All in one scenario¶
Note
This documentation is intended as a walk through of the configuration required for a minimal all-in-one overcloud host. If you are looking for an all-in-one environment for test or development, see Automated Setup.
This scenario describes how to configure an all-in-one controller and compute node using Kayobe. This is a very minimal setup, and not one that is recommended for a production environment, but is useful for learning about how to use and configure Kayobe.
Prerequisites¶
This scenario requires a basic understanding of Linux, networking and OpenStack.
It also requires a single host running a supported operating system (VM or bare metal), with:
1 CPU
8GB RAM
40GB disk
at least one network interface that has Internet access
You will need access to a user account with passwordless sudo. The default user
in a cloud image (e.g. centos
or rocky
or ubuntu
) is typically
sufficient. This user will be used to run Kayobe commands. It will also be used
by Kayobe to bootstrap other user accounts.
Overview¶
An all in one environment consists of a single node that provides both control and compute services. There is no seed host, and no provisioning of the overcloud host. Customisation is minimal, in order to demonstrate the basic required configuration in Kayobe:
+---------------------------+
| Overcloud host |
| |
| |
| +-------------+ |
| | |+ |
| | Containers || |
| | || |
| +-------------+| |
| +-------------+ |
| |
+---------+-------+---------+
| |
| NIC 1 |
| |
+---+---+
|
|
+-----------------+------------------+ Internet
The networking in particular is relatively simple. The main interface of the
overcloud host, labelled NIC 1 in the above diagram, will be used only for
connectivity to the host and Internet access. A single Kayobe network called
aio
carries all control plane traffic, and is based on virtual networking
that is local to the host.
Later in this tutorial, we will create a dummy interface called dummy0
, and
plug it into a bridge called br0
:
+--------------+
| |
| OVS |
| |
+--------------+
|
|
+--------------+
| |
| br0 |
| 192.168.33.3 |
| 192.168.33.2 |
+--------------+
| dummy0 |
+--------+
The use of a bridge here allows Kayobe to connect this network to the Open
vSwitch network, while maintaining an IP address on the bridge. Ordinarily,
dummy0
would be a NIC providing connectivity to a physical network. We’re
using a dummy interface here to keep things simple by using a fixed IP subnet,
192.168.33.0/24
. The bridge will be assigned a static IP address of
192.168.33.3
, and this address will by used for various things, including
Ansible SSH access and OpenStack control plane traffic. Kolla Ansible will
manage a Virtual IP (VIP) address of 192.168.33.2
on br0
, which will be
used for OpenStack API endpoints.