kuryr/README.rst
Antoni Segura Puimedon 854a8028b6
binding: Add driver based subsystem
This patch introduces a new hierarchy of drivers to perform the port
binding and unbinding in a similar fashion as how it is done with
Neutron plugins.

The initial three drivers are:
* veth: The one that we have been using up until now and that uses
  the usr/libexec/kuryr/* scripts to bind the host side
* ipvlan: L2 ipvlan motivated mostly container-in-vm use cases so that
  the instance interface will have linked devices that get addresses
  of other ports of the same subnet.
* macvlan: bridged mode ipvlan for OSes that do not support vlan.

Co-Authored-by: Louise Daly <louise.m.daly@intel.com>
Implements: blueprint driver-binding-ipvlan
Change-Id: I1d94ab324ab2a65a6d3e782e23ea6c59b110ff67
2016-10-03 12:28:01 +02:00

4.9 KiB

kuryr

Kuryr mascot

Docker for OpenStack Neutron

Kuryr is a Docker network plugin that uses Neutron to provide networking services to Docker containers. It provides containerised images for the common Neutron plugins.

Features

  • TODO

Getting Code

$ git clone https://git.openstack.org/openstack/kuryr.git
$ cd kuryr

Prerequisites

$ sudo pip install -r requirements.txt

Installing Kuryr's libnetwork driver

For kuryr-libnetwork driver installation refer:

http://docs.openstack.org/developer/kuryr-libnetwork/readme.html

Configuring Kuryr

Generate sample config, etc/kuryr.conf.sample, running the following

$ tox -e genconfig

Rename and copy config file at required path

$ cp etc/kuryr.conf.sample /etc/kuryr/kuryr.conf

Edit keystone section in /etc/kuryr/kuryr.conf, replace ADMIN_PASSWORD:

auth_uri = http://127.0.0.1:35357/v2.0
admin_user = admin
admin_tenant_name = service
admin_password = ADMIN_PASSWORD

In the same file uncomment the bindir parameter with the path for the Kuryr vif binding executables:

bindir = /usr/local/libexec/kuryr

By default, Kuryr will use veth pairs for performing the binding. However, the Kuryr library ships with two other drivers that you can configure in the binding section:

[binding]
#driver = kuryr.lib.binding.drivers.ipvlan
#driver = kuryr.lib.binding.drivers.macvlan

Drivers may make use of other binding options. Both Kuryr library drivers in the previous snippet can be further configured setting the interface that will act as link interface for the virtual devices:

link_iface = enp4s0

Running Kuryr

Currently, Kuryr utilizes a bash script to start the service. Make sure that you have installed tox before the execution of the below command.

$ sudo ./scripts/run_kuryr.sh

After the booting, please restart your Docker service, e.g.,

$ sudo service docker restart

The bash script creates the following file if it is missing.

  • /usr/lib/docker/plugins/kuryr/kuryr.json: Json spec file for libnetwork.

Note the root privilege is required for creating and deleting the veth pairs with pyroute2 to run.

Testing Kuryr

For a quick check that Kuryr is working create a network:

$ docker network create --driver kuryr test_net
785f8c1b5ae480c4ebcb54c1c48ab875754e4680d915b270279e4f6a1aa52283
$ docker network ls
NETWORK ID          NAME                DRIVER
785f8c1b5ae4        test_net            kuryr

To test it with tox:

$ tox

You can also run specific test cases using the -e flag, e.g., to only run the fullstack test case.

$ tox -e fullstack

Generating Documentation

We use Sphinx to maintain the documentation. You can install Sphinx using pip.

$ pip install -U Sphinx

In addition to Sphinx you will also need the following requirements (not covered by requirements.txt):

$ pip install oslosphinx reno 'reno[sphinx]'

The source code of the documentation are under doc, you can generate the html files using the following command. If the generation succeeds,a build/html dir will be created under doc.

$ cd doc
$ make html

Now you can serve the documentation at http://localhost:8080 as a simple website.

$ cd build/html
$ python -m SimpleHTTPServer 8080

Limitations

To create Docker networks with subnets having same/overlapping cidr, it is expected to pass unique pool name for each such network creation Docker command. Docker cli options -o and --ipam-opt should be used to pass pool names as shown below:

$ sudo docker network create --driver=kuryr --ipam-driver=kuryr \
  --subnet 10.0.0.0/16 --ip-range 10.0.0.0/24 \
  -o neutron.pool.name=neutron_pool1 \
  --ipam-opt=neutron.pool.name=neutron_pool1 \
  foo
  eddb51ebca09339cb17aaec05e48ffe60659ced6f3fc41b020b0eb506d364

Now Docker user creates another network with same cidr as the previous one, i.e 10.0.0.0/16, but with different pool name, neutron_pool2:

$ sudo docker network create --driver=kuryr --ipam-driver=kuryr \
  --subnet 10.0.0.0/16 --ip-range 10.0.0.0/24 \
  -o neutron.pool.name=neutron_pool2 \
  --ipam-opt=neutron.pool.name=neutron_pool2 \
  bar
  397badb51ebca09339cb17aaec05e48ffe60659ced6f3fc41b020b0eb506d786