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path: root/firstboot/os-net-config-mappings.yaml
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2017-05-19Update the template_version alias for all the templates to pike.Carlos Camacho1-1/+1
Master is now the development branch for pike changing the release alias name. Change-Id: I938e4a983e361aefcaa0bd9a4226c296c5823127
2017-02-23Merge "Add support for node groups in NetConfigDataLookup"Jenkins1-5/+46
2016-12-23Bump template version for all templates to "ocata"Steven Hardy1-1/+1
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
2016-12-05Add support for node groups in NetConfigDataLookupHarald Jensas1-5/+46
By using DMI String as identifier, such as 'system-product-name' or 'system-version' add support for node groups. This allow the use of a single entry in 'NetConfigDataLookup' to match a group of systems of the same model, vendor etc. Try to match on ethernet mac address first, then if no match is found 'dmiString' and 'id' is used, if the keys are set. Example: NetConfigDataLookup: node1: nic1: "00:c8:7c:e6:f0:2e" node2: nic1: "00:18:7d:99:0c:b6" node3: dmiString: 'system-version' id: 'ThinkPad T460p' nic1: enp0s31f6 # Dell PowerEdge R630 - nodegroup nodegroup1: dmiString: "system-product-name" id: "PowerEdge R630" nic1: em3 nic2: em1 nic3: em2 # Cisco UCS B200-M4 - nodegroup nodegroup2: dmiString: "system-product-name" id: "UCSB-B200-M4" nic1: enp7s0 nic2: enp6s0 Change-Id: Ie2547cd8805c57ed9afe7362eada802580ffc215
2016-11-17No longer hard coding to a specifc network interface name.Harald Jensas1-2/+2
Instead of using a specific network interface name, thi fix fetch all ethernet mac addresses. Then uses this list of mac addresses to do a check if any entries in the list match any of the values in NetConfigDataLookup for a node. If there is a match, the /etc/os-net-config/mapping.yaml file for the node will be written. This fix removes the hard coded interface name 'eth0' used to get a mac address as identifyer for the specific node before. Using a hard coded interface name such as 'eth0' would have failed on most hardware because of "consistent network device names". Fix Bug: #1642551 Change-Id: I6c1d1b4d70b916bc5d9049469df8221f8ab2eb95
2016-07-01Add example of creating per-node os-net-config mappingsSteven Hardy1-0/+65
Adds an example of proving a mapping file for all nodes, then extracting the data for each node based on a lookup of the mac address. Some assumptions are made (e.g the hard-coded reference to eth0), but it should be easily modified to suit specific environments. Usage via an enviroment file will look like: resource_registry: OS::TripleO::NodeUserData: os-net-config-mappings.yaml parameter_defaults: NetConfigDataLookup: host1: nic1: "00:c8:7c:e6:f0:2e" host2: nic1: "00:18:7d:99:0c:b6" Note this version requires liberty heat in the undercloud due to the use of a new str_replace feature to serialize the json parameter. Change-Id: I7da9c9d8805e676a383e888a7d77f05d3432ab12