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authorTim Rozet <trozet@redhat.com>2018-08-02 23:49:00 -0400
committerTim Rozet <trozet@redhat.com>2018-08-23 18:01:16 -0400
commit4301e4cb3bd6f62caec575d30e8588b72ac626c7 (patch)
tree31f6ca88598c12d45f578a6a25b5c3b86c7d5dad /docs/release
parentdc83fb1667a1a65ad333a3aab1c2843601180b23 (diff)
Adds deployment via snapshot
New arguments are added to allow snapshot deployment: --snapshot, --snap-cache The previous tripleo-quickstart code has been removed/replaced with the snapshot option. Snapshot deployments are supported on CentOS and Fedora, and snapshot artifacts use a similar caching system as the standard deployment. Snapshots are produced daily by Apex, and include latest as well as n-1 OpenStack versions. The os-odl-nofeature scenario is used for the snapshots. Additionally multiple topology verions of Snapshots are available. The Snapshot pulled at deploy time depends on the deploy-settings and number of virtual-computes used at deploy time. Since there is only one network used with snapshot deployments (admin), there is no reason to pass in network settings for snapshot deployments. That argument is now optional. Previously we required even in Standard virtual deployments that the network settings be provided. However that is also unnecessary, as we can default to the virtual network settings. Includes minor fix to the tox.ini to allow specifying test cases to run (useful for developers writing tests). Default behavior of tox is unchanged. JIRA: APEX-548 Change-Id: I1e08c4e54eac5aae99921f61ab7f69693ed12b47 Signed-off-by: Tim Rozet <trozet@redhat.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'docs/release')
-rw-r--r--docs/release/installation/virtual.rst79
1 files changed, 73 insertions, 6 deletions
diff --git a/docs/release/installation/virtual.rst b/docs/release/installation/virtual.rst
index 5682f364..a844d43f 100644
--- a/docs/release/installation/virtual.rst
+++ b/docs/release/installation/virtual.rst
@@ -3,10 +3,23 @@ Installation High-Level Overview - Virtual Deployment
Deploying virtually is an alternative deployment method to bare metal, where
only a single bare metal Jump Host server is required to execute deployment.
-In this deployment type, the Jump Host server will host the undercloud VM along
-with any number of OPNFV overcloud control/compute nodes. This deployment type
-is useful when physical resources are constrained, or there is a desire to
-deploy a temporary sandbox environment.
+This deployment type is useful when physical resources are constrained, or
+there is a desire to deploy a temporary sandbox environment.
+
+With virtual deployments, two deployment options are offered. The first is a
+standard deployment where the Jump Host server will host the undercloud VM along
+with any number of OPNFV overcloud control/compute nodes. This follows the same
+deployment workflow as baremetal, and can take between 1 to 2 hours to complete.
+
+The second option is to use snapshot deployments. Snapshots are saved disk images
+of previously deployed OPNFV upstream. These snapshots are promoted daily and contain
+and already deployed OPNFV environment that has passed a series of tests. The
+advantage of the snapshot is that it deploys in less than 10 minutes. Another
+major advantage is that the snapshots work on both CentOS and Fedora OS. Note:
+Fedora support is only tested via PIP installation at this time and not via RPM.
+
+Standard Deployment Overview
+----------------------------
The virtual deployment operates almost the same way as the bare metal
deployment with a few differences mainly related to power management.
@@ -27,6 +40,23 @@ the power management. Finally, the default network settings file will deploy wi
modification. Customizations are welcome but not needed if a generic set of
network settings are acceptable.
+Snapshot Deployment Overview
+----------------------------
+
+Snapshot deployments use the same ``opnfv-deploy`` CLI as standard deployments.
+The snapshot deployment will use a cache in order to store snapshots that are
+downloaded from the internet at deploy time. This caching avoids re-downloading
+the same artifact between deployments. The snapshot deployment recreates the same
+network and libvirt setup as would have been provisioned by the Standard
+deployment, with the exception that there is no undercloud VM. The snapshot
+deployment will give the location of the RC file to use in order to interact
+with the Overcloud directly from the jump host.
+
+Snapshots come in different topology flavors. One is able to deploy either HA
+(3 Control, 2 Computes, no-HA (1 Control, 2 Computes), or all-in-one
+(1 Control/Compute. The snapshot deployment itself is always done with the
+os-odl-nofeature-* scenario.
+
Installation Guide - Virtual Deployment
=======================================
@@ -57,8 +87,8 @@ Install Jump Host
Follow the instructions in the `Install Bare Metal Jump Host`_ section.
-Running ``opnfv-deploy``
-------------------------
+Running ``opnfv-deploy`` for Standard Deployment
+------------------------------------------------
You are now ready to deploy OPNFV!
``opnfv-deploy`` has virtual deployment capability that includes all of
@@ -96,6 +126,43 @@ Follow the steps below to execute:
3. When the deployment is complete the IP for the undercloud and a url for the
OpenStack dashboard will be displayed
+Running ``opnfv-deploy`` for Snapshot Deployment
+------------------------------------------------
+
+Deploying snapshots requires enough disk space to cache snapshot archives, as well
+as store VM disk images per deployment. The snapshot cache directory can be
+configured at deploy time. Ensure a directory is used on a partition with enough
+space for about 20GB. Additionally, Apex will attempt to detect the default
+libvirt storage pool on the jump host. This is typically '/var/lib/libvirt/images'.
+On default CentOS installations, this path will resolve to the /root partition,
+which is only around 50GB. Therefore, ensure that the path for the default storage
+pool has enough space to hold the VM backing storage (approx 4GB per VM). Note,
+each Overcloud VM disk size is set to 40GB, however Libvirt grows these disks
+dynamically. Due to this only 4GB will show up at initial deployment, but the disk
+may grow from there up to 40GB.
+
+The new arguments to deploy snapshots include:
+
+ - `--snapshot`: Enables snapshot deployments
+ - `--snap-cache`: Indicates the directory to use for caching artifacts
+
+An example deployment command is:
+
+.. code-block::
+
+ opnfv-deploy -d ../config/deploy/os-odl-queens-noha.yaml --snapshot
+ --snap-cache /home/trozet/snap_cache --virtual-computes 0 --no-fetch
+
+In the above example, several of the Standard Deployment arguments are still
+used to deploy snapshots:
+
+ - `-d`: Deploy settings are used to determine OpenStack version of snapshots
+ to use as well as the topology
+ - `--virtual-computes` - When set to 0, it indicates to Apex to use an
+ all-in-one snapshot
+ - `--no-fetch` - Can be used to disable fetching latest snapshot artifact
+ from upstream and use the latest found in `--snap-cache`
+
Verifying the Setup - VMs
-------------------------