78488bcf32
With the new default Kubernetes 1.18 version used by Kuryr, the command "kubectl run" does not create a Kubernetes Deployment anymore, but instead creates a Pod. The Kuryr docs should get updated to still support a Deployment creation with the command "kubectl create deployment" Change-Id: I8df10e64d71cc224e08825987d538693df1719f3 Closes-Bug: #1897391 |
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README.rst | ||
subports.py |
Subport pools management tool
This tool makes it easier to deal with subports pools. It allows to populate a given amount of subports at the specified pools (i.e., at the VM trunks), as well as to free the unused ones.
The first step to perform is to enable the pool manager by adding
this to /etc/kuryr/kuryr.conf
:
[kubernetes]
enable_manager = True
If the environment has been deployed with devstack, the socket file
directory will have been created automatically. However, if that is not
the case, you need to create the directory for the socket file with the
right permissions. If no other path is specified, the default location
for the socket file is: /run/kuryr/kuryr_manage.sock
Hence, you need to create that directory and give it read/write access to the user who is running the kuryr-kubernetes.service, for instance:
$ sudo mkdir -p /run/kuryr
$ sudo chown stack:stack /run/kuryr
Finally, restart kuryr-k8s-controller:
$ sudo systemctl restart devstack@kuryr-kubernetes.service
Populate subport pools for nested environment
Once the nested environment is up and running, and the pool manager has been started, we can populate the pools, i.e., the trunk ports in used by the overcloud VMs, with subports. From the undercloud we just need to make use of the subports.py tool.
To obtain information about the tool options:
$ python contrib/pools-management/subports.py -h
usage: subports.py [-h] {create,free} ...
Tool to create/free subports from the subport pools
positional arguments:
{create,free} commands
create Populate the pool(s) with subports
free Remove unused subports from the pools
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
And to obtain information about the create subcommand:
$ python contrib/pools-management/subports.py create -h
usage: subports.py create [-h] --trunks SUBPORTS [SUBPORTS ...] [-n NUM] [-t TIMEOUT]
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
--trunks SUBPORTS [SUBPORTS ...]
list of trunk IPs where subports will be added
-n NUM, --num-ports NUM
number of subports to be created per pool
-t TIMEOUT, --timeout TIMEOUT
set timeout for operation. Default is 180 sec
Then, we can check the existing (overcloud) VMs to use their (trunk) IPs to later populate their respective pool:
$ openstack server list -f value -c Networks
net0-10.0.4.5
net0=10.0.4.6, 172.24.4.5
As it can be seen, the second VM has also a floating ip associated, but we only need to use the one belonging to net0. If we want to create and attach a subport to the 10.0.4.5 trunk, and the respective pool, we just need to do:
$ python contrib/pools-management/subports.py create --trunks 10.0.4.5
As the number of ports to create is not specified, it only creates 1 subport as this is the default value. We can check the result of this command with:
# Checking the subport named `available-port` has been created
$ openstack port list | grep available-port
| 1de77073-7127-4c39-a47b-cef15f98849c | available-port| fa:16:3e:64:7d:90 | ip_address='10.0.0.70', subnet_id='c3a8feb0-62b5-4b53-9235-af1ca93c2571' | ACTIVE |
# Checking the subport is attached to the VM trunk
$ openstack network trunk show trunk1
+-----------------+--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| Field | Value |
+-----------------+--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| admin_state_up | UP |
| created_at | 2017-08-28T15:06:54Z |
| description | |
| id | 9048c109-c1aa-4a41-9508-71b2ba98f3b0 |
| name | trunk1 |
| port_id | 4180a2e5-e184-424a-93d4-54b48490f50d |
| project_id | a05f6ec0abd04cba80cd160f8baaac99 |
| revision_number | 43 |
| status | ACTIVE |
| sub_ports | port_id='1de77073-7127-4c39-a47b-cef15f98849c', segmentation_id='3934', segmentation_type='vlan' |
| tags | [] |
| tenant_id | a05f6ec0abd04cba80cd160f8baaac99 |
| updated_at | 2017-08-29T06:12:39Z |
+-----------------+--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
It can be seen that the port with id 1de77073-7127-4c39-a47b-cef15f98849c has been attached to trunk1.
