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anvil/docs/source/topics/gettingstarted.rst
2012-08-22 18:12:26 -07:00

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Getting Started

Simple setup!

Made to be as simple as possible, but not to simple.

Prerequisites

Linux

One of the tested Linux distributions (RHEL 6.2+ until further updated)

You can get RHEL 6.2+ (64-bit is preferred) from http://rhn.redhat.com/.

Networking

Important!

Since networking can affect how your cloud runs please check out this link:

http://docs.openstack.org/trunk/openstack-compute/admin/content/configuring-networking-on-the-compute-node.html

Check out the root article and the sub-chapters there to understand more of what these settings mean.

This is typically one of the hardest aspects of *OpenStack* to configure and get right!


ANVIL will configure the network in a identical manner to version 1.0. This means that the default network manager will be the FlatDHCPManager. The following settings are relevant in configuring your network.

flat_network_bridge = ${FLAT_NETWORK_BRIDGE:-br100}
flat_interface = ${FLAT_INTERFACE:-eth0}
public_interface = ${PUBLIC_INTERFACE:-eth0}

The above settings will affect exactly which network interface is used as the source interface which will be used as a network bridge.

fixed_range = ${NOVA_FIXED_RANGE:-10.0.0.0/24}
fixed_network_size = ${NOVA_FIXED_NETWORK_SIZE:-256} 
floating_range = ${FLOATING_RANGE:-172.24.4.224/28}
test_floating_pool = ${TEST_FLOATING_POOL:-test}
test_floating_range = ${TEST_FLOATING_RANGE:-192.168.253.0/29}

The above settings will determine exactly how nova when running assigns IP addresses. By default a single network is created using fixed_range with a network size specified by fixed_network_size. Note the size here is 256 which is the number of addresses in the 10.0.0.0/24 subnet (32 - 24 bits is 8 bits or 256 addresses). The floating pool is similar to fixed addresses (TODO describe this more).

Installation

Pre-setup

Since RHEL requires a tty to perform sudo commands we need to disable this so sudo can run without a tty. This seems needed since nova and other components attempt to do sudo commands. This isnt possible in RHEL unless you disable this (since those instances wont have a tty ).

$ sudo visudo 

Then comment out line:

Default requiretty

Also disable selinux:

$ sudo vi /etc/sysconfig/selinux

Change SELINUX=enforcing to SELINUX=disabled then it seems you need to reboot.

$ sudo reboot

Also to avoid qemu errors please follow the solution @ https://bugs.launchpad.net/anvil/+bug/985786 which will ensure that the qemu user can write to your instances directory. If needed edit conf/components/nova.yaml and also adjust the instances_path option.

This can be typically solved by running the following (and then updating the instances_path option)

$ sudo mkdir -pv /home/openstack
$ sudo chmod -R a+rwx /home/openstack

Get git!

$ sudo yum install git -y

Download

Well grab the latest version of ANVIL via git:

$ git clone git://github.com/yahoo/Openstack-Anvil.git anvil

Configuration

Network configuration

We need to adjust the configuration of ANVIL to reflect our above network configuration.

Please reference:

http://docs.openstack.org/diablo/openstack-compute/admin/content/configuring-networking-on-the-compute-node.html

If you need to adjust those variables the matching config variables in conf/components/nova.yaml are:

# Network settings
# Very useful to read over:
# http://docs.openstack.org/cactus/openstack-compute/admin/content/configuring-networking-on-the-compute-node.html
fixed_range = ${NOVA_FIXED_RANGE:-10.0.0.0/24}
fixed_network_size = ${NOVA_FIXED_NETWORK_SIZE:-256}
network_manager = ${NET_MAN:-FlatDHCPManager}
public_interface = ${PUBLIC_INTERFACE:-eth0}

# DHCP Warning: If your flat interface device uses DHCP, there will be a hiccup while the network 
# is moved from the flat interface to the flat network bridge. This will happen when you launch 
# your first instance. Upon launch you will lose all connectivity to the node, and the vm launch will probably fail.
#
# If you are running on a single node and don't need to access the VMs from devices other than 
# that node, you can set the flat interface to the same value as FLAT_NETWORK_BRIDGE. This will stop the network hiccup from occurring.
flat_interface = ${FLAT_INTERFACE:-eth0}
vlan_interface = ${VLAN_INTERFACE:-$(nova:public_interface)}
flat_network_bridge = ${FLAT_NETWORK_BRIDGE:-br100}

# Test floating pool and range are used for testing. 
# They are defined here until the admin APIs can replace nova-manage
floating_range = ${FLOATING_RANGE:-172.24.4.224/28}
test_floating_pool = ${TEST_FLOATING_POOL:-test}
test_floating_range = ${TEST_FLOATING_RANGE:-192.168.253.0/29}

If you are using a FlatManager and RH/Fedora then you might want read and follow:

http://www.techotopia.com/index.php/Creating_an_RHEL_5_KVM_Networked_Bridge_Interface

Installing

Now install OpenStacks components by running the following:

sudo ./smithy -a install

You should see a set of distribution packages and/or pips being installed, python setups occurring and configuration files being written as ANVIL figures out how to install your desired components (if you desire more informational output add a -v or a -vv to that command).

Testing

Now (if you choose) you can run each OpenStack components unit tests by running the following:

sudo ./smithy -a test

You should see a set of unit tests being ran (ideally with zero failures).

Starting

Now that you have installed OpenStack you can now start your OpenStack components by running the following.

sudo ./smithy -a start

If you desire more informational output add a -v or a -vv to that command.

Check horizon

Once that occurs you should be able to go to your hosts ip with a web browser and view horizon which can be logged in with the user admin and the password you entered when prompted for Enter a password to use for horizon and keystone. If you let the system auto-generate one for you you will need to check the final output of the above install and pick up the password that was generated which should be displayed at key passwords/horizon_keystone_admin. You can also later find this authentication information in the generated passwords.yaml file.

If you see a login page and can access horizon then:

Congratulations. You did it!

Command line tools

In your ANVIL directory:

source install.rc

This should set up the environment variables you need to run OpenStack CLI tools:

nova <command> [options] [args]
nova-manage <command> [options] [args]
keystone <command> [options] [args]
glance <command> [options] [args]
....

If you desire to use eucalyptus tools (ie euca2ools) which use the EC2 apis run the following to get your EC2 certs:

./euca.sh $OS_USERNAME $OS_TENANT_NAME

It broke?

First run the following to check the status of each component.

sudo ./smithy -a status

If you do not see all green status then you should run the following and see if any of the stderr and stdout files will give you more information about what is occuring

sudo ./smithy -a status --show

This will dump out those files (truncated to not be to verbose) so that anything peculaliar can be seen. If nothing can be then go to the installation directory (typically ~/openstack) and check the traces directory of each component and check if anything looks fishy.

Stopping

Once you have started OpenStack services you can stop them by running the following:

sudo ./smithy -a stop

You should see a set of stop actions happening and stderr and stdout and pid files being removed (if you desire more informational output add a -v or a -vv to that command). This ensures the above a daemon that was started is now killed. A good way to check if it killed everything correctly is to run the following.

sudo ps -elf | grep python
sudo ps -elf | grep apache

There should be no entries like nova, glance, apache, httpd. If there are then the stop may have not occurred correctly. If this is the case run again with a -v or a -vv or check the stderr, stdout, pid files for any useful information on what is happening.

Uninstalling

Once you have stopped (if you have started it) OpenStack services you can uninstall them by running the following:

sudo ./smithy -a uninstall

You should see a set of packages, configuration and directories, being removed (if you desire more informational output add a -v or a -vv to that command). On completion the directory specified at ~/openstack be empty.

Issues

Please report issues/bugs to https://launchpad.net/anvil. Much appreciated!