The new sphinx version introduces some changes that break build: * Warns if code cannot be parsed for highlighting. Fix the code so that it can be parsed, this includes uncommenting "..." lines. Note that not every config file is an ini-file. Also, the parser seems to have bugs and cannot parse all files. Fix mysql ini file and enable the parameter, see http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.7/en/innodb-parameters.html#sysvar_innodb_file_per_table * :option: works only with declared options, replace useage with simple ``. This change only handles a few files, more to come later. Change-Id: I7c7335e514581622dd562ee355f62d6ae1beaa18
3.5 KiB
Highly available Shared File Systems API
Making the Shared File Systems (manila) API service highly available in active/passive mode involves:
ha-sharedfilesystems-pacemaker
ha-sharedfilesystems-configure
ha-sharedfilesystems-services
Add Shared File Systems API resource to Pacemaker
Download the resource agent to your system:
# cd /usr/lib/ocf/resource.d/openstack # wget https://git.openstack.org/cgit/openstack/openstack-resource-agents/plain/ocf/manila-api # chmod a+rx *
Add the Pacemaker configuration for the Shared File Systems API resource. Connect to the Pacemaker cluster with the following command:
# crm configure
Note
The
crm configure
supports batch input. Copy and paste the lines in the next step into your live Pacemaker configuration and then make changes as required.For example, you may enter
edit p_ip_manila-api
from thecrm configure
menu and edit the resource to match your preferred virtual IP address.Add the following cluster resources:
primitive p_manila-api ocf:openstack:manila-api \ params config="/etc/manila/manila.conf" \ os_password="secretsecret" \ os_username="admin" \ os_tenant_name="admin" \ keystone_get_token_url="http://10.0.0.11:5000/v2.0/tokens" \ op monitor interval="30s" timeout="30s"
This configuration creates
p_manila-api
, a resource for managing the Shared File Systems API service.Commit your configuration changes by entering the following command from the
crm configure
menu:# commit
Pacemaker now starts the Shared File Systems API service and its dependent resources on one of your nodes.
Configure Shared File Systems API service
Edit the /etc/manila/manila.conf
file:
# We have to use MySQL connection to store data:
sql_connection = mysql+pymysql://manila:password@10.0.0.11/manila?charset=utf8
# We bind Shared File Systems API to the VIP:
osapi_volume_listen = 10.0.0.11
# We send notifications to High Available RabbitMQ:
notifier_strategy = rabbit
rabbit_host = 10.0.0.11
Configure OpenStack services to use HA Shared File Systems API
Your OpenStack services must now point their Shared File Systems API configuration to the highly available, virtual cluster IP address rather than a Shared File Systems API server’s physical IP address as you would for a non-HA environment.
You must create the Shared File Systems API endpoint with this IP.
If you are using both private and public IP addresses, you should create two virtual IPs and define your endpoints like this:
$ openstack endpoint create --region RegionOne \
sharev2 public 'http://PUBLIC_VIP:8786/v2/%(tenant_id)s'
$ openstack endpoint create --region RegionOne \
sharev2 internal 'http://10.0.0.11:8786/v2/%(tenant_id)s'
$ openstack endpoint create --region RegionOne \
sharev2 admin 'http://10.0.0.11:8786/v2/%(tenant_id)s'