Similarly, we can add subport to different pools by including several IPs at the --trunks option, and we can also modify the amount of subports created per pool with the --num option:
$ python contrib/pools-management/subports.py create --trunks 10.0.4.6 10.0.4.5 --num 3
This command will create 6 subports in total, 3 at trunk 10.0.4.5 and another 3 at trunk 10.0.4.6. So, to check the result of this command, as before:
$ openstack port list | grep available-port
| 1de77073-7127-4c39-a47b-cef15f98849c | available-port | fa:16:3e:64:7d:90 | ip_address='10.0.0.70', subnet_id='c3a8feb0-62b5-4b53-9235-af1ca93c2571' | ACTIVE |
| 52e52281-4692-45e9-935e-db77de44049a | available-port | fa:16:3e:0b:45:f6 | ip_address='10.0.0.73', subnet_id='c3a8feb0-62b5-4b53-9235-af1ca93c2571' | ACTIVE |
| 71245983-e15e-4ae8-9425-af255b54921b | available-port | fa:16:3e:e5:2f:90 | ip_address='10.0.0.68', subnet_id='c3a8feb0-62b5-4b53-9235-af1ca93c2571' | ACTIVE |
| b6a8aa34-feef-42d7-b7ce-f9c33ac499ca | available-port | fa:16:3e:0c:8c:b0 | ip_address='10.0.0.65', subnet_id='c3a8feb0-62b5-4b53-9235-af1ca93c2571' | ACTIVE |
| bee0cb3e-8d83-4942-8cdd-fc091b6e6058 | available-port | fa:16:3e:c2:0a:c6 | ip_address='10.0.0.74', subnet_id='c3a8feb0-62b5-4b53-9235-af1ca93c2571' | ACTIVE |
| c2d7b5c9-606d-4499-9981-0f94ec94f7e1 | available-port | fa:16:3e:73:89:d2 | ip_address='10.0.0.67', subnet_id='c3a8feb0-62b5-4b53-9235-af1ca93c2571' | ACTIVE |
| cb42940f-40c0-4e01-aa40-f3e9c5f6743f | available-port | fa:16:3e:49:73:ca | ip_address='10.0.0.66', subnet_id='c3a8feb0-62b5-4b53-9235-af1ca93c2571' | ACTIVE |
$ openstack network trunk show trunk0
+-----------------+--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| Field | Value |
+-----------------+--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| admin_state_up | UP |
| created_at | 2017-08-25T07:28:11Z |
| description | |
| id | c730ff56-69c2-4540-b3d4-d2978007236d |
| name | trunk0 |
| port_id | ad1b8e91-0698-473d-a2f2-d123e8a0af45 |
| project_id | a05f6ec0abd04cba80cd160f8baaac99 |
| revision_number | 381 |
| status | ACTIVE |
| sub_port | port_id='bee0cb3e-8d83-4942-8cdd-fc091b6e6058', segmentation_id='875', segmentation_type='vlan' |
| | port_id='71245983-e15e-4ae8-9425-af255b54921b', segmentation_id='1446', segmentation_type='vlan' |
| | port_id='b6a8aa34-feef-42d7-b7ce-f9c33ac499ca', segmentation_id='1652', segmentation_type='vlan' |
| tags | [] |
| tenant_id | a05f6ec0abd04cba80cd160f8baaac99 |
| updated_at | 2017-08-29T06:19:24Z |
+-----------------+--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
$ openstack network trunk show trunk1
+-----------------+--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| Field | Value |
+-----------------+--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| admin_state_up | UP |
| created_at | 2017-08-28T15:06:54Z |
| description | |
| id | 9048c109-c1aa-4a41-9508-71b2ba98f3b0 |
| name | trunk1 |
| port_id | 4180a2e5-e184-424a-93d4-54b48490f50d |
| project_id | a05f6ec0abd04cba80cd160f8baaac99 |
| revision_number | 46 |
| status | ACTIVE |
| sub_ports | port_id='c2d7b5c9-606d-4499-9981-0f94ec94f7e1', segmentation_id='289', segmentation_type='vlan' |
| | port_id='cb42940f-40c0-4e01-aa40-f3e9c5f6743f', segmentation_id='1924', segmentation_type='vlan' |
| | port_id='52e52281-4692-45e9-935e-db77de44049a', segmentation_id='3866', segmentation_type='vlan' |
| | port_id='1de77073-7127-4c39-a47b-cef15f98849c', segmentation_id='3934', segmentation_type='vlan' |
| tags | [] |
| tenant_id | a05f6ec0abd04cba80cd160f8baaac99 |
| updated_at | 2017-08-29T06:19:28Z |
+-----------------+--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
We can see that now we have 7 subports, 3 of them attached to trunk0 and 4 (1 + 3) attached to trunk1.
After that, if we create a new pod, we can see that the pre-created subports are being used:
$ kubectl create deployment demo --image=celebdor/kuryr-demo
$ kubectl scale deploy/demo --replicas=2
$ kubectl get pods
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
demo-2293951457-0l35q 1/1 Running 0 8s
demo-2293951457-nlghf 1/1 Running 0 17s
$ openstack port list | grep demo
| 71245983-e15e-4ae8-9425-af255b54921b | demo-2293951457-0l35q | fa:16:3e:e5:2f:90 | ip_address='10.0.0.68', subnet_id='c3a8feb0-62b5-4b53-9235-af1ca93c2571' | ACTIVE |
| b6a8aa34-feef-42d7-b7ce-f9c33ac499ca | demo-2293951457-nlghf | fa:16:3e:0c:8c:b0 | ip_address='10.0.0.65', subnet_id='c3a8feb0-62b5-4b53-9235-af1ca93c2571' | ACTIVE |
Free pools for nested environment
In addition to the create subcommand, there is a free command available that allows to either remove the available ports at a given pool (i.e., VM trunk), or in all of them:
$ python contrib/pools-management/subports.py free -h
usage: subports.py free [-h] [--trunks SUBPORTS [SUBPORTS ...]] [-t TIMEOUT]
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
--trunks SUBPORTS [SUBPORTS ...]
