74e311261b
Fixes bug 1052727 Change-Id: I01b81febfcc3e38a198bed55e55451746f321ab1
170 lines
6.4 KiB
Plaintext
170 lines
6.4 KiB
Plaintext
# -- Background
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The Quantum Linux Bridge plugin is a plugin that allows you to manage
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connectivity between VMs on hosts that are capable of running a Linux Bridge.
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The Quantum Linux Bridge plugin consists of three components:
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1) The plugin itself: The plugin uses a database backend (mysql for
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now) to store configuration and mappings that are used by the
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agent. The mysql server runs on a central server (often the same
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host as nova itself).
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2) The quantum service host which will be running quantum. This can
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be run on the server running nova.
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3) An agent which runs on the host and communicates with the host operating
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system. The agent gathers the configuration and mappings from
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the mysql database running on the quantum host.
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The sections below describe how to configure and run the quantum
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service with the Linux Bridge plugin.
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# -- Python library dependencies
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Make sure you have the following package(s) installedi on quantum server
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host as well as any hosts which run the agent:
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python-configobj
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bridge-utils
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python-mysqldb
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sqlite3
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# -- Nova configuration (controller node)
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1) Ensure that the quantum network manager is configured in the
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nova.conf on the node that will be running nova-network.
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network_manager=nova.network.quantum.manager.QuantumManager
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# -- Nova configuration (compute node(s))
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1) Configure the vif driver, and libvirt/vif type
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connection_type=libvirt
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libvirt_type=qemu
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libvirt_vif_type=ethernet
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libvirt_vif_driver=nova.virt.libvirt.vif.QuantumLinuxBridgeVIFDriver
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linuxnet_interface_driver=nova.network.linux_net.QuantumLinuxBridgeInterfaceDriver
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2) If you want a DHCP server to be run for the VMs to acquire IPs,
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add the following flag to your nova.conf file:
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quantum_use_dhcp=true
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(Note: For more details on how to work with Quantum using Nova, i.e. how to create networks and such,
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please refer to the top level Quantum README which points to the relevant documentation.)
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# -- Quantum configuration
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Make the Linux Bridge plugin the current quantum plugin
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- edit quantum.conf and change the core_plugin
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core_plugin = quantum.plugins.linuxbridge.lb_quantum_plugin.LinuxBridgePluginV2
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# -- Database config.
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(Note: The plugin ships with a default SQLite in-memory database configuration,
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and can be used to run tests without performing the suggested DB config below.)
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The Linux Bridge quantum plugin requires access to a mysql database in order
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to store configuration and mappings that will be used by the agent. Here is
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how to set up the database on the host that you will be running the quantum
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service on.
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MySQL should be installed on the host, and all plugins and clients
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must be configured with access to the database.
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To prep mysql, run:
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$ mysql -u root -p -e "create database quantum_linux_bridge"
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# log in to mysql service
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$ mysql -u root -p
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# The Linux Bridge Quantum agent running on each compute node must be able to
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# make a mysql connection back to the main database server.
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mysql> GRANT USAGE ON *.* to root@'yourremotehost' IDENTIFIED BY 'newpassword';
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# force update of authorization changes
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mysql> FLUSH PRIVILEGES;
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(Note: If the remote connection fails to MySQL, you might need to add the IP address,
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and/or fully-qualified hostname, and/or unqualified hostname in the above GRANT sql
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command. Also, you might need to specify "ALL" instead of "USAGE".)
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# -- Plugin configuration
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- Edit the configuration file:
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etc/quantum/plugins/linuxbridge/linuxbridge_conf.ini
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Make sure it matches your mysql configuration. This file must be updated
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with the addresses and credentials to access the database.
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Note: debug and logging information should be updated in etc/quantum.conf
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Note: When running the tests, set the connection type to sqlite, and when
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actually running the server set it to mysql. At any given time, only one
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of these should be active in the conf file (you can comment out the other).
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- On the quantum server, network_vlan_ranges must be configured in
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linuxbridge_conf.ini to specify the names of the physical networks
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managed by the linuxbridge plugin, along with the ranges of VLAN IDs
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available on each physical network for allocation to virtual
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networks. An entry of the form
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"<physical_network>:<vlan_min>:<vlan_max>" specifies a VLAN range on
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the named physical network. An entry of the form
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"<physical_network>" specifies a named network without making a
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range of VLANs available for allocation. Networks specified using
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either form are available for adminstrators to create provider flat
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networks and provider VLANs. Multiple VLAN ranges can be specified
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for the same physical network.
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The following example linuxbridge_conf.ini entry shows three
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physical networks that can be used to create provider networks, with
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ranges of VLANs available for allocation on two of them:
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[VLANS]
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network_vlan_ranges = physnet1:1000:2999,physnet1:3000:3999,physnet2,physnet3:1:4094
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# -- Agent configuration
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- Edit the configuration file:
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etc/quantum/plugins/linuxbridge/linuxbridge_conf.ini
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- Copy quantum/plugins/linuxbridge/agent/linuxbridge_quantum_agent.py
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and etc/quantum/plugins/linuxbridge/linuxbridge_conf.ini
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to the compute node.
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- Copy the quantum.conf file to the compute node
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Note: debug and logging information should be updated in etc/quantum.conf
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- On each compute node, the network_interface_mappings must be
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configured in linuxbridge_conf.ini to map each physical network name
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to the physical interface connecting the node to that physical
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network. Entries are of the form
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"<physical_network>:<physical_interface>". For example, one compute
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node may use the following physical_inteface_mappings entries:
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[LINUX_BRIDGE]
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physical_interface_mappings = physnet1:eth1,physnet2:eth2,physnet3:eth3
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while another might use:
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[LINUX_BRIDGE]
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physical_interface_mappings = physnet1:em3,physnet2:em2,physnet3:em1
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$ Run the following:
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python linuxbridge_quantum_agent.py --config-file quantum.conf
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--config-file linuxbridge_conf.ini
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Note that the the user running the agent must have sudo priviliges
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to run various networking commands. Also, the agent can be
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configured to use quantum-rootwrap, limiting what commands it can
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run via sudo. See http://wiki.openstack.org/Packager/Rootwrap for
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details on rootwrap.
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As an alternative to coping the agent python file, if quantum is
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installed on the compute node, the agent can be run as
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bin/quantum-linuxbridge-agent.
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