From 283bb98ae05b77979f00716d3c9cd3fff6af3651 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Tim Rozet Date: Wed, 25 Apr 2018 13:45:31 -0400 Subject: Updates documentation for Fraser release Change-Id: I19bfaa5b2778baf458df60a4a53d135e57859e04 Signed-off-by: Tim Rozet (cherry picked from commit 22bc385f5b2e25694699a614268aaad2fdacbb12) --- docs/release/installation/upstream.rst | 107 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 107 insertions(+) create mode 100644 docs/release/installation/upstream.rst (limited to 'docs/release/installation/upstream.rst') diff --git a/docs/release/installation/upstream.rst b/docs/release/installation/upstream.rst new file mode 100644 index 00000000..b98b0c19 --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/release/installation/upstream.rst @@ -0,0 +1,107 @@ +Deploying Directly from Upstream - (Beta) +========================================= + +In addition to deploying with OPNFV tested artifacts included in the +opnfv-apex-undercloud and opnfv-apex RPMs, it is now possible to deploy +directly from upstream artifacts. Essentially this deployment pulls the latest +RDO overcloud and undercloud artifacts at deploy time. This option is useful +for being able to deploy newer versions of OpenStack that are not included +with this release, and offers some significant advantages for some users. +Please note this feature is currently in beta for the Fraser release and will +be fully supported in the next OPNFV release. + +Upstream Deployment Key Features +-------------------------------- + +In addition to being able to install newer versions of OpenStack, the upstream +deployment option allows the use of a newer version of TripleO, which provides +overcloud container support. Therefore when deploying from upstream with an +OpenStack version newer than Pike, every OpenStack service (also OpenDaylight) +will be running as a docker container. Furthermore, deploying upstream gives +the user the flexibility of including any upstream OpenStack patches he/she +may need by simply adding them into the deploy settings file. The patches will +be applied live during deployment. + +Installation Guide - Upstream Deployment +======================================== + +This section goes step-by-step on how to correctly install and provision the +OPNFV target system using a direct upstream deployment. + +Special Requirements for Upstream Deployments +--------------------------------------------- + +With upstream deployments it is required to have internet access. In addition, +the upstream artifacts will be cached under the root partition of the jump +host. It is required to at least have 10GB free space in the root partition +in order to download and prepare the cached artifacts. + +Scenarios and Deploy Settings for Upstream Deployments +------------------------------------------------------ + +Some deploy settings files are already provided which have been tested by the +Apex team. These include (under /etc/opnfv-apex/): + + - os-nosdn-queens_upstream-noha.yaml + - os-nosdn-master_upstream-noha.yaml + - os-odl-queens_upstream-noha.yaml + - os-odl-master_upstream-noha.yaml + +Each of these scenarios has been tested by Apex over the Fraser release, but +none are guaranteed to work as upstream is a moving target and this feature is +relatively new. Still it is the goal of the Apex team to provide support +and move to an upstream based deployments in the future, so please file a bug +when encountering any issues. + +Including Upstream Patches with Deployment +------------------------------------------------------ + +With upstream deployments it is possible to include any pending patch in +OpenStack gerrit with the deployment. These patches are applicable to either +the undercloud or the overcloud. This feature is useful in the case where +a developer or user desires to pull in an unmerged patch for testing with a +deployment. In order to use this feature, include the following in the deploy +settings file, under "global_params" section: + +.. code-block:: yaml + + patches: + undercloud: + - change-id: + project: openstack/ + branch: + overcloud: + - change-id: + project: openstack/ + branch: + +You may include as many patches as needed. If the patch is already merged or +abandoned, then it will not be included in the deployment. + +Running ``opnfv-deploy`` +------------------------ + +Deploying is similar to the typical method used for baremetal and virtual +deployments with the addition of a few new arguments to the ``opnfv-deploy`` +command. In order to use an upstream deployment, please use the ``--upstream`` +argument. Also, the artifacts for each upstream deployment are only +downloaded when a newer version is detected upstream. In order to explicitly +disable downloading new artifacts from upstream if previous artifacts are +already cached, please use the ``--no-fetch`` argument. + +Interacting with Containerized Overcloud +---------------------------------------- + +Upstream deployments will use a containerized overcloud. These containers are +Docker images built by the Kolla project. The Containers themselves are run +and controlled through Docker as root user. In order to access logs for each +service, examine the '/var/log/containers' directory or use the `docker logs +`. To see a list of services running on the node, use the +``docker ps`` command. Each container uses host networking, which means that +the networking of the overcloud node will act the same exact way as a +traditional deployment. In order to attach to a container, use this command: +``docker exec -it bin/bash``. This will login to the +container with a bash shell. Note the containers do not use systemd, unlike +the traditional deployment model and are instead started as the first process +in the container. To restart a service, use the ``docker restart `` +command. -- cgit 1.2.3-korg