Welcome to Ironic’s developer documentation!¶
Introduction¶
Ironic is an OpenStack project which provisions bare metal (as opposed to virtual) machines. It may be used independently or as part of an OpenStack Cloud, and integrates with the OpenStack Identity (keystone), Compute (nova), Network (neutron), Image (glance), and Object (swift) services.
The Bare Metal service manages hardware through both common (eg. PXE and IPMI) and vendor-specific remote management protocols. It provides the cloud operator with a unified interface to a heterogeneous fleet of servers while also providing the Compute service with an interface that allows physical servers to be managed as though they were virtual machines.
An introduction to ironic’s conceptual architecture is available for those new to the project.
Site Notes¶
This site is primarily intended to provide documentation for developers interested in contributing to or working with ironic. It also contains references and guides for administrators which are not yet hosted elsewhere on the OpenStack documentation sites.
This documentation is continually updated and may not represent the state of the project at any specific prior release. To access documentation for a previous release of ironic, append the OpenStack release name to the URL, for example:
Bare Metal API References¶
Ironic’s REST API has changed since its first release, and continues to evolve to meet the changing needs of the community. Here we provide a conceptual guide as well as more detailed reference documentation.
Developer’s Guide¶
Getting Started¶
If you are new to ironic, this section contains information that should help you get started as a developer working on the project or contributing to the project.
The following pages describe the architecture of the Bare Metal service and may be helpful to anyone working on or with the service, but are written primarily for developers.
These pages contain information for PTLs, cross-project liaisons, and core reviewers.
Writing Drivers¶
Ironic’s community includes many hardware vendors who contribute drivers that enable more advanced functionality when Ironic is used in conjunction with that hardware. To do this, the Ironic developer community is committed to standardizing on a Python Driver API that meets the common needs of all hardware vendors, and evolving this API without breaking backwards compatibility. However, it is sometimes necessary for driver authors to implement functionality - and expose it through the REST API - that can not be done through any existing API.
To facilitate that, we also provide the means for API calls to be “passed through” ironic and directly to the driver. Some guidelines on how to implement this are provided below. Driver authors are strongly encouraged to talk with the developer community about any implementation using this functionality.
Administrator’s Guide¶
Installation & Operations¶
If you are a system administrator running Ironic, this section contains information that should help you understand how to deploy, operate, and upgrade the services.
Configuration¶
There are many aspects of the Bare Metal service which are environment specific. The following pages will be helpful in configuring specific aspects of ironic that may or may not be suitable to every situation.
- Guide to Node Cleaning
- Configuring Node Inspection
- Configuring RAID during deployment
- Security considerations for your Bare Metal installation
- Adopting Nodes in an ACTIVE state
- Configuring for Multi-tenant Networking
- Configuring for port groups
- Configuring node web or serial console
- Emitting software metrics
- Auditing API Traffic
- Notifications
- Ceph Object Gateway support
- Configuration Reference
- Sample configuration file
Dashboard Integration¶
A plugin for the OpenStack Dashboard (horizon) service is under development. Documentation for that can be found within the ironic-ui project.
Driver References¶
Every driver author is expected to document the use and configuration of their driver. These pages are linked below.