* Update supported ubuntu version to 24.04. * Replace pip with pipx since the recent pip doesn't allow system-wide installation of packages for PEP668. * Drop centos-stream8 support. Change-Id: I57334595f7dd005ff51dd3cd3c605b4b30ce7efa
Devstack Installer for Tacker
What is this
Deployment tool for devstack for testing multi-VM OpenStack environment, consists of vagrant and ansible.
It only supports Ubuntu on VirtualBox currently.
How to use
Requirements
You need to install required software before running this tool. Please follow instructions on official sites for installation.
Please also notice the version of vagrant supporting experimental feature
Vagrant Disks for
expanding the size of volume if you use Ubuntu box image.
For other boxes than Ubuntu, plugin vagrant-disksize is required instead as
below. It is because the default size is not enough for deploying OpenStack
environment.
$ vagrant plugin install vagrant-disksize
Configure and Fire Up VMs
Before launching VMs with vagrant, configure machines.yml, which defines
parameters of each VM you deploy. It should be placed at project root, or failed
to run vagrant up. You can use template files in samples directory.
$ cp samples/machines.yml .
$ YOUR_FAVORITE_EDITOR machines.yml
You should take care about private_ips which is used in hosts for
ansible-playbook as explained later.
You should confirm you have a SSH key before you run the command. This tool
expects the type of your key is not rsa but ed25519 because rsa
was deprecated as default in Ubuntu 22.04.
Update key path ssh_pub_key in machines.yml without your key is
~/.ssh/id_ed25519.pub.
Run vagrant up after configurations are done. It launches VMs and create a
user stack on them.
$ vagrant up
If vagrant up is completed successfully, you are ready to login to VMs as
stack user with your SSH public key.
Setup Devstack
This tool provides ansible playbooks for setting up devstack. You should update
entries of IP addresses in hosts as you defined private_ips in
machines.yml.
There are some parameters in group_vars/all.yml such as password on devstack
or optional configurations. You don't need to update it usually.
$ ansible-playbook -i hosts site.yaml
After finished ansible's tasks, you can login to launched VMs with hostname you
defined in machines.yml.
So, let's login to controller node and OpenStack. You will find that two
examples of local.conf are prepared in $HOME/devstack for your environment.
- local.conf.example
- local.conf.kubernetes
$ ssh stack@192.168.56.11
$ cd devstack
$ cp local.conf.kubernetes local.conf
$ ./stack.sh
See instruction how to configure local.conf described in
DevStack Quick Start.
Editor support
Although you can use any editors on the setup VM, it provides vim and
neovim with minimal configurations for LSP.
You can choose the editor by configuring parameters related vim
in group_vars/all.yml, so turn it false if you don't use the
support.