Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Files | Lines |
|
Right now, the service-related IPs assosiated with the machine are
registered in the /etc/hosts with different hostnames. This is fine,
except if you need to register that hostname in a third party service
(such as FreeIPA), since the current configuration is not assigning a
domain to those IP addresses. So the current implementation requires
DNS to be properly working, which is not ideal for testing purposes.
Since the current hostnames are not currently being used; it's still
trivial to change this mapping and the format of them. instead of
having entries such as:
<INTERNAL IP> <node>-internalapi
<STORAGE IP> <node>-storage
...
in /etc/hosts; This changes the format to:
<INTERNAL IP> <node>.internalapi.<domain> <node>.internalapi
<STORAGE IP> <node>.storage.<domain> <node>.storage
...
So the network (external, internal, storage, etc...) is now
represented as a subdomain. For simplicity, the format without the
domain is still available through an alias.
Change-Id: I6502959a974546e5de757935acea15df6326acda
|
|
For the external loadbalancer work, we added the ability to specify
fixed ips for controller nodes on all network isolation networks.
In order to allow users full control over the placement and ip
addresses of deployed nodes, we need to be able to do the same thing
for the other node types.
Change-Id: I3ea91768b2ea3a40287f2f3cdb823c23533cf290
|
|
This change adds a new set of network templates with IPv6 subnets
that can be used instead of the existing IPv4 networks. Each network
can use either the IPv4 or IPv6 template, and the Neutron subnet will
be created with the specified IP version.
The default addresses used for the IPv6 networks use the fd00::/8
prefix for the internal isolated networks (this range is reserved
for private use similar to 10.0.0.0/8), and 2001:db8:fd00:1000::/64
is used as an example default for the External network
(2001:db8::/32 are the documentation addresses [RFC3849]), but this
would ordinarily be a globally addressable subnet. These
parameters may be overridden in an environment file.
This change will require updates to the OpenStack Puppet
Modules to support IPv6 addresses in some of the hieradata values.
Many of the OPM modules already have IPv6 support to support IPv6
deployments in Packstack, but some OPM packages that apply only to
Instack/TripleO deployments need to be updated.
IPv6 addresses used in URLs need to be surrounded by brackets in
order to differentiate IP address from port number. This change
adds a new output to the network/ports resources for
ip_address_uri, which is an IP address with brackets in the case
of IPv6, and a raw IP address without brackets for IPv4 ports.
This change also updates some URLs which are constructed in Heat.
This has been tested and problems were found with Puppet not
accepting IPv6 addresses. This is addressed in the latest Puppet.
Additional changes were required to make this work with Ceph.
IPv6 tunnel endpoints with Open vSwitch are not yet supported
(although support is coming soon), so this review leaves the
Tenant network as an isolated IPv4 network for the time being.
Change-Id: Ie7a742bdf1db533edda2998a53d28528f80ef8e2
|
|
|
|
Populates /etc/hosts with an entry for each IP address the node
is on, which will be useful to migrate services configuration from
using IPs into using hostnames.
This is how the lines look like on a host which doesn't have all ports:
172.16.2.6 overcloud-novacompute-0.localdomain overcloud-novacompute-0
192.0.2.9 overcloud-novacompute-0-external
172.16.2.6 overcloud-novacompute-0-internalapi
172.16.1.6 overcloud-novacompute-0-storage
192.0.2.9 overcloud-novacompute-0-storagemgmt
172.16.0.4 overcloud-novacompute-0-tenant
192.0.2.9 overcloud-novacompute-0-management
the network against which the default (or primary) name is resolved
can be configured (for computes) via ComputeHostnameResolveNetwork
Change-Id: Id480207c68e5d68967d67e2091cd081c17ab5dd7
|
|
Some operators desire more granular control of hostnames than is
currently possible via the *HostnameFormat parameters, in particular
mapping nodes to explicit IDs (such as inventory references) is not
easily possible.
So, add a HostnameMap parameter, which is optional and allows
explicit overriding of the default hostnames.
E.g pass an environment like this:
parameter_defaults:
HostnameMap:
overcloud-controller-0: overcloud-controller-prod-123-0
overcloud-controller-1: overcloud-controller-prod-456-0
overcloud-controller-2: overcloud-controller-prod-789-0
Note this is mapping is global (for all roles), because we
expect the keys to be unique given that they include the
role name and index by default.
