neutron/doc/source/admin/archives/introduction.rst
chenxing b6a0fa8a76 import the admin guide content from openstack-manuals
Neutron repository has the networking guide in admin/,
so we cannot just import the admin guide contents into admin/
as it potentially breaks the existing document structure of
the networking guide. This commit imports the admin guide
into admin/archives directory so that the team can migrate them
into the networking guide after careful reviews.

Co-Authored-By: Akihiro Motoki <amotoki@gmail.com>
Change-Id: I1f99f225a6f58654911ed827f51d3d4de67f405d
2017-07-19 00:42:07 +00:00

9.8 KiB

Introduction to Networking

The Networking service, code-named neutron, provides an API that lets you define network connectivity and addressing in the cloud. The Networking service enables operators to leverage different networking technologies to power their cloud networking. The Networking service also provides an API to configure and manage a variety of network services ranging from L3 forwarding and NAT to load balancing, edge firewalls, and IPsec VPN.

For a detailed description of the Networking API abstractions and their attributes, see the OpenStack Networking API v2.0 Reference.

Note

If you use the Networking service, do not run the Compute nova-network service (like you do in traditional Compute deployments). When you configure networking, see the Compute-related topics in this Networking section.

Networking API

Networking is a virtual network service that provides a powerful API to define the network connectivity and IP addressing that devices from other services, such as Compute, use.

The Compute API has a virtual server abstraction to describe computing resources. Similarly, the Networking API has virtual network, subnet, and port abstractions to describe networking resources.

Resource Description
Network An isolated L2 segment, analogous to VLAN in the physical networking world.
Subnet A block of v4 or v6 IP addresses and associated configuration state.
Port A connection point for attaching a single device, such as the NIC of a virtual server, to a virtual network. Also describes the associated network configuration, such as the MAC and IP addresses to be used on that port.

Networking resources

To configure rich network topologies, you can create and configure networks and subnets and instruct other OpenStack services like Compute to attach virtual devices to ports on these networks.

In particular, Networking supports each project having multiple private networks and enables projects to choose their own IP addressing scheme, even if those IP addresses overlap with those that other projects use.

The Networking service:

  • Enables advanced cloud networking use cases, such as building multi-tiered web applications and enabling migration of applications to the cloud without changing IP addresses.
  • Offers flexibility for administrators to customize network offerings.
  • Enables developers to extend the Networking API. Over time, the extended functionality becomes part of the core Networking API.

Configure SSL support for networking API

OpenStack Networking supports SSL for the Networking API server. By default, SSL is disabled but you can enable it in the neutron.conf file.

Set these options to configure SSL:

use_ssl = True

Enables SSL on the networking API server.

ssl_cert_file = PATH_TO_CERTFILE

Certificate file that is used when you securely start the Networking API server.

ssl_key_file = PATH_TO_KEYFILE

Private key file that is used when you securely start the Networking API server.

ssl_ca_file = PATH_TO_CAFILE

Optional. CA certificate file that is used when you securely start the Networking API server. This file verifies connecting clients. Set this option when API clients must authenticate to the API server by using SSL certificates that are signed by a trusted CA.

tcp_keepidle = 600

The value of TCP_KEEPIDLE, in seconds, for each server socket when starting the API server. Not supported on OS X.

retry_until_window = 30

Number of seconds to keep retrying to listen.

backlog = 4096

Number of backlog requests with which to configure the socket.

Load-Balancer-as-a-Service (LBaaS) overview

Load-Balancer-as-a-Service (LBaaS) enables Networking to distribute incoming requests evenly among designated instances. This distribution ensures that the workload is shared predictably among instances and enables more effective use of system resources. Use one of these load balancing methods to distribute incoming requests:

Round robin

Rotates requests evenly between multiple instances.

Source IP

Requests from a unique source IP address are consistently directed to the same instance.

Least connections

Allocates requests to the instance with the least number of active connections.

Feature Description
Monitors LBaaS provides availability monitoring with the ping, TCP, HTTP and HTTPS GET methods. Monitors are implemented to determine whether pool members are available to handle requests.
Management LBaaS is managed using a variety of tool sets. The REST API is available for programmatic administration and scripting. Users perform administrative management of load balancers through either the CLI (neutron) or the OpenStack Dashboard.
Connection limits Ingress traffic can be shaped with connection limits. This feature allows workload control, and can also assist with mitigating DoS (Denial of Service) attacks.
Session persistence LBaaS supports session persistence by ensuring incoming requests are routed to the same instance within a pool of multiple instances. LBaaS supports routing decisions based on cookies and source IP address.

Firewall-as-a-Service (FWaaS) overview

For information on Firewall-as-a-Service (FWaaS), please consult the Networking Guide <../fwaas>.

Allowed-address-pairs

Allowed-address-pairs enables you to specify mac_address and ip_address(cidr) pairs that pass through a port regardless of subnet. This enables the use of protocols such as VRRP, which floats an IP address between two instances to enable fast data plane failover.

Note

Currently, only the ML2, Open vSwitch, and VMware NSX plug-ins support the allowed-address-pairs extension.

Basic allowed-address-pairs operations.

  • Create a port with a specified allowed address pair:

    $ openstack port create port1 --allowed-address \
    ip-address=<IP_CIDR>[,mac_address=<MAC_ADDRESS]
  • Update a port by adding allowed address pairs:

    $ openstack port set PORT_UUID --allowed-address \
    ip-address=<IP_CIDR>[,mac_address=<MAC_ADDRESS]

Virtual-Private-Network-as-a-Service (VPNaaS)

The VPNaaS extension enables OpenStack projects to extend private networks across the internet.

VPNaas is a service. It is a parent object that associates a VPN with a specific subnet and router. Only one VPN service object can be created for each router and each subnet. However, each VPN service object can have any number of IP security connections.

The Internet Key Exchange (IKE) policy specifies the authentication and encryption algorithms to use during phase one and two negotiation of a VPN connection. The IP security policy specifies the authentication and encryption algorithm and encapsulation mode to use for the established VPN connection. Note that you cannot update the IKE and IPSec parameters for live tunnels.

You can set parameters for site-to-site IPsec connections, including peer CIDRs, MTU, authentication mode, peer address, DPD settings, and status.

The current implementation of the VPNaaS extension provides:

  • Site-to-site VPN that connects two private networks.
  • Multiple VPN connections per project.
  • IKEv1 policy support with 3des, aes-128, aes-256, or aes-192 encryption.
  • IPSec policy support with 3des, aes-128, aes-192, or aes-256 encryption, sha1 authentication, ESP, AH, or AH-ESP transform protocol, and tunnel or transport mode encapsulation.
  • Dead Peer Detection (DPD) with hold, clear, restart, disabled, or restart-by-peer actions.

The VPNaaS driver plugin can be configured in the neutron configuration file. You can then enable the service.