kolla-ansible/specs/high-availability.rst
Daneyon Hansen 2aebba26a4 Spec to Add Support for High Availability
Previously, a spec did not exist to define how Kolla will support
highly available OpenStack services.

Change-Id: I8fcc60f26d2cb98179be6b520c13abb22a372ecf
2015-06-17 09:47:39 -07:00

13 KiB

High-Availability

Kolla deployments will be maturing from evaluation-level environments to highly available and scalable environments supporting production applications and services. The goal for Kolla HA is to provide active/active, highly available and independently scalable OpenStack services. This spec focuses on providing high availability within a single Kolla-based OpenStack deployment.

Problem description

OpenStack consists of several core and infrastructure services. The services work in concert to provide a cloud computing environment. By default, the services are single points of failure and are unable to scale beyond a single instance.

Use cases

  1. Fail any one or a combination of OpenStack core and/or infrastructure services and the overall system continues to operate.
  2. Scale any one or a combination of OpenStack core and/or infrastructure services without any interruption of service.

Proposed change

The spec consists of the following components for providing high availability and scalability to Kolla-based OpenStack services:

MySQL Galera: A synchronous multi-master database clustering technology for MySQL/InnoDB databases that includes features such as:

  • Synchronous replication
  • Active/active multi-master topology
  • Read and write to any cluster node
  • True parallel replication, on row level
  • Direct client connections, native MySQL look & feel
  • No slave lag or integrity issues

Note: Although Galera supports an active/active multi-master topology with multiple active writers, a few OpenStack services cause database deadlocks in this scenario. This is because these services use the SELECT... FOR UPDATE SQL construct, even though it's [documented][] not to. It appears that [Nova][] has recently fixed the issue and [Neutron][] is making progress

[documented]: https://github.com/openstack/nova/blob/da59d3228125d7e7427c0ba70180db17c597e8fb/nova/openstack/common/db/sqlalchemy/session.py#L180-196 [Nova]: http://specs.openstack.org/openstack/nova-specs/specs/kilo/approved/lock-free-quota-management.html [Neutron]: https://bugs.launchpad.net/neutron/+bug/1364358 https://bugs.launchpad.net/neutron/+bug/1331564

Testing should be performed as part of the Galera implementation to verify whether the recent patches address the deadlock issues. If so, multiple active/active writers can exist within the Galera cluster. If not,then the initial implementation should continue using the well documented work around until the issue is completely resolved.

Several OpenStack services utilize a message queuing system to send and receive messages between software components. The intention of this spec is to leverage RabbitMQ as the messaging system since it is most commonly used within the OpenStack community. Clustering and RabbitMQ Mirrored Queues provide active/active and highly scalable message queuing for OpenStack services.

  • RabbitMQ Clustering: If the RabbitMQ broker consists of a single node, then a failure of that node will cause downtime, temporary unavailability of service, and potentially loss of messages. A cluster of RabbitMQ nodes can be used to construct the RabbitMQ broker. Clustering RabbitMQ nodes are resilient to the loss of individual nodes in terms of overall availability of the service. All data/state required for the operation of a RabbitMQ broker is replicated across all nodes, for reliability and scaling. An exception to this are message queues, which by default reside on the node that created them, though they are visible and reachable from all nodes.
  • RabbitMQ Mirrored Queues: While exchanges and bindings survive the loss of individual nodes, message queues and their messages do not. This is because a queue and its contents reside on exactly one node, thus the loss of a node will render its queues unavailable. To solve these various problems, RabbitMQ has developed active/active high-availability for message queues. This works by allowing queues to be mirrored on other nodes within a RabbitMQ cluster. The result is that should one node of a cluster fail, the queue can automatically switch to one of the mirrors and continue to operate, with no unavailability of service. This solution still requires a RabbitMQ Cluster, which means that it will not cope seamlessly with network partitions within the cluster and, for that reason, is not recommended for use across a WAN (though of course, clients can still connect from as near and as far as needed).

HAProxy provide load-balancing between clients and OpenStack API Endpoints. HAProxy is a free, very fast and reliable software solution offering high availability, load balancing, and proxying for TCP and HTTP-based applications. HAProxy implements an event-driven, single-process model which enables support for a high number of simultaneous connections.

Memcached is required by nova-consoleauth, Horizon and Swift Proxy to store ephemeral data such as tokens. Memcached does not support typical forms of redundancy such as clustering. However, OpenStack services can support more than one Memcached instance by configuring multiple hostnames or IP addresses. The Memcached client implements hashing to balance objects among the instances. Failure of a Memcached instance only impacts a portion of the objects and the client automatically removes it from the list of instances.

An Example configuration with two hosts: 'memcached_servers = kolla1:11211,kolla2:11211'

Memcached does not implement authentication and therefore is insecure. This risk is reduced in default deployments because Memcached is not exposed outside of localhost. Since deploying Memcahced in a highly-available manner requires exposing Memcached outside of localhost, precautions should be taken to reduce this risk.

Keepalived is routing software that provides simple and robust facilities for load-balancing Linux systems. Keepalived will track the HAProxy process and failover/back between HAProxy instances with minimal service interruption. Keepalived implements the Virtual Router Redundancy Protocol (VRRP). VRRP creates virtual routers, which are an abstract representation of multiple routers, i.e. master and backup routers, acting as a group. The default gateway of a participating host is assigned to the virtual router instead of a physical router. If the physical router that is routing packets on behalf of the virtual router fails, another physical router is selected to automatically replace it. The physical router that is forwarding packets at any given time is called the master router.

Neutron: HAProxy will provide high-availability and scalability to the neutron-server service by load-balancing traffic across multiple instances of the service. RabbitMQ clustering and mirrored queues will be used to provide high-availability and scalability for RPC messaging among Neutron components. Galera will provide high-availability and scalability to Neutron persistent data. Multiple Neutron Agents will be deployed across separate nodes. [Multiple L3/DHCP Agents][] will be assigned per tenant network to provide network high-availability for tenant networks.

[Multiple L3/DHCP Agents]: https://wiki.openstack.org/wiki/Neutron/L3_High_Availability_VRRP

Glance: Glance can use different back-ends to store OpenStack images. Examples include Swift, Ceph, Cinder and the default filesystem back-end. Although it is not required, it is highly recommended to use a backend that is highly scalable and fault-tolerant.

Just as with the rest of the OpenStack API's, HAProxy and Keepalived can provide high-availability and scalability to the Glance API and Registry endpoints.

Swift: Multiple Swift Proxy services can be used to provide high availability to the Swift object, account and container storage rings. Standard Swift replication provides high-availability to data stored within a Swift object storage system. The replication processes compare local data with each remote copy to ensure they all contain the latest version. Object replication uses a hash list to quickly compare subsections of each partition. Container and account replication use a combination of hashes and shared high water marks.

Cinder: As with other stateless services, HAProxy can provide high availability and scalability to cinder-api. RabbitMQ clustering and mirrored queues can provide high-availability and scalability for RPC messaging among Cinder services. At the time of this writing, the only Cinder backend supported is LVM. LVM can be made [highly-available][] or a new Cinder backend, such as [Ceph][], can be added to Kolla which supports high availability and scalability for tenant-facing block storage services. Due to limitations described [here][], the Cinder volume manager can not be reliably deployed in an active/active or active/passive fashion.

[highly-available]: https://access.redhat.com/documentation/en-US/Red_Hat_Enterprise_Linux/6/html/Cluster_Administration/ap-ha-halvm-CA.html [Ceph]: http://ceph.com/ [here]: https://bugs.launchpad.net/cinder/+bug/1322190

In general, the Kolla HA environment looks like:

![Image](https://raw.githubusercontent.com/stackforge/kolla/master/specs/ha.svg)

Security impact

Keystone UUID vs PKI tokens. Tokens are used as a mechanism to authenticate API requests of users. Keystone supports UUID and PKI token formats. PKI tokens provide better security, but are more difficult to deploy in an active/active manner. Therefore, it is recommended to start with UUID tokens and add PKI tokens in a future iteration.

Performance Impact

The proposed high-availability spec should increase the performance of Kolla-based OpenStack clouds. A slight performance decrease can be expected due to the additional hop introduced by the load-balancing layer. However, the additional latency introduced by this layer is insignificant. Since this layer provides intelligent load-balancing of services, improved performance can be expected for services under moderate-to-heavy load. Without the intelligence provided by the load-balancing layer, overloaded services can become degraded and a decrease in performance can be expected.

Performance tests should be conducted for the following scenarios to validate and/or improve the HA spec:

  1. The HA environment is functioning as expected.
  2. One or more API services are in a failed state.
  3. One or more Galera instances are in a failed state.
  4. One or more RabbitMQ Brokers are in a failed state.
  5. Adding services to/from the HA environment.

Implementation

Generally, the implementation should start off simple and add capabilities through development iterations. The implementation can be organized as follows:

1. Multi-node: In order to implement HA, Kolla must first support being deployed to multiple hosts.

2. Database: Implement a Galera container image that follows best practices used by existing Kolla images. Use existing tools to manage the image, the configuration file(s) and deployment of the Galera service in a highly available and scalable fashion.

3. RabbitMQ: Implement a RabbitMQ container image that follows best practices used by existing Kolla images. Use existing tools to manage the image, the configuration file(s) and deployment of the Galera service in a highly available and scalable fashion.

4. APIs: Implement HAProxy/Keepalived container images that follow best practices used by existing Kolla images. Use existing tools to manage the image, the configuration file(s) and deployment of the Galera service in a highly available and scalable fashion.

5. Update Existing Images: Update existing container images with the necessary configuration to support HA. For example, OpenStack services should use the Virtual IP of the Galera cluster to communicate with the DB instead of an IP assigned to an individual DB instance.

6. Update Existing Deployment Automation: Update automation scripts, playbooks, etc to support additional container images, configuration parameters, etc. introduced by the HA components.

7. Testing: Follow the guidance provided in the performance impact section to test how the OpenStack environment responds and performances in various failure scenarios.

Assignee(s)

Primary assignee:

kolla maintainers

Work Items

  1. Deploy existing Kolla across multiple physical hosts.
  2. Create containers for HAProxy, Keepalived.
  3. Add Galera Support to existing MariaDB container set.
  4. Add clustering/mirrored queue support to RabbitMQ container set.
  5. Add L3/DHCP agent HA to existing Neutron agent container set.
  6. Create Swift containers.
  7. Add/configure the Glance backend to support HA and scalability.
  8. Add/configure HAproxy for services, like keystone or horizon.

Testing

We don't know how to test multi-node deployment in CI/CD because we are unsure whether the gating system allows for deployments consisting of more than one VM. As a result, we will rely on manual testing of the solution as a starting point.

Documentation Impact

The integration-guide.md should be updated to include additional K/V pairs introduced by HA. Additionally, a document should be developed explaining how to deploy and configure Kolla in a highly-available fashion.

References