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4 High Availability Scenarios for Network Nodes
===============================================

4.1 Network nodes and HA deployment
-----------------------------------

OpenStack network nodes contain: Neutron DHCP agent, Neutron L2 agent, Neutron L3 agent, Neutron LBaaS
agent and Neutron Metadata agent. The DHCP agent provides DHCP services for virtual networks. The
metadata agent provides configuration information such as credentials to instances. Note that the
L2 agent cannot be distributed and highly available. Instead, it must be installed on each data
forwarding node to control the virtual network drivers such as Open vSwitch or Linux Bridge. One L2
agent runs per node and controls its virtual interfaces.

A typical HA deployment of network nodes can be achieved in Fig 20. Here shows a two nodes cluster.
The number of the nodes is decided by the size of the cluster. It can be 2 or more. More details can be
achieved from each agent's part.


.. figure:: images_network_nodes/Network_nodes_deployment.png
    :alt: HA deployment of network nodes
    :figclass: align-center

    Fig 20. A typical HA deployment of network nodes


4.2 DHCP agent
--------------

The DHCP agent can be natively highly available. Neutron has a scheduler which lets you run multiple
agents across nodes. You can configure the dhcp_agents_per_network parameter in the neutron.conf file
and set it to X (X >=2 for HA, default is 1).

If the X is set to 2, as depicted in Fig 21 three tenant networks (there can be multiple tenant networks)
are used as an example, six DHCP agents are deployed in two nodes for three networks, they are
all active. Two dhcp1s serve one network, dhcp2s and dhcp3s serve other two different networks. In a
network, all DHCP traffic is broadcast, DHCP servers race to offer IP. All the servers will update the
lease tables. In Fig 22, when the agent(s) in Node1 doesn't work which can be caused by software
failure or hardware failure, the dhcp agent(s) on Node2 will continue to offer IP for the network.


.. figure:: images_network_nodes/DHCP_deployment.png
    :alt: HA deployment of DHCP agents
    :figclass: align-center

    Fig 21. Natively HA deployment of DHCP agents


.. figure:: images_network_nodes/DHCP_failure.png
    :alt: Failure of DHCP agents
    :figclass: align-center

    Fig 22. Failure of DHCP agents


4.3 L3 agent
------------

The L3 agent is also natively highly available. To achieve HA, it can be configured in the neutron.conf
file.

.. code-block:: bash

    l3_ha = True # All routers are highly available by default

    allow_automatic_l3agent_failover = True # Set automatic L3 agent failover for routers

    max_l3_agents_per_router = 2 # Maximum number of network nodes to use for the HA router

    min_l3_agents_per_router = 2 # Minimum number of network nodes to use for the HA router. A new router
    can be created only if this number of network nodes are available.

According to the neutron.conf file, the L3 agent scheduler supports Virtual Router Redundancy
Protocol (VRRP) to distribute virtual routers across multiple nodes (e.g. 2). The scheduler will choose
a number between the maximum and the minimum number according scheduling algorithm. VRRP is implemented
by Keepalived.

As depicted in Fig 23, both L3 agents in Node1 and Node2 host vRouter 1 and vRouter 2. In Node 1,
vRouter 1 is active and vRouter 2 is standby (hot standby). In Node2, vRouter 1 is standby and
vRouter 2 is active. For the purpose of reducing the load, two actives are deployed in two Nodes
alternatively. In Fig 24, Keepalived will be used to manage the VIP interfaces. One instance of
keepalived per virtual router, then one per namespace. 169.254.192.0/18 is a dedicated HA network
which is created in order to isolate the administrative traffic from the tenant traffic, each vRouter
will be connected to this dedicated network via an HA port. More details can be achieved from the
Reference at the bottom.


.. figure:: images_network_nodes/L3_deployment.png
    :alt: HA deployment of L3 agents
    :figclass: align-center

    Fig 23. Natively HA deployment of L3 agents


.. figure:: images_network_nodes/L3_ha_principle.png
    :alt: HA principle of L3 agents
    :figclass: align-center

    Fig 24. Natively HA principle of L3 agents


In Fig 25, when vRouter 1 in Node1 is down which can be caused by software failure or hardware failure,
the Keepalived will detect the failure and the standby will take over to be active. In order to keep the
TCP connection, Conntrackd is used to maintain the TCP sessions going through the router. One instance
of conntrackd per virtual router, then one per namespace. After then, a rescheduling procedure will be
triggered to respawn the failed virtual router to another l3 agent as standby. All the workflows is
depicted in Fig 26.


.. figure:: images_network_nodes/L3_failure.png
    :alt: Failure of L3 agents
    :figclass: align-center

    Fig 25. Failure of L3 agents


.. figure:: images_network_nodes/L3_ha_workflow.png
    :alt: HA workflow of L3 agents
    :figclass: align-center

    Fig 26. HA workflow of L3 agents


4.4 LBaaS agent and Metadata agent
----------------------------------

Currently, no native feature is provided to make the LBaaS agent highly available using the defaul
plug-in HAProxy. A common way to make HAProxy highly available is to use Pacemaker.


.. figure:: images_network_nodes/LBaaS_deployment.png
    :alt: HA deployment of LBaaS agents
    :figclass: align-center

    Fig 27. HA deployment of LBaaS agents using Pacemaker


As shown in Fig 27 HAProxy and pacemaker are deployed in both of the network nodes. The number of network
nodes can be 2 or more. It depends on your cluster. HAProxy in Node 1 is the master and the VIP is in
Node 1. Pacemaker monitors the liveness of HAProxy.


.. figure:: images_network_nodes/LBaaS_failure.png
    :alt: Failure of LBaaS agents
    :figclass: align-center

    Fig 28. Failure of LBaaS agents


As shown in Fig 28 when HAProxy in Node1 falls down which can be caused by software failure or hardware
failure, Pacemaker will fail over HAProxy and the VIP to Node 2.

Note that the default plug-in HAProxy only supports TCP and HTTP.

No native feature is available to make Metadata agent highly available. At this time, the Active/Passive
solution exists to run the neutron metadata agent in failover mode with Pacemaker. The deployment and
failover procedure can be the same as the case of LBaaS.