The dev-quickstart needed a bit of updating. The major change in this update is to specify using docker 1.6.0 release version rather than a docker RC. Change-Id: I1fcb79e3751c00c5bd75680ef05ec3952d76578d
3.8 KiB
Developer Environment
If you are developing Kolla on an existing OpenStack cloud that supports Heat, then follow the Heat template README. Otherwise, follow the instructions below to manually create your Kolla development environment.
Installing Dependencies
In order to run Kolla, it is mandatory to run a version of docker-compose
that includes pid: host support. The docker-compose
master repository
includes support but the pip packaged version of 1.2.0 does not. We expect
the pip packaged version of docker-compose 1.3.0 to include the necessary
features, so these next steps won't be necessary if installed from pip or
distro packaging.
git clone http://github.com/docker/compose
cd compose
sudo pip install -e .
In order to run Kolla, it is mandatory to run a version of docker
that is a 1.6.0. Docker 1.5.0 has a defect in --pid=host
support where
the libvirt container cannot be stopped.
If a version of Docker less than 1.6.0 is running on your system, stop it:
sudo systemctl stop docker
sudo killall -9 docker
Next, download and run the Docker 1.6.0 binary provided by Docker Inc.:
curl https://get.docker.com/builds/Linux/x86_64/docker-1.6.0 -o docker
sudo ./docker -d &
Next, install the OpenStack python clients if they are not installed:
sudo yum install python-keystoneclient python-glanceclient
python-novaclient python-heatclient python-neutronclient
Finally stop libvirt on the host machine. Only one copy of libvirt may be running at a time.
service libvirtd stop
The basic starting environment will be created using docker-compose
.
This environment will start up the openstack services listed in the
compose directory.
Starting Kolla
To start, setup your environment variables.
$ cd kolla
$ ./tools/genenv
The genenv
script will create a compose/openstack.env file
and an openrc file in your current directory. The openstack.env
file contains all of your initialized environment variables, which
you can edit for a different setup.
A mandatory step is customizing the FLAT_INTERFACE network interface
environment variable. The variable defaults to eth1. In some cases, the
second interface in a system may not be eth1, but a unique name. For
exmaple with an Intel driver, the interface is enp1s0. The interface name
can be determined by executing the ifconfig tool. The second interface must
be a real interface, not a virtual interface. Make certain to store the
interface name in compose/openstack.env
:
NEUTRON_FLAT_NETWORK_INTERFACE=enp1s0
FLAT_INTERFACE=enp1s0
Next, run the start command:
$ sudo ./tools/kolla start
Finally, run the status command:
$ sudo ./tools/kolla status
This will display information about all Kolla containers.
Debugging Kolla
All Docker commands should be run from the directory of the Docker binary,
by default this is /
.
The start
command to kolla is responsible for starting the containers
using docker-compose -f <service-container> up -d
.
If you want to start a container set by hand use this template:
$ docker-compose -f glance-api-registry.yml up -d
You can determine a container's status by executing:
$ sudo ./docker ps -a
If any of the containers exited you can check the logs by executing:
$ sudo ./docker logs <container-id>
$ docker-compose logs <container-id>
If you want to start a individual service like glance-api
manually, use
this template. This is a good method to test and troubleshoot an individual
container. Note some containers require special options. Reference the
compose yml specification for more details:
$ sudo ./docker run --name glance-api -d \
--net=host \
--env-file=compose/openstack.env \
kollaglue/fedora-rdo-glance-api:latest