Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Files | Lines |
|
This was forgotten in I72376a803ec6b2ed93903cc0c95a6ffce718b6dc and
broke containerized deployment.
Change-Id: I599a87bf06efbfefd3067c77ed6ca866505900f9
Closes-Bug: #1690870
|
|
When a service is enabled on multiple roles, the parameters for the
service will be global. This change enables an option to provide
role specific parameter to services and other templates.
Two new parameters - RoleName and RoleParameters, are added to the
service template. RoleName provides the role name of on which the
current instance of the service is being applied on. RoleParameters
provides the list of parameters which are configured specific to the
role in the environment file, like below:
parameters_default:
# Default value for applied to all roles
NovaReservedHostMemory: 2048
ComputeDpdkParameters:
# Applied only to ComputeDpdk role
NovaReservedHostMemory: 4096
In above sample, the cluster contains 2 roles - Compute, ComputeDpdk.
The values of ComputeDpdkParameters will be passed on to the templates
as RoleParameters while creating the stack for ComputeDpdk role. The
parameter which supports role specific configuration, should find the
parameter first in in the RoleParameters list, if not found, then the
default (for all roles) should be used.
Implements: blueprint tripleo-derive-parameters
Change-Id: I72376a803ec6b2ed93903cc0c95a6ffce718b6dc
|
|
This output gets nova metadata into the servers this is deployed to and
is necessary for the TLS-everywhere work.
bp tls-via-certmonger-containers
Change-Id: Iff54f7af9c63a529f88c6455047f6584d29154b4
|
|
This implements a host_prep_tasks hook where we can specify Ansible
tasks to perform on the host before deploying containerized
services. The hook runs in a single step, the assumption is that we will
mostly use the hook for creating per-service directories on the host to
ensure we are able to mount them into the containers. (We cannot do this
operation via Puppet because all containerized services run their Puppet
within a config container, so Puppet doesn't have access to host's
filesystem.)
Change-Id: I7d8bac39e0cd422fd651eefe29f7d10941ab4a1a
|
|
We don't use docker_image for anything. It is a remant of the
pre-composable docker templates and we can now remove it.
This patch removes references to the 'docker_image' section
from docker/post.yaml and all of the docker/services* templates.
Change-Id: I208c1ef1550ab39ab0ee47ab282f9b1937379810
|
|
This aligns the docker based services with the new composable upgrades
architecture we landed for ocata, and does a first-pass adding upgrade_tasks
for the services (these may change, atm we only disable the service on
the host).
To run the upgrade workflow you basically do two steps:
openstack overcloud deploy --templates \
-e environments/major-upgrade-composable-steps-docker.yaml
This will run the ansible upgrade steps we define via upgrade_tasks
then run the normal docker PostDeploySteps to bring up the containers.
For the puppet workflow there's then an operator driven step where
compute nodes (and potentially storage nodes) are upgrades in batches
and finally you do:
openstack overcloud deploy --templates \
-e environments/major-upgrade-converge-docker.yaml
In the puppet case this re-applies puppet to unpin the nova RPC API
so I guess it'll restart the nova containers this affects but otherwise
will be a no-op (we also disable the ansible steps at this point.
Depends-On: I9057d47eea15c8ba92ca34717b6b5965d4425ab1
Change-Id: Ia50169819cb959025866348b11337728f8ed5c9e
|
|
This approach removes the need for the yaql zip to build the
docker-puppet data by building the data in a puppet_config dict.
This allows a future change to make docker-puppet.py only accept dict
data.
Currently the step_config is left where it is and referenced inside
puppet_config, but feedback is welcome whether this is necessary or
desirable.
Change-Id: I4a4d7a6fd2735cb841174af305dbb62e0b3d3e8c
|
|
This patch adds a new (optional) section to the docker post.j2.yaml
that collects any 'docker_puppet_tasks' data from enabled
services and applies it on the primary role node (the
first node in the primary (first) role).
The use case for this is although we are generally only using
puppet for configuration there are several exceptions that we
desire to make use of today for parity with baremetal. This
includes things like database creation and keystone endpoint
initialization which we rely on configuration via hiera variables
controlled by the puppet services.
Change-Id: Ic14ef48f26de761b0d0eabd0e1c0eae52d90e68a
|
|
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
|
|
This patch rewires how we configure the Kolla external config files
via Heat templates and uses a more simple json-file heat hook to
directly write out Kolla config files to disk.
By using a heat hook instead of a shell script we can avoid
Json conversion issues. Additionally, This generic json file hook will
be useful for other ad-hoc Json file configuration within the TripleO
docker architecture.
Co-Authored-By: Martin André <m.andre@redhat.com>
Change-Id: I8c72a4a9a7022f722bfe1cef3e18517605720cce
Depends-On: I2b372ac2e291339e436202c9fe58a681ed6a743f
Depends-On: Id3f779b11e23fd3122ef29b7ccbae116667d4520
|
|
Heat now supports release name aliases, so we can replace
the inconsistent mix of date related versions with one consistent
version that aligns with the supported version of heat for this
t-h-t branch.
This should also help new users who sometimes copy/paste old templates
and discover intrinsic functions in the t-h-t docs don't work because
their template version is too old.
Change-Id: Ib415e7290fea27447460baa280291492df197e54
|
|
This change modifies the template interface to support containers and
converts the compute services to composable roles.
Co-Authored-By: Dan Prince <dprince@redhat.com>
Co-Authored-By: Flavio Percoco <flavio@redhat.com>
Co-Authored-By: Martin André <m.andre@redhat.com>
Co-Authored-By: Steve Baker <sbaker@redhat.com>
Change-Id: I82fa58e19de94ec78ca242154bc6ecc592112d1b
|