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Environment
This section explains how to configure the controller node and one compute node using the example architecture.
Although most environments include Identity, Image service, Compute, at least one networking service, and the Dashboard, the Object Storage service can operate independently. If your use case only involves Object Storage, you can skip to
- Object Storage Installation Guide for 2023.2 (Bobcat)
- Object Storage Installation Guide for 2023.1 (Antelope)
- Object Storage Installation Guide for Zed
- Object Storage Installation Guide for Yoga
- Object Storage Installation Guide for Stein
after configuring the appropriate nodes for it.
You must use an account with administrative privileges to configure
each node. Either run the commands as the root
user or
configure the sudo
utility.
Note
The systemctl enable
call on openSUSE outputs a
warning message when the service uses SysV Init scripts instead of
native systemd files. This warning can be ignored.
For best performance, we recommend that your environment meets or
exceeds the hardware requirements in figure-hwreqs
.
The following minimum requirements should support a proof-of-concept
environment with core services and several CirrOS
instances:
- Controller Node: 1 processor, 4 GB memory, and 5 GB storage
- Compute Node: 1 processor, 2 GB memory, and 10 GB storage
As the number of OpenStack services and virtual machines increase, so do the hardware requirements for the best performance. If performance degrades after enabling additional services or virtual machines, consider adding hardware resources to your environment.
To minimize clutter and provide more resources for OpenStack, we recommend a minimal installation of your Linux distribution. Also, you must install a 64-bit version of your distribution on each node.
A single disk partition on each node works for most basic
installations. However, you should consider Logical Volume Manager (LVM)
for installations with optional services such as Block Storage.
For first-time installation and testing purposes, many users select
to build each host as a virtual machine (VM)
. The primary benefits of VMs
include the following:
- One physical server can support multiple nodes, each with almost any number of network interfaces.
- Ability to take periodic "snap shots" throughout the installation process and "roll back" to a working configuration in the event of a problem.
However, VMs will reduce performance of your instances, particularly if your hypervisor and/or processor lacks support for hardware acceleration of nested VMs.
Note
If you choose to install on VMs, make sure your hypervisor provides a way to disable MAC address filtering on the provider network interface.
For more information about system requirements, see the OpenStack 2023.2 (Bobcat) Administrator Guides, the OpenStack 2023.1 (Antelope) Administrator Guides, the OpenStack Zed Administrator Guides, the OpenStack Yoga Administrator Guides, or the OpenStack Stein Administrator Guides.
environment-security.rst environment-networking.rst environment-ntp.rst environment-packages.rst environment-sql-database.rst environment-messaging.rst environment-memcached.rst environment-etcd.rst