Adds the variable ``om_enable_queue_manager`` to configure enabling oslo.messaging Queue Manager for all services which use RabbitMQ. This is enabled by default. This is required before we can move away from transient queues (``rabbit_transient_quorum_queue``) as Queue Manager is needed to avoid consuming all erlang atoms after some time. It is also a useful feature for debugging, as queues are now named with hostnames and services included. Also setting ``lock_path`` and mounting ``dev/shm`` is dependent on ``om_enable_queue_manager``, these are now enabled too. This will allow us to backport these features to Caracal and Dalamation without enforcing the changes right away. Side-notes: The quorum queue precheck needed to be updated as queue manager puts "_fanout" on the end of the name instead. We need to override the ``[oslo_messaging_rabbit] processname`` for services running udner wsgi, as they will otherwise all use the same processname ``mod_wsgi``. This will cause Permission Errors trying to access the same file in shared memory as services run with different users. Depends-On: https://review.opendev.org/c/openstack/oslo.messaging/+/939540 Change-Id: Iae5f268e778fbbd2b744dc71a84253ec9e758a99
Kolla Ansible
The Kolla Ansible is a deliverable project separated from Kolla project.
Kolla Ansible deploys OpenStack services and infrastructure components in Docker containers.
Kolla's mission statement is:
To provide production-ready containers and deployment tools for operating
OpenStack clouds.
Kolla is highly opinionated out of the box, but allows for complete customization. This permits operators with little experience to deploy OpenStack quickly and as experience grows modify the OpenStack configuration to suit the operator's exact requirements.
Getting Started
Learn about Kolla Ansible by reading the documentation online Kolla Ansible.
Get started by reading the Developer Quickstart.
OpenStack services
Kolla Ansible deploys containers for the following OpenStack projects:
- Aodh
- Barbican
- Bifrost
- Blazar
- Ceilometer
- Cinder
- CloudKitty
- Cyborg
- Designate
- Glance
- Heat
- Horizon
- Ironic
- Keystone
- Kuryr
- Magnum
- Manila
- Masakari
- Mistral
- Neutron
- Nova
- Octavia
- Skyline (APIServer and Console)
- Swift
- Tacker
- Trove
- Venus
- Watcher
- Zun
Infrastructure components
Kolla Ansible deploys containers for the following infrastructure components:
- Collectd, Telegraf, InfluxDB, Prometheus, and Grafana for performance monitoring.
- OpenSearch and OpenSearch Dashboards to search, analyze, and visualize log messages.
- Etcd a distributed reliable key-value store.
- Fluentd as an open source data collector for unified logging layer.
- Gnocchi A time-series storage database.
- HAProxy and Keepalived for high availability of services and their endpoints.
- MariaDB and Galera Cluster for highly available MySQL databases.
- Memcached a distributed memory object caching system.
- Open vSwitch for use with Neutron.
- RabbitMQ as a messaging backend for communication between services.
- Redis an in-memory data structure store.
Directories
ansible- Contains Ansible playbooks to deploy OpenStack services and infrastructure components in Docker containers.contrib- Contains demos scenarios for Heat, Magnum and Tacker and a development environment for Vagrantdoc- Contains documentation.etc- Contains a reference etc directory structure which requires configuration of a small number of configuration variables to achieve a working All-in-One (AIO) deployment.kolla_ansible- Contains password generation script.releasenotes- Contains releasenote of all features added in Kolla Ansible.specs- Contains the Kolla Ansible communities key arguments about architectural shifts in the code base.tests- Contains functional testing tools.tools- Contains tools for interacting with Kolla Ansible.zuul.d- Contains project gate job definitions.
Getting Involved
Need a feature? Find a bug? Let us know! Contributions are much appreciated and should follow the standard Gerrit workflow.
- We communicate using the #openstack-kolla irc channel.
- File bugs, blueprints, track releases, etc on Launchpad.
- Attend weekly meetings.
- Contribute code.
Contributors
Check out who's contributing code and contributing reviews.
Notices
Docker and the Docker logo are trademarks or registered trademarks of Docker, Inc. in the United States and/or other countries. Docker, Inc. and other parties may also have trademark rights in other terms used herein.