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Install and configure
This section describes how to install and configure the OpenStack Identity service, code-named keystone, on the controller node. For scalability purposes, this configuration deploys Fernet tokens and the Apache HTTP server to handle requests.
Prerequisites
Before you configure the OpenStack Identity service, you must create a database and an administration token.
- To create the database, complete the following actions:
Use the database access client to connect to the database server as the
root
user:$ mysql -u root -p
Create the
keystone
database:mysql> CREATE DATABASE keystone;
Grant proper access to the
keystone
database:mysql> GRANT ALL PRIVILEGES ON keystone.* TO 'keystone'@'localhost' \ IDENTIFIED BY 'KEYSTONE_DBPASS'; mysql> GRANT ALL PRIVILEGES ON keystone.* TO 'keystone'@'%' \ IDENTIFIED BY 'KEYSTONE_DBPASS';
Replace
KEYSTONE_DBPASS
with a suitable password.Exit the database access client.
Install and configure components
obs or rdo
Note
This guide uses the Apache HTTP server with mod_wsgi
to
serve Identity service requests on ports 5000 and 35357. By default, the
keystone service still listens on these ports. Therefore, this guide
manually disables the keystone service.
ubuntu or debian
Note
This guide uses the Apache HTTP server with mod_wsgi
to
serve Identity service requests on ports 5000 and 35357. By default, the
keystone service still listens on these ports. The package handles all
of the Apache configuration for you (including the activation of the
mod_wsgi
apache2 module and keystone configuration in
Apache).
Run the following command to install the packages:
# apt install keystone
rdo
Run the following command to install the packages:
# yum install openstack-keystone httpd mod_wsgi
obs
Run the following command to install the packages:
# zypper install openstack-keystone apache2-mod_wsgi
Edit the
/etc/keystone/keystone.conf
file and complete the following actions:In the
[database]
section, configure database access:[database] ... connection = mysql+pymysql://keystone:KEYSTONE_DBPASS@controller/keystone
Replace
KEYSTONE_DBPASS
with the password you chose for the database.In the
[token]
section, configure the Fernet token provider:[token] ... provider = fernet
Populate the Identity service database:
# su -s /bin/sh -c "keystone-manage db_sync" keystone
Initialize Fernet key repositories:
# keystone-manage fernet_setup --keystone-user keystone --keystone-group keystone # keystone-manage credential_setup --keystone-user keystone --keystone-group keystone
Bootstrap the Identity service:
# keystone-manage bootstrap --bootstrap-password ADMIN_PASS \ --bootstrap-admin-url http://controller:35357/v3/ \ --bootstrap-internal-url http://controller:35357/v3/ \ --bootstrap-public-url http://controller:5000/v3/ \ --bootstrap-region-id RegionOne
Replace
ADMIN_PASS
with a suitable password for an administrative user.
Configure the Apache HTTP server
rdo
Edit the
/etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf
file and configure theServerName
option to reference the controller node:controller ServerName
Create a link to the
/usr/share/keystone/wsgi-keystone.conf
file:# ln -s /usr/share/keystone/wsgi-keystone.conf /etc/httpd/conf.d/
ubuntu or debian
Edit the
/etc/apache2/apache2.conf
file and configure theServerName
option to reference the controller node:controller ServerName
debian
Note
The Debian package will perform the below operations for you:
# a2enmod wsgi
# a2ensite wsgi-keystone.conf
# invoke-rc.d apache2 restart
obs
Edit the
/etc/sysconfig/apache2
file and configure theAPACHE_SERVERNAME
option to reference the controller node:APACHE_SERVERNAME="controller"
Create the
/etc/apache2/conf.d/wsgi-keystone.conf
file with the following content:5000 Listen 35357 Listen <VirtualHost *:5000> =keystone group=keystone display-name=%{GROUP} WSGIDaemonProcess keystone-public processes=5 threads=1 user WSGIProcessGroup keystone-public WSGIScriptAlias / /usr/bin/keystone-wsgi-public WSGIApplicationGroup %{GLOBAL} WSGIPassAuthorization On ErrorLogFormat "%{cu}t %M" /var/log/apache2/keystone.log ErrorLog /var/log/apache2/keystone_access.log combined CustomLog <Directory /usr/bin> all granted Require</Directory> </VirtualHost> <VirtualHost *:35357> =keystone group=keystone display-name=%{GROUP} WSGIDaemonProcess keystone-admin processes=5 threads=1 user WSGIProcessGroup keystone-admin WSGIScriptAlias / /usr/bin/keystone-wsgi-admin WSGIApplicationGroup %{GLOBAL} WSGIPassAuthorization On ErrorLogFormat "%{cu}t %M" /var/log/apache2/keystone.log ErrorLog /var/log/apache2/keystone_access.log combined CustomLog <Directory /usr/bin> all granted Require</Directory> </VirtualHost>
Recursively change the ownership of the
/etc/keystone
directory:# chown -R keystone:keystone /etc/keystone
Finalize the installation
ubuntu
Restart the Apache service and remove the default SQLite database:
# service apache2 restart # rm -f /var/lib/keystone/keystone.db
rdo
Start the Apache HTTP service and configure it to start when the system boots:
# systemctl enable httpd.service # systemctl start httpd.service
obs
Start the Apache HTTP service and configure it to start when the system boots:
# systemctl enable apache2.service # systemctl start apache2.service
Configure the administrative account
$ export OS_USERNAME=admin $ export OS_PASSWORD=ADMIN_PASS $ export OS_PROJECT_NAME=admin $ export OS_USER_DOMAIN_NAME=default $ export OS_PROJECT_DOMAIN_NAME=default $ export OS_AUTH_URL=http://controller:35357/v3 $ export OS_IDENTITY_API_VERSION=3
Replace
ADMIN_PASS
with the password used in thekeystone-manage bootstrap
command from the section calledkeystone-install
.