Note that this depends on a fix for heat bug #1539737
Change-Id: Ib4d3d40e9523903ebccc06c3e14b2d71d924afa3
Depends-On: Ib934f443a8b8e4f75335a9d8b992e7f86791aa45
|
|
|
|
Adds a TimeZone parameter for node types and the top level
stack. Defaults to UTC.
Change-Id: I98123d894ce429c34744233fe3e631cbdd7c12b5
Depends-On: Icf7c681f359e3e48b653ea4648db6a73b532d45e
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
This change allows every overcloud node to optionally participate in
any of the isolated networks. The optional networks are not enabled
by default, but allow additional flexibility. Since the new networks
are not enabled by default, the standared deployment is unchanged.
This change was originally requested for OpenDaylight support.
There are several use cases for using non-standard networks.
For instance, one example might be adding the Internal API network
to the Ceph nodes, in order to use that network for administrative
functions. Another example would be adding the Storage Management
network to the compute nodes, in order to use it for backup. Without
this change, any deviation from the standard set of roles that use a
network is a custom change to the Heat templates, which makes
upgrades much more difficult.
Change-Id: Ia386c964aa0ef79e457821d8d96ebb8ac2847231
|
|
This change adds a system management network to all overcloud
nodes. The purpose of this network is for system administration,
for access to infrastructure services like DNS or NTP, or for
monitoring. This allows the management network to be placed on a
bond for redundancy, or for the system management network to be
an out-of-band network with no routing in or out. The management
network might also be configured as a default route instead of the
provisioning 'ctlplane' network.
This change does not enable the management network by default. An
environment file named network-management.yaml may be included to
enable the network and ports for each role. The included NIC config
templates have been updated with a block that may be uncommented
when the management network is enabled.
This change also contains some minor cleanup to the NIC templates,
particularly the multiple nic templates.
Change-Id: I0813a13f60a4f797be04b34258a2cffa9ea7e84f
|
|
|
|
This change adds a SoftwareConfigTransport parameter to role templates
so that the transport can be changed via a parameter_defaults entry.
This change will have no effect on an existing overcloud as the current
default POLL_SERVER_CFN is now explicit in the parameter default.
Change-Id: I5c2a2d2170714093c5757282cba12ac65f8738a4
|
|
The parameters have nothing to do with EC2 keypairs, they are used to
specify Nova SSH key pairs.
Change-Id: Ia8d37cb5c443812d02133747cb54fcaf0110d091
|
|
There are two reasons the name property should always be set for deployment
resources:
- The name often shows up in logs, files and API calls, the default
derived name is long and unhelpful
- Sorting by name determines the merge order of os-apply-config, and the
execution order of puppet/shell scripts (note this is different to
resource dependency order) so leaving the default name results in an
undetermined order which could lead to unpredictable deployment of
configs
This change simply sets the name to the resource name, but a future change
should prepend each name with a run-parts style 2 digit prefix so that the
order is explicitly stated. Documentation for extraconfig needs to clearly
state what prefix is needed to override which merge/execution order.
For existing overcloud stacks, heat currently replaces deployment resources
when the name changes, so this change
Depends-On: I95037191915ccd32b2efb72203b146897a4edbc9
Change-Id: Ic4bcd56aa65b981275c3d4214588bfc4de63b3b0
|
|
This adds a parameter for each role, where optional scheduler hints
may be passed to nova. One potential use-case for this is using
the ComputeCapabilities to pin deployment to a specific node (not
just a specific role/profile mapping to a pool of nodes like we
have currently documented in the ahc-match docs).
This could work as follows:
1. Tag a specific node as "node:controller-0" in Ironic:
ironic node-update <id> replace properties/capabilities='node:controller-0,boot_option:local'
2. Create a heat environment file which uses %index%
parameters:
ControllerSchedulerHints:
'capabilities:node': 'controller-%index%'
Change-Id: I79251dde719b4bb5c3b0cce90d0c9d1581ae66f2
|
|
Some Nova hooks might require custom properties/metadata set for the
servers deployed in the overcloud, and this would enable us to inject
such information.
For FreeIPA (IdM) integration, there is effectively a Nova hook that
requires such data.
Currently this inserts metadata for all servers, but a subsequent CR
will introduce per-role metadata. However, that was not added to this
because it will require the usage of map_merge. which will block those
changes to be backported. However, this one is not a problem in that
sense.
Change-Id: I98b15406525eda8dff704360d443590260430ff0
|
|
Introduce configuration of the nodes' domains through a parameter.
Change-Id: Ie012f9f2a402b0333bebecb5b59565c26a654297
|
|
This commit enables the injection of a trust anchor or root
certificate into every node in the overcloud. This is in case that the
TLS certificates for the controllers are signed with a self-signed CA
or if the deployer would like to inject a relevant root certificate
for other purposes. In this case the other nodes might need to have
the root certificate in their trust chain in order to do proper
validation
Change-Id: Ia45180fe0bb979cf12d19f039dbfd22e26fb4856
|
|
We don't necessarily want the network configuration to be reapplied
with every template update so we add a param to configure on which
action the NetworkDeployment resource should be executed.
Change-Id: I0e86318eb5521e540cc567ce9d77e1060086d48b
Co-Authored-By: Dan Sneddon <dsneddon@redhat.com>
Co-Authored-By: James Slagle <jslagle@redhat.com>
Co-Authored-By: Jiri Stransky <jstransk@redhat.com>
Co-Authored-By: Steven Hardy <shardy@redhat.com>
|
|
This commits aims to allow a user to specify several ntp servers and not
just one.
Example:
openstack overcloud deploy --templates --ntp-server
0.centos.pool.org,1.centos.pool.org
Change-Id: I4925ef1cf1e565d789981e609c88a07b6e9b28de
|
|
|
|
It's become apparent that some actions are required in the pre-deploy
phase for all nodes, for example applying common hieradata overrides,
or also as a place to hook in logic which must happen for all nodes
prior to their removal on scale down (such as unregistration from
a satellite server, which currently doesn't work via the
*NodesPostDeployment for scale-down usage).
So, add a new interface that enables ExtraConfig per-node (inside the
scaled unit, vs AllNodes which is used for the cluster-wide config
outside of the ResourceGroup)
Change-Id: Ic865908e97483753e58bc18e360ebe50557ab93c
|
|
This change updates yum_update.sh so that we set set a boolean
output when "managed" packages should get updated. The
output is named 'update_managed_packages' and for the
puppet implementation it is wired up so that it
directly sets tripleo::packages::enable_upgrade to
control whether packages are updated.
It also modifies yum_update.sh to build a yum update excludes list for
packages managed by puppet. The exclude lists are being
generated via puppet-tripleo as well via the new 'write_package_names'
function that is now wired into all the role manifests.
This change does not actually trigger the puppet apply. The fix for
Related-Bug: #1463092 will be used to trigger the puppet run when the
hiera changes. As a minor tweak to this logic we append the
UpdateIdentifier to the config_identifier so that we ensure
puppet gets executed on an update where other (non-related)
hiera changes also occur.
Co-Authored-By: Dan Prince <dprince@redhat.com>
Change-Id: I343c3959517eae38bbcd43648ed56f610272864d
|
|
This change adds a CephStorageExtraConfigPre which can be used
to distribute hooks for the CephStorage nodes.
Change-Id: Id0023d8ffddb3ee5e855d5dcc32c76bc41ce4c63
|
|
It is currently not possible to specify settings per host and not per
type of host.
One of the example of the problematic that could cause is : What if
node0 have devices /dev/sdb and /dev/sdc while node1 have devices
/dev/sda and /dev/sdd, they is currently no way to specify that simply.
The idea here is to add a top priority file in the hiera lookup that
will match the UUID of the System Information section in the output of
the dmidecode command.
The file could be provided with the firstboot/rsync stack for example.
Change-Id: I3ab082c8ebd2567bd1d914fc0b924e19b1eff7d0
|
|
Updates the /puppet directory templates so that we drop the
'-puppet' from the filenames. This is redundant because
we already have puppet in the directory name and fixes
inconsistencies where we aren't using -puppet in
all the files within the puppet directory.
Depends-On: I71cb07b2f5305aaf9c43ab175cca976e844b8175
Change-Id: I70d6e048a566666f5d6e5c2407f8a6b4fd9f6f87
|