Sometimes, for various reasons (Redundancy, organisational policies, etc.), it might be necessary to use an externally managed database. This use case can be achieved by simply taking some extra steps:
In order to enable external mariadb support,
you will first need to disable mariadb deployment,
by ensuring the following line exists within /etc/kolla/globals.yml
:
enable_mariadb: "no"
There are two ways in which you can use external MariaDB: * Using an already load-balanced MariaDB address * Using an external MariaDB cluster
If your external database already has a load balancer, you will need to do the following:
Edit the inventory file, change control
to the hostname of the load
balancer within the mariadb
group as below:
[mariadb]
myexternalmariadbloadbalancer.com
Define database_address
in /etc/kolla/globals.yml
file:
database_address: myexternalmariadbloadbalancer.com
Note
If enable_external_mariadb_load_balancer
is set to no
(default), the external DB load balancer should be accessible
from all nodes during your deployment.
Using this way, you need to adjust the inventory file:
[mariadb:children]
myexternaldbserver1.com
myexternaldbserver2.com
myexternaldbserver3.com
If you choose to use haproxy for load balancing between the
members of the cluster, every node within this group
needs to be resolvable and reachable from all
the hosts within the [haproxy:children]
group
of your inventory (defaults to [network]
).
In addition, configure the /etc/kolla/globals.yml
file
according to the following configuration:
enable_external_mariadb_load_balancer: yes
In case your MariaDB user is root, just leave
everything as it is within globals.yml (Except the
internal mariadb deployment, which should be disabled),
and set the database_password
in /etc/kolla/passwords.yml
file:
database_password: mySuperSecurePassword
If the MariaDB username
is not root
, set database_user
in
/etc/kolla/globals.yml
file:
database_user: "privillegeduser"
The first step you need to take is to set use_preconfigured_databases
to
yes
in the /etc/kolla/globals.yml
file:
use_preconfigured_databases: "yes"
Note
when the use_preconfigured_databases
flag is set to "yes"
, you need
to make sure the mysql variable log_bin_trust_function_creators
set to 1
by the database administrator before running the
upgrade command.
In order to achieve this, you will need to define the user names in the
/etc/kolla/globals.yml
file, as illustrated by the example below:
keystone_database_user: preconfigureduser1
nova_database_user: preconfigureduser2
Also, you will need to set the passwords for all databases in the
/etc/kolla/passwords.yml
file
However, fortunately, using a common user across all databases is possible.
In order to use a common, preconfigured user across all databases, all you need to do is the following steps:
Edit the /etc/kolla/globals.yml
file, add the following:
use_common_mariadb_user: "yes"
Set the database_user within /etc/kolla/globals.yml
to
the one provided to you:
database_user: mycommondatabaseuser
Set the common password for all components within
/etc/kolla/passwords.yml
. In order to achieve that you
could use the following command:
sed -i -r -e 's/([a-z_]{0,}database_password:+)(.*)$/\1 mycommonpass/gi' /etc/kolla/passwords.yml
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