puppet-cinder/examples/cinder_volume_with_pacemaker.pp
Tobias Urdin 1e1be4fb56 Convert all class usage to relative names
Change-Id: Ib509c510e3e5ed19fbb1b5f68a060cde02d82eab
2019-12-08 23:02:56 +01:00

40 lines
1.4 KiB
Puppet

# Example: managing cinder controller services with pacemaker
#
# By setting enabled to false, these services will not be started at boot. By setting
# manage_service to false, puppet will not kill these services on every run. This
# allows the Pacemaker resource manager to dynamically determine on which node each
# service should run.
#
# The puppet commands below would ideally be applied to at least three nodes.
#
# Note that cinder-api is associated with the virtual IP address as
# it is called from external services. The remaining services connect to the
# database and/or message broker independently.
#
# Example pacemaker resource configuration commands (configured once per cluster):
#
# sudo pcs resource create cinder_vip ocf:heartbeat:IPaddr2 params ip=192.0.2.3 \
# cidr_netmask=24 op monitor interval=10s
#
# sudo pcs resource create cinder_api_service lsb:openstack-cinder-api
# sudo pcs resource create cinder_scheduler_service lsb:openstack-cinder-scheduler
#
# sudo pcs constraint colocation add cinder_api_service with cinder_vip
class { 'cinder':
database_connection => 'mysql://cinder:secret_block_password@openstack-controller.example.com/cinder',
}
class { 'cinder::api':
keystone_password => 'CINDER_PW',
keystone_user => 'cinder',
enabled => false,
manage_service => false,
}
class { 'cinder::scheduler':
enabled => false,
manage_service => false,
}