list of trunk IPs where subports will be freed
-t TIMEOUT, --timeout TIMEOUT
set timeout for operation. Default is 180 sec
Following from the previous example, we can remove the available-ports attached to a give pool, e.g.:
$ python contrib/pools-management/subports.py free --trunks 10.0.4.5
$ openstack network trunk show trunk1
+-----------------+--------------------------------------+
| Field | Value |
+-----------------+--------------------------------------+
| admin_state_up | UP |
| created_at | 2017-08-28T15:06:54Z |
| description | |
| id | 9048c109-c1aa-4a41-9508-71b2ba98f3b0 |
| name | trunk1 |
| port_id | 4180a2e5-e184-424a-93d4-54b48490f50d |
| project_id | a05f6ec0abd04cba80cd160f8baaac99 |
| revision_number | 94 |
| status | ACTIVE |
| sub_ports | |
| tags | [] |
| tenant_id | a05f6ec0abd04cba80cd160f8baaac99 |
| updated_at | 2017-08-29T06:40:18Z |
+-----------------+--------------------------------------+
Or from all the pools at once:
$ python contrib/pools-management/subports.py free
$ openstack port list | grep available-port
$ # returns nothing
List pools for nested environment
There is a list command available to show information about the existing pools, i.e., it prints out the pool keys (trunk_ip, project_id, [security_groups]) and the amount of available ports in each one of them:
$ python contrib/pools-management/subports.py list -h
usage: subports.py list [-h] [-t TIMEOUT]
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
-t TIMEOUT, --timeout TIMEOUT
set timeout for operation. Default is 180 sec
As an example:
$ python contrib/pools-management/subports.py list
Content-length: 150
Pools:
["10.0.0.6", "9d2b45c4efaa478481c30340b49fd4d2", ["00efc78c-f11c-414a-bfcd-a82e16dc07d1", "fd6b13dc-7230-4cbe-9237-36b4614bc6b5"]] has 4 ports
Show pool for nested environment
There is a show command available to print out information about a given pool. It prints the ids of the ports associated to that pool::
$ python contrib/pools-management/subports.py show -h
usage: subports.py show [-h] --trunk TRUNK_IP -p PROJECT_ID --sg SG [SG ...]
[-t TIMEOUT]
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
--trunk TRUNK_IP Trunk IP of the desired pool
-p PROJECT_ID, --project-id PROJECT_ID
project id of the pool
--sg SG [SG ...] Security group ids of the pool
-t TIMEOUT, --timeout TIMEOUT
set timeout for operation. Default is 180 sec
As an example:
$ python contrib/pools-management/subports.py show --trunk 10.0.0.6 -p 9d2b45c4efaa478481c30340b49fd4d2 --sg 00efc78c-f11c-414a-bfcd-a82e16dc07d1 fd6b13dc-7230-4cbe-9237-36b4614bc6b5
Content-length: 299
Pool (u'10.0.0.6', u'9d2b45c4efaa478481c30340b49fd4d2', (u'00efc78c-f11c-414a-bfcd-a82e16dc07d1', u'fd6b13dc-7230-4cbe-9237-36b4614bc6b5')) ports are:
4913fbde-5939-4aef-80c0-7fcca0348871
864c8237-6ab4-4713-bec8-3d8bb6aa2144
8138134b-44df-489c-a693-3defeb2adb58
f5e107c6-f998-4416-8f17-a055269f2829
Without the script
Note the same can be done without using this script, by directly calling the REST API with curl:
# To populate the pool
$ curl --unix-socket /run/kuryr/kuryr_manage.sock http://localhost/populatePool -H "Content-Type: application/json" -X POST -d '{"trunks": ["10.0.4.6"], "num_ports": 3}'
# To free the pool
$ curl --unix-socket /run/kuryr/kuryr_manage.sock http://localhost/freePool -H "Content-Type: application/json" -X POST -d '{"trunks": ["10.0.4.6"]}'
# To list the existing pools
$ curl --unix-socket /run/kuryr/kuryr_manage.sock http://localhost/listPools -H "Content-Type: application/json" -X GET -d '{}'
# To show a specific pool
$ curl --unix-socket /run/kuryr/kuryr_manage.sock http://localhost/showPool -H "Content-Type: application/json" -X GET -d '{"pool_key": ["10.0.0.6", "9d2b45c4efaa478481c30340b49fd4d2", ["00efc78c-f11c-414a-bfcd-a82e16dc07d1", "fd6b13dc-7230-4cbe-9237-36b4614bc6b5"]]}'