This patch removes the old install guide. It is still accessible in the Mitaka section. Change-Id: I47ce62523edd14a1bb20deba3f40e1e0b2df223c Implements: blueprint osa-install-guide-overhaul
2.8 KiB
Deployment host
When installing OpenStack in a production environment, we recommend using a separate deployment host which contains Ansible and orchestrates the OpenStack-Ansible installation on the target hosts. In a test environment, we prescribe using one of the infrastructure target hosts as the deployment host.
To use a target host as a deployment host, follow the steps in Chapter 3, Target hosts on the deployment host.
Installing the operating system
Install the Ubuntu Server 14.04 (Trusty Tahr) LTS 64-bit operating system on the deployment host. Configure at least one network interface to access the internet or suitable local repositories.
Configuring the operating system
Install additional software packages and configure NTP.
Install additional software packages if not already installed during operating system installation:
# apt-get install aptitude build-essential git ntp ntpdate \ openssh-server python-dev sudo
Configure NTP to synchronize with a suitable time source.
Configuring the network
Ansible deployments fail if the deployment server is unable to SSH to the containers. Configure the deployment host to be on the same network designated for container management. This configuration reduces the rate of failure due to connectivity issues.
The following network information is used as an example:
Container management: 172.29.236.0/22 (VLAN 10)
Select an IP from this range to assign to the deployment host.
Installing source and dependencies
Install the source and dependencies for the deployment host.
Clone the OSA repository into the
/opt/openstack-ansible
directory:# git clone -b TAG https://github.com/openstack/openstack-ansible.git /opt/openstack-ansible
Replace
TAG
with the current stable release tag :Change to the
/opt/openstack-ansible
directory, and run the Ansible bootstrap script:# scripts/bootstrap-ansible.sh
Configuring Secure Shell (SSH) keys
Ansible uses Secure Shell (SSH) with public key authentication for
connectivity between the deployment and target hosts. To reduce user
interaction during Ansible operations, do not include pass phrases with
key pairs. However, if a pass phrase is required, consider using the
ssh-agent
and ssh-add
commands to temporarily
store the pass phrase before performing Ansible operations.