Install and configure for Debian¶
This section describes how to install and configure the dashboard on the controller node.
The only core service required by the dashboard is the Identity service. You can use the dashboard in combination with other services, such as Image service, Compute, and Networking. You can also use the dashboard in environments with stand-alone services such as Object Storage.
Note
This section assumes proper installation, configuration, and operation of the Identity service using the Apache HTTP server and Memcached service.
Install and configure components¶
Note
Default configuration files vary by distribution. You might need
to add these sections and options rather than modifying existing
sections and options. Also, an ellipsis (...
) in the configuration
snippets indicates potential default configuration options that you
should retain.
Install the packages:
# apt install openstack-dashboard-apache
Respond to prompts for web server configuration.
Note
The automatic configuration process generates a self-signed SSL certificate. Consider obtaining an official certificate for production environments.
Note
There are two modes of installation. One using
/horizon
as the URL, keeping your default vhost and only adding an Alias directive: this is the default. The other mode will remove the default Apache vhost and install the dashboard on the webroot. It was the only available option before the Liberty release. If you prefer to set the Apache configuration manually, install theopenstack-dashboard
package instead ofopenstack-dashboard-apache
.Edit the
/etc/openstack-dashboard/local_settings.py
file and complete the following actions:Configure the dashboard to use OpenStack services on the
controller
node:OPENSTACK_HOST = "controller"
In the Dashboard configuration section, allow your hosts to access Dashboard:
ALLOWED_HOSTS = ['one.example.com', 'two.example.com']
Note
Do not edit the
ALLOWED_HOSTS
parameter under the Ubuntu configuration section.ALLOWED_HOSTS
can also be['*']
to accept all hosts. This may be useful for development work, but is potentially insecure and should not be used in production. See the Django documentation for further information.
Configure the
memcached
session storage service:SESSION_ENGINE = 'django.contrib.sessions.backends.cache' CACHES = { 'default': { 'BACKEND': 'django.core.cache.backends.memcached.MemcachedCache', 'LOCATION': 'controller:11211', } }
Note
Comment out any other session storage configuration.
Enable the Identity API version 3:
OPENSTACK_KEYSTONE_URL = "http://%s/identity/v3" % OPENSTACK_HOST
Note
In case your keystone run at 5000 port then you would mentioned keystone port here as well i.e. OPENSTACK_KEYSTONE_URL = “http://%s:5000/identity/v3” % OPENSTACK_HOST
Enable support for domains:
OPENSTACK_KEYSTONE_MULTIDOMAIN_SUPPORT = True
Configure API versions:
OPENSTACK_API_VERSIONS = { "identity": 3, "image": 2, "volume": 3, }
Configure
Default
as the default domain for users that you create via the dashboard:OPENSTACK_KEYSTONE_DEFAULT_DOMAIN = "Default"
Configure
user
as the default role for users that you create via the dashboard:OPENSTACK_KEYSTONE_DEFAULT_ROLE = "user"
If you chose networking option 1, disable support for layer-3 networking services:
OPENSTACK_NEUTRON_NETWORK = { ... 'enable_router': False, 'enable_quotas': False, 'enable_ipv6': False, 'enable_distributed_router': False, 'enable_ha_router': False, 'enable_fip_topology_check': False, }
Optionally, configure the time zone:
TIME_ZONE = "TIME_ZONE"
Replace
TIME_ZONE
with an appropriate time zone identifier. For more information, see the list of time zones.
Finalize installation¶
Reload the web server configuration:
# service apache2 reload