Bootstrapping Servers¶
Kolla-ansible provides support for bootstrapping host configuration prior to
deploying containers via the bootstrap-servers
subcommand. This includes
support for the following:
Customisation of
/etc/hosts
Creation of user and group
Kolla configuration directory
Package installation and removal
Docker engine installation and configuration
Disabling firewalls
Creation of Python virtual environment
Configuration of Apparmor
Configuration of SELinux
Configuration of NTP daemon
All bootstrapping support is provided by the baremetal
Ansible role.
Running the command¶
The base command to perform a bootstrap is:
kolla-ansible bootstrap-servers -i INVENTORY
Further options may be necessary, as described in the following sections.
Initial bootstrap considerations¶
The nature of bootstrapping means that the environment that Ansible executes in during the initial bootstrap may look different to that seen after bootstrapping is complete. For example:
The
kolla_user
user account may not yet have been created. If this is normally used as theansible_user
when executing Kolla Ansible, a different user account must be used for bootstrapping.The Python virtual environment may not exist. If a virtualenv is normally used as the
ansible_python_interpreter
when executing Kolla Ansible, the system python interpreter must be used for bootstrapping.
Each of these variables may be passed via the -e
argument to Kolla Ansible
to override the inventory defaults:
kolla-ansible bootstrap-servers -i INVENTORY -e ