--- # Copyright 2014, Rackspace US, Inc. # # Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); # you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. # You may obtain a copy of the License at # # http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 # # Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software # distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, # WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. # See the License for the specific language governing permissions and # limitations under the License. ### ### This file contains commonly used overrides for convenience. Please inspect ### the defaults for each role to find additional override options. ### ## Debug and Verbose options. debug: false ## Common Glance Overrides # Set glance_default_store to "swift" if using Cloud Files backend # or "rbd" if using ceph backend; the latter will trigger ceph to get # installed on glance. If using a file store, a shared file store is # recommended. See the OpenStack-Ansible install guide and the OpenStack # documentation for more details. # Note that "swift" is automatically set as the default back-end if there # are any swift hosts in the environment. Use this setting to override # this automation if you wish for a different default back-end. # glance_default_store: file ## Ceph pool name for Glance to use # glance_rbd_store_pool: images # glance_rbd_store_chunk_size: 8 ## Common Nova Overrides # When nova_libvirt_images_rbd_pool is defined, ceph will be installed on nova # hosts. # nova_libvirt_images_rbd_pool: vms # If you wish to change the dhcp_domain configured for both nova and neutron # dhcp_domain: openstacklocal ## Common Glance Overrides when using a Swift back-end # By default when 'glance_default_store' is set to 'swift' the playbooks will # expect to use the Swift back-end that is configured in the same inventory. # If the Swift back-end is not in the same inventory (ie it is already setup # through some other means) then these settings should be used. # # NOTE: Ensure that the auth version matches your authentication endpoint. # # NOTE: If the password for glance_swift_store_key contains a dollar sign ($), # it must be escaped with an additional dollar sign ($$), not a backslash. For # example, a password of "super$ecure" would need to be entered as # "super$$ecure" below. See Launchpad Bug #1259729 for more details. # # glance_swift_store_auth_version: 3 # glance_swift_store_auth_address: "https://some.auth.url.com" # glance_swift_store_user: "OPENSTACK_TENANT_ID:OPENSTACK_USER_NAME" # glance_swift_store_key: "OPENSTACK_USER_PASSWORD" # glance_swift_store_container: "NAME_OF_SWIFT_CONTAINER" # glance_swift_store_region: "NAME_OF_REGION" ## Common Ceph Overrides # ceph_mons: # - 10.16.5.40 # - 10.16.5.41 # - 10.16.5.42 ## Custom Ceph Configuration File (ceph.conf) # By default, your deployment host will connect to one of the mons defined above to # obtain a copy of your cluster's ceph.conf. If you prefer, uncomment ceph_conf_file # and customise to avoid ceph.conf being copied from a mon. #ceph_conf_file: | # [global] # fsid = 00000000-1111-2222-3333-444444444444 # mon_initial_members = mon1.example.local,mon2.example.local,mon3.example.local # mon_host = 10.16.5.40,10.16.5.41,10.16.5.42 # # optionally, you can use this construct to avoid defining this list twice: # # mon_host = {{ ceph_mons|join(',') }} # auth_cluster_required = cephx # auth_service_required = cephx # By default, openstack-ansible configures all OpenStack services to talk to # RabbitMQ over encrypted connections on port 5671. To opt-out of this default, # set the rabbitmq_use_ssl variable to 'false'. The default setting of 'true' # is highly recommended for securing the contents of RabbitMQ messages. # rabbitmq_use_ssl: false # RabbitMQ management plugin is enabled by default, the guest user has been # removed for security reasons and a new userid 'monitoring' has been created # with the 'monitoring' user tag. In order to modify the userid, uncomment the # following and change 'monitoring' to your userid of choice. # rabbitmq_monitoring_userid: monitoring ## Additional pinning generator that will allow for more packages to be pinned as you see fit. ## All pins allow for package and versions to be defined. Be careful using this as versions ## are always subject to change and updates regarding security will become your problem from this ## point on. Pinning can be done based on a package version, release, or origin. Use "*" in the ## package name to indicate that you want to pin all package to a particular constraint. # apt_pinned_packages: # - { package: "lxc", version: "1.0.7-0ubuntu0.1" } # - { package: "libvirt-bin", version: "1.2.2-0ubuntu13.1.9" } # - { package: "rabbitmq-server", origin: "www.rabbitmq.com" } # - { package: "*", release: "MariaDB" } ## Environment variable settings # This allows users to specify the additional environment variables to be set # which is useful in setting where you working behind a proxy. If working behind # a proxy It's important to always specify the scheme as "http://". This is what # the underlying python libraries will handle best. This proxy information will be # placed both on the hosts and inside the containers. ## Example environment variable setup: # proxy_env_url: http://username:pa$$w0rd@10.10.10.9:9000/ # no_proxy_env: "localhost,127.0.0.1,{{ internal_lb_vip_address }},{{ external_lb_vip_address }},{% for host in groups['all_containers'] %}{{ hostvars[host]['container_address'] }}{% if not loop.last %},{% endif %}{% endfor %}" # global_environment_variables: # HTTP_PROXY: "{{ proxy_env_url }}" # HTTPS_PROXY: "{{ proxy_env_url }}" # NO_PROXY: "{{ no_proxy_env }}" # http_proxy: "{{ proxy_env_url }}" # https_proxy: "{{ proxy_env_url }}" # no_proxy: "{{ no_proxy_env }}" ## SSH connection wait time # If an increased delay for the ssh connection check is desired, # uncomment this variable and set it appropriately. #ssh_delay: 5 ## HAProxy # Uncomment this to disable keepalived installation (cf. documentation) # haproxy_use_keepalived: False # # HAProxy Keepalived configuration (cf. documentation) # Make sure that this is set correctly according to the CIDR used for your # internal and external addresses. # haproxy_keepalived_external_vip_cidr: "{{external_lb_vip_address}}/32" # haproxy_keepalived_internal_vip_cidr: "{{internal_lb_vip_address}}/32" # haproxy_keepalived_external_interface: # haproxy_keepalived_internal_interface: # Defines the default VRRP id used for keepalived with haproxy. # Overwrite it to your value to make sure you don't overlap # with existing VRRPs id on your network. Default is 10 for the external and 11 for the # internal VRRPs # haproxy_keepalived_external_virtual_router_id: # haproxy_keepalived_internal_virtual_router_id: # Defines the VRRP master/backup priority. Defaults respectively to 100 and 20 # haproxy_keepalived_priority_master: # haproxy_keepalived_priority_backup: # Keepalived default IP address used to check its alive status (IPv4 only) # keepalived_ping_address: "193.0.14.129" # All the previous variables are used in a var file, fed to the keepalived role. # To use another file to feed the role, override the following var: # haproxy_keepalived_vars_file: 'vars/configs/keepalived_haproxy.yml' ## Host security hardening # The openstack-ansible-security role provides security hardening for hosts # by applying security configurations from the STIG. Hardening is disabled by # default, but an option to opt-in is available by setting the following # variable to 'true'. # Docs: http://docs.openstack.org/developer/openstack-ansible-security/ # apply_security_hardening: true