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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 Red Hat Enterprise Linux and CentOS
This section describes how to install and configure the Shared File Systems service, code-named manila, on the controller node that runs Red Hat Enterprise Linux or CentOS. This service requires at least one additional share node that manages file storage back ends.
Install and configure components
Install the packages:
# yum install openstack-manila python-manilaclient
Edit the
/etc/manila/manila.conf
file and complete the following actions:In the
[database]
section, configure database access:[database] ... connection = mysql+pymysql://manila:MANILA_DBPASS@controller/manila
Replace
MANILA_DBPASS
with 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
Start the Shared File Systems services and configure them to start when the system boots:
# systemctl enable openstack-manila-api.service openstack-manila-scheduler.service # systemctl start openstack-manila-api.service openstack-manila-scheduler.service