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			There is little material on manila in the centralized Install Guide to migrate as outlined in the migration spec [1], so copy from our local install guide. After we complete this migration, we can remove the job that builds the local install guide and remove it from the manila tree. [1] https://specs.openstack.org/openstack/docs-specs/specs/pike/os-manuals-migration.html Change-Id: Ibe3588c3f4560c037cf109058fc357234e70a846 Partial-Bug: #1706181 Needed-By: I04237021943bb7501acb9cfb7252be2cbf07ac4b Depends-On: I7924d94b82e7c8d9716bad7a219fc38c57970773 Depends-On: Ia750cb049c0f53a234ea70ce1f2bbbb7a2aa9454
		
			
				
	
	
	
		
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Install and configure controller node on Debian
This section describes how to install and configure the Shared File Systems service, code-named manila, on the controller node that runs a Debian distribution. This service requires at least one additional share node that manages file storage back ends.
Install and configure components
- Install the packages: - # apt-get install manila-api manila-scheduler python-manilaclient
- Edit the - /etc/manila/manila.conffile and complete the following actions:- In the - [database]section, configure database access:- [database] ... connection = mysql+pymysql://manila:MANILA_DBPASS@controller/manila- Replace - MANILA_DBPASSwith the password you chose for the Shared File Systems database.
 
- Populate the Shared File Systems database: - # su -s /bin/sh -c "manila-manage db sync" manila- Note - Ignore any deprecation messages in this output. 
Finalize installation
- Restart the Shared File Systems services: - # service manila-scheduler restart # service manila-api restart