensor_data_types
option. For
example, the below settings will send temperature, fan, voltage and
these three sensor types of data to Telemetry:
- send_sensor_data_types=Temperature,Fan,Voltage
If we use default value 'All' for all the sensor types which are supported by Telemetry, they are:
- Temperature, Fan, Voltage, Current
Configure node web console
See Configuring Web or Serial Console.
Boot mode support
The following drivers support setting of boot mode (Legacy BIOS or UEFI).
pxe_ipmitool
The boot modes can be configured in Bare Metal service in the following way:
When no boot mode setting is provided, these drivers default the boot_mode to Legacy BIOS.
Only one boot mode (either
uefi
orbios
) can be configured for the node.If the operator wants a node to boot always in
uefi
mode orbios
mode, then they may usecapabilities
parameter withinproperties
field of an bare metal node. The operator must manually set the appropriate boot mode on the bare metal node.To configure a node in
uefi
mode, then setcapabilities
as below:ironic node-update <node-uuid> add properties/capabilities='boot_mode:uefi'
Nodes having
boot_mode
set touefi
may be requested by adding anextra_spec
to the Compute service flavor:nova flavor-key ironic-test-3 set capabilities:boot_mode="uefi" nova boot --flavor ironic-test-3 --image test-image instance-1
If
capabilities
is used inextra_spec
as above, nova scheduler (ComputeCapabilitiesFilter
) will match only bare metal nodes which have theboot_mode
set appropriately inproperties/capabilities
. It will filter out rest of the nodes.The above facility for matching in the Compute service can be used in heterogeneous environments where there is a mix of
uefi
andbios
machines, and operator wants to provide a choice to the user regarding boot modes. If the flavor doesn't containboot_mode
andboot_mode
is configured for bare metal nodes, then nova scheduler will consider all nodes and user may get eitherbios
oruefi
machine.
Choosing the disk label
Note
The term disk label
is historically used in Ironic and
was taken from parted.
Apparently everyone seems to have a different word for
disk label
- these are all the same thing: disk type,
partition table, partition map and so on...
Ironic allows operators to choose which disk label they want their
bare metal node to be deployed with when Ironic is responsible for
partitioning the disk; therefore choosing the disk label does not apply
when the image being deployed is a whole disk image
.
There are some edge cases where someone may want to choose a specific disk label for the images being deployed, including but not limited to:
- For machines in
bios
boot mode with disks larger than 2 terabytes it's recommended to use agpt
disk label. That's because a capacity beyond 2 terabytes is not addressable by using the MBR partitioning type. But, although GPT claims to be backward compatible with legacy BIOS systems that's not always the case. - Operators may want to force the partitioning to be always MBR (even
if the machine is deployed with boot mode
uefi
) to avoid breakage of applications and tools running on those instances.
The disk label can be configured in two ways; when Ironic is used with the Compute service or in standalone mode. The following bullet points and sections will describe both methods:
- When no disk label is provided Ironic will configure it according to
the boot mode;
bios
boot mode will usemsdos
anduefi
boot mode will usegpt
. - Only one disk label - either
msdos
orgpt
- can be configured for the node.
When used with Compute service
When Ironic is used with the Compute service the disk label should be
set to node's properties/capabilities
field and also to the
flavor which will request such capability, for example:
ironic node-update <node-uuid> add properties/capabilities='disk_label:gpt'
As for the flavor:
nova flavor-key baremetal set capabilities:disk_label="gpt"
When used in standalone mode
When used without the Compute service, the disk label should be set
directly to the node's instance_info
field, as below:
ironic node-update <node-uuid> add instance_info/capabilities='{"disk_label": "gpt"}'
On Fedora/RHEL the
syslinux-tftpboot
package already install the library modules and PXE image at/tftpboot
. If the TFTP server is configured to listen to a different directory you should copy the contents of/tftpboot
to the configured directory↩︎On Fedora/RHEL the
syslinux-tftpboot
package already install the library modules and PXE image at/tftpboot
. If the TFTP server is configured to listen to a different directory you should copy the contents of/tftpboot
to the configured directory↩︎