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.
When the Bare Metal service is appropriately configured with the Compute and Network services, it is possible to provision both virtual and physical machines through the Compute service’s API. However, the set of instance actions is limited, arising from the different characteristics of physical servers and switch hardware. For example, live migration can not be performed on a bare metal instance.
The community maintains reference drivers that leverage open-source technologies (eg. PXE and IPMI) to cover a wide range of hardware. Ironic’s pluggable driver architecture also allows hardware vendors to write and contribute drivers that may improve performance or add functionality not provided by the community drivers.
Here are a few use-cases for bare metal (physical server) provisioning in cloud; there are doubtless many more interesting ones:
The following diagram shows the relationships and how all services come into play during the provisioning of a physical server. (Note that Ceilometer and Swift can be used with Ironic, but are missing from this diagram.)
The diagram below shows the logical architecture. It shows the basic components that form the Ironic service, the relation of Ironic service with other OpenStack services and the logical flow of a boot instance request resulting in the provisioning of a physical server.
The Ironic service is composed of the following components:
As in Figure 1.2. Logical Architecture, a user request to boot an instance is passed to the Nova Compute service via Nova API and Nova Scheduler. The Compute service hands over this request to the Ironic service, where the request passes from the Ironic API, to the Conductor, to a Driver to successfully provision a physical server for the user.
Just as the Nova Compute service talks to various OpenStack services like Glance, Neutron, Swift etc to provision a virtual machine instance, here the Ironic service talks to the same OpenStack services for image, network and other resource needs to provision a bare metal instance.
PXE is part of the Wired for Management (WfM) specification developed by Intel and Microsoft. The PXE enables system’s BIOS and network interface card (NIC) to bootstrap a computer from the network in place of a disk. Bootstrapping is the process by which a system loads the OS into local memory so that it can be executed by the processor. This capability of allowing a system to boot over a network simplifies server deployment and server management for administrators.
DHCP is a standardized networking protocol used on Internet Protocol (IP) networks for dynamically distributing network configuration parameters, such as IP addresses for interfaces and services. Using PXE, the BIOS uses DHCP to obtain an IP address for the network interface and to locate the server that stores the network bootstrap program (NBP).
NBP is equivalent to GRUB (GRand Unified Bootloader) or LILO (LInux LOader) - loaders which are traditionally used in local booting. Like the boot program in a hard drive environment, the NBP is responsible for loading the OS kernel into memory so that the OS can be bootstrapped over a network.
TFTP is a simple file transfer protocol that is generally used for automated transfer of configuration or boot files between machines in a local environment. In a PXE environment, TFTP is used to download NBP over the network using information from the DHCP server.
IPMI is a standardized computer system interface used by system administrators for out-of-band management of computer systems and monitoring of their operation. It is a method to manage systems that may be unresponsive or powered off by using only a network connection to the hardware rather than to an operating system.
The Ironic RESTful API service is used to enroll hardware that Ironic will manage. A cloud administrator usually registers the hardware, specifying their attributes such as MAC addresses and IPMI credentials. There can be multiple instances of the API service.
The Ironic conductor service does the bulk of the work. For security reasons, it is advisable to place the conductor service on an isolated host, since it is the only service that requires access to both the data plane and IPMI control plane.
There can be multiple instances of the conductor service to support various class of drivers and also to manage fail over. Instances of the conductor service should be on separate nodes. Each conductor can itself run many drivers to operate heterogeneous hardware. This is depicted in the following figure.
The API exposes a list of supported drivers and the names of conductor hosts servicing them.
What happens when a boot instance request comes in? The below diagram walks through the steps involved during the provisioning of a bare metal instance.
These pre-requisites must be met before the deployment process:
Dependent packages to be configured on the Bare Metal service node(s) where ironic-conductor is running like tftp-server, ipmi, syslinux etc for bare metal provisioning.
Nova must be configured to make use of the bare metal service endpoint and compute driver should be configured to use ironic driver on the Nova compute node(s).
Flavors to be created for the available hardware. Nova must know the flavor to boot from.
Images to be made available in Glance. Listed below are some image types required for successful bare metal deployment:
- bm-deploy-kernel
- bm-deploy-ramdisk
- user-image
- user-image-vmlinuz
- user-image-initrd
Hardware to be enrolled via Ironic RESTful API service.
A boot instance request comes in via the Nova API, through the message queue to the Nova scheduler.
Nova scheduler applies filter and finds the eligible compute node. Nova scheduler uses flavor extra_specs detail such as ‘cpu_arch’, ‘baremetal:deploy_kernel_id’, ‘baremetal:deploy_ramdisk_id’ etc to match the target physical node.
A spawn task is placed by the driver which contains all information such as which image to boot from etc. It invokes the driver.spawn from the virt layer of Nova compute.
Information about the bare metal node is retrieved from the bare metal database and the node is reserved.
Images from Glance are pulled down to the local disk of the Ironic conductor servicing the bare metal node.
Virtual interfaces are plugged in and Neutron API updates DHCP port to support PXE/TFTP options.
Nova’s ironic driver issues a deploy request via the Ironic API to the Ironic conductor servicing the bare metal node.
PXE driver prepares tftp bootloader.
The IPMI driver issues command to enable network boot of a node and power it on.
The DHCP boots the deploy ramdisk. Next, depending on the exact driver used, either the conductor copies the image over iSCSI to the physical node (pxe_* group of drivers) or the deploy ramdisk downloads the image from a temporary URL (agent_* group of drivers), which can be generated by a variety of object stores, e.g. swift, radosgw, etc, and uploaded to OpenStack’s Object Storage service. In the former case, the conductor connects to the iSCSI end point, partitions volume, “dd” the image and closes the iSCSI connection.
The deployment is done. The Ironic conductor will switch pxe config to service mode and notify ramdisk agent on the successful deployment.
The IPMI driver reboots the bare metal node. Note that there are 2 power cycles during bare metal deployment; the first time when powered-on, the images get deployed as mentioned in step 9. The second time as in this case, after the images are deployed, the node is powered up.
The bare metal node status is updated and the node instance is made available.