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This patch removes more of the DockerNamespace references as part
of the cleanup/reorg of the container configuration patches.
This also adds a centos-rdo environment file for use with
the new interface. This file was generated with the command
"openstack overcloud container image prepare"
Depends-On: I729fa00175cb36b02b882d729aae5ff06d0e3fbc
Depends-On: I292162d66880278de09f7acbdbf02e2312c5bb2b
Co-Authored-By: Dan Prince <dprince@redhat.com>
Change-Id: Ice7b57c25248634240a6dd6e14e6d411e7806326
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This commit consistently defines a heat template parameter in the form
of DockerXXXConfigImage where XXX represents the name of the
config_volume that is used by docker-puppet.
The goal is to mitigate hard to debug errors where the templates would
set different defaults for the image docker-puppet.py uses to run, for
the same config_volume name.
This fixes a couple of inconsistencies on the way.
Change-Id: I212020a76622a03521385a6cae4ce73e51ce5b6b
Closes-Bug: #1699791
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Master is now the development branch for pike
changing the release alias name.
Change-Id: I938e4a983e361aefcaa0bd9a4226c296c5823127
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This patch implements a new docker deployment architecture that
should us to install docker services in a stepwise manner alongside
of baremetal puppet services. This works by using Yaql to select
docker specific services (docker/services/*.yaml) vs the puppet
specific ones and then applying the selected Json to relevant Heat
software deployments for docker and baremetal puppet in a stepwise
fashion.
Additionally the new architecture
leverages new composable services interfaces from Newton to
allow configuration of per-service container configuration
sets (directories that are bind mounted into kolla containers) by
using the Kolla containers themselves. It does this by spinning up
a throw away "configuration only" version of the container being
configured itself, then running the puppet apply in that container and
copying the generated config files into /var/lib/config-data. This
avoids having to install all of the OpenStack dependency packages
in the heat-agent-container itself (our previous approach) and should
allow us to configure a much wider variety of container config files
that would otherwise be impossible with the previous shared approach.
The new approach (combined) should allow us to configure containers in
both the undercloud and overcloud and incrementally add CI coverage to
services as we containerize them.
Co-Authored-By: Martin André <m.andre@redhat.com>
Co-Authored-By: Ian Main <imain@redhat.com>
Co-Authored-By: Flavio Percoco <flavio@redhat.com>
Change-Id: Ibcff99f03e6751fbf3197adefd5d344178b71fc2
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