Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Files | Lines |
|
Change-Id: Id45ac93d482ff23c4c834e2d345a926fc408573f
|
|
|
|
A function to create noop providers (set as the default) for the named
resource. This works alongside of 'puppet apply --tags' to disable
some custom resource types that still attempt to run commands during
prefetch, etc.
Change-Id: Icabdb30369c8ca15e77d169dc441bee8cfd3631f
|
|
Currently the inter-cluster communication port listens to all ip
addresses:
tcp 0 0 0.0.0.0:25672 0.0.0.0:* LISTEN 25631/beam.smp
In order to limit it to listen only to the network assigned to rabbitmq
we need to add the following:
{kernel, [
...
{inet_dist_use_interface, {172,17,0,16}},
...
]}
In order to do the conversion from an ip address to the Erlang
representation we add a function that takes a string and returns a
converted output. The (~400 randomly generated) IPv6/4 addresses at [1]
have been parsed both via erl's built-in inet:parse_address() function
and our ruby implementation. All converted ip addresses resulted in the
same output [2], [3]. The only difference is that Erlang's parse_address()
considers network ip addresses (e.g. 10.0.0.0) invalid whereas the ruby
function does not. This should not be a problem as the use case here is
to bind a service to a specific ip address on an interface and if
anything we likely prefer the less strict behaviour, given that at least
in theory it is perfectly valid for an interface to have a network
address assigned to it.
[1] http://acksyn.org/files/tripleo/ip-addresses.txt
[2] http://acksyn.org/files/tripleo/ip-addresses-ruby.txt
[3] http://acksyn.org/files/tripleo/ip-addresses-erl.txt
Change-Id: I211c75b9bab25c545bcc7f90f34edebc92bba788
Partial-Bug: #1645898
|
|
Currently we have some hard-coded mangling in t-h-t but we
instead need to build the array based on the nodes running swift
storage, combined with the SwiftRawDisks parameter.
This will enable running SwiftStorage on nodes other than Controller
and SwiftStorage roles, and is required for custom-roles due to
the hard-coded stuff in the role templates and overcloud.yaml
Change-Id: I11deed1df712ecccf85d36a75b3bd2e9d226af36
Partially-Implements: blueprint custom-roles
|
|
The lookup_hiera_hash function is meant to lookup for the value
of a given key from a given Hiera hash. In the manifests this is
possible by saving the value of the hash in a variable first but
when driving lookups from the Heat templates we can't do it.
Change-Id: Ie31bb70314db44a0a18e86090cc74aa4df5de169
|
|
TL;DR:
If keystone_public_api_vip and/or public_virtual_ip is an array of IPs,
HAproxy will be configured to listen on all IPs that are given in the
arrays.
It allows to specify an array for keystone_public_api_vip and/or
public_virtual_ip where one IP is v4 and another one is v6.
HAproxy will configured to listen on both and redirect the traffic to
the IPv6 network (Dual-Stack).
Implementation & background:
HAproxy requires binding options as an hash where each IP contains an
array of binding options.
TripleO does not support Puppet Parser [1] (yet) so we can't manipulate
data iterations inside the manifests.
This patch creates a custom function, called list_to_hash.
Example:
keystone_vips = ['192.168.0.1:5000', '192.168.0.2:5000']
$keystone_bind_opts = ['transparent']
Using this function:
$keystone_vips_hash = list_to_hash($keystone_vips,
$keystone_bind_opts)
Would return:
$keystone_vips_hash = {
'192.168.0.1:5000' => ['transparent'],
'192.168.0.2:5000' => ['transparent'],
}
This function will help us in loadbalancer.pp to construct binding
options in dynamic way.
It's backward compatible, so you don't have to give an array.
But if you do, multiple binding will be configured in HAproxy and you'll
also be able to deploy IPv6 Dual-Stack.
[1] https://docs.puppetlabs.com/puppet/latest/reference/lang_iteration.html
Change-Id: I003b6d7d171652654745861d4231882f9e0d373e
|
|
Proper interface matching when an IPv6 address is provided.
If Facter version used is < 3 then it adds the netmask6 facts as custom facts.
Fix bugs https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1280523
Change-Id: Ide26ca1740dc12ea5f47a28f4cecacd6ef0b18f9
|
|
It is already merged on the puppetlabs-stdlib module:
https://github.com/puppetlabs/puppetlabs-stdlib/commit/88a9a314c3e9cccbea5add95081655f2c14ec4c1
And we don't need to carry with this validation anymore.
Change-Id: I2cee12e7601c546e616e2c249157e7739af29490
|
|
Provide TripleO overcloud manifests to deploy MidoNet and the cluster
services that needs to run.
Change-Id: I24f852e74fc4652d4609e1a71897e813448055fe
|
|
This patch converts the write_package_names function into
a proper resource. Using the write_package_names only works
if the function comes last in the puppet manifest. By
making the same functionality a custom resource we allow
for it to exist anywhere in the manifest and provide the
same functionality.
The new syntax would be:
package_manifest{'/tmp/foo': ensure => present}
Co-Authored-By: Martin Mágr <mmagr@redhat.com>
Change-Id: If3e03b1983fed47082fac8ce63f975557dbc503c
|
|
This function writes out package names that have been
defined in a given puppet catalog.
In order to work this should be place last (or very late)
in a manifest to ensure it picks up packages.
Change-Id: Ie21b5bf7df71337da02ea43915dc4e70d3052bb7
|
|
Adds a class to configure fence devices and a helper function which
helps to select the devices for configuration on appropriate nodes.
Depends on patches outside OpenStack's Gerrit:
https://github.com/redhat-openstack/puppet-pacemaker/pull/50
https://github.com/redhat-openstack/puppet-pacemaker/pull/52
Change-Id: I819fc8c126ec47cd207c59b3dcf92ff699649c5a
|
|
This patch adds a custom Puppet function called interface_for_ip
This function will be used within the TripleO puppet implementation
to help obtain the correct interface for a given IP address.
Change-Id: I0979f69a49052fda888277fa64ebeadc038bc778
|