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Development Environment with Vagrant
This guide describes how to use Vagrant to assist in developing for Kolla.
Vagrant is a tool to assist in scripted creation of virtual machines. Vagrant takes care of setting up CentOS-based VMs for Kolla development, each with proper hardware like memory amount and number of network interfaces.
Getting Started
The Vagrant script implements all-in-one or multi-node deployments. all-in-one is the default.
In the case of multi-node deployment, the Vagrant setup builds a cluster with the following nodes by default:
- 3 control nodes
- 1 compute node
- 1 storage node (Note: ceph requires at least 3 storage nodes)
- 1 network node
- 1 operator node
The cluster node count can be changed by editing the Vagrantfile.
Kolla runs from the operator node to deploy OpenStack.
All nodes are connected with each other on the secondary NIC. The primary NIC is behind a NAT interface for connecting with the Internet. The third NIC is connected without IP configuration to a public bridge interface. This may be used for Neutron/Nova to connect to instances.
Start by downloading and installing the Vagrant package for the distro of choice. Various downloads can be found at the Vagrant downloads.
Install required dependencies as follows:
On CentOS:
sudo yum install ruby-devel libvirt-devel zlib-devel libpng-devel gcc \
qemu-kvm qemu-img libvirt libvirt-python libvirt-client virt-install \
bridge-utils
On Ubuntu 16.04 or later:
sudo apt-get install vagrant ruby-dev ruby-libvirt python-libvirt libvirt-dev nfs-kernel-server zlib1g-dev libpng12-dev gcc git
Note
Many distros ship outdated versions of Vagrant by default. When in doubt, always install the latest from the downloads page above.
Next install the hostmanager plugin so all hosts are recorded in
/etc/hosts
(inside each vm):
vagrant plugin install vagrant-hostmanager
If you are going to use VirtualBox, then install vagrant-vbguest:
vagrant plugin install vagrant-vbguest
Vagrant supports a wide range of virtualization technologies. If VirtualBox is used, the vbguest plugin will be required to install the VirtualBox Guest Additions in the virtual machine:
vagrant plugin install vagrant-vbguest
This documentation focuses on libvirt specifics. To install vagrant-libvirt plugin:
vagrant plugin install --plugin-version ">= 0.0.31" vagrant-libvirt
Some Linux distributions offer vagrant-libvirt packages, but the version they provide tends to be too old to run Kolla. A version of >= 0.0.31 is required.
To use libvirt from Vagrant with a low privileges user without being asked for a password, add the user to the libvirt group:
sudo gpasswd -a ${USER} libvirt
newgrp libvirt
Setup NFS to permit file sharing between host and VMs. Contrary to the rsync method, NFS allows both way synchronization and offers much better performance than VirtualBox shared folders. On CentOS:
# Add the virtual interfaces to the internal zone
sudo firewall-cmd --zone=internal --add-interface=virbr0
sudo firewall-cmd --zone=internal --add-interface=virbr1
# Enable nfs, rpc-bind and mountd services for firewalld
sudo firewall-cmd --permanent --zone=internal --add-service=nfs
sudo firewall-cmd --permanent --zone=internal --add-service=rpc-bind
sudo firewall-cmd --permanent --zone=internal --add-service=mountd
sudo firewall-cmd --permanent --zone=internal --add-port=2049/udp
sudo firewall-cmd --permanent --add-port=2049/tcp
sudo firewall-cmd --permanent --add-port=111/udp
sudo firewall-cmd --permanent --add-port=111/tcp
sudo firewall-cmd --reload
# Start required services for NFS
sudo systemctl restart firewalld
sudo systemctl start nfs-server
sudo systemctl start rpcbind.service
Ensure your system has libvirt and associated software installed and setup correctly. On CentOS:
sudo systemctl start libvirtd
sudo systemctl enable libvirtd
Find a location in the system's home directory and checkout Kolla repos:
git clone https://git.openstack.org/openstack/kolla-ansible
git clone https://git.openstack.org/openstack/kolla
Both repos must share the same parent directory so the bootstrap code can locate them.
Developers can now tweak the Vagrantfile or bring up the default all-in-one CentOS 7-based environment:
cd kolla-ansible/contrib/dev/vagrant && vagrant up
The command vagrant status
provides a quick overview of
the VMs composing the environment.
Vagrant Up
Once Vagrant has completed deploying all nodes, the next step is to launch Kolla. First, connect with the operator node:
vagrant ssh operator
To speed things up, there is a local registry running on the operator. All nodes are configured so they can use this insecure repo to pull from, and use it as a mirror. Ansible may use this registry to pull images from.
All nodes have a local folder shared between the group and the
hypervisor, and a folder shared between all nodes and
the hypervisor. This mapping is lost after reboots, so make sure to use
the command vagrant reload <node>
when reboots are
required. Having this shared folder provides a method to supply a
different Docker binary to the cluster. The shared folder is also used
to store the docker-registry files, so they are save from destructive
operations like vagrant destroy
.
Building images
Once logged on the operator VM call the
kolla-build
utility:
kolla-build
kolla-build
accept arguments as documented in Building
Container Images. It builds Docker images and pushes them to the
local registry if the push option is enabled (in
Vagrant this is the default behaviour).
Deploying OpenStack with Kolla
Deploy all-in-one with:
sudo kolla-ansible deploy
Deploy multinode On Centos 7:
sudo kolla-ansible deploy -i /usr/share/kolla-ansible/ansible/inventory/multinode
On Ubuntu 16.04 or later:
sudo kolla-ansible deploy -i /usr/local/share/kolla-ansible/ansible/inventory/multinode
Validate OpenStack is operational:
kolla-ansible post-deploy
. /etc/kolla/admin-openrc.sh
openstack user list
Or navigate to http://172.28.128.254/ with a web browser.
Further Reading
All Vagrant documentation can be found at docs.vagrantup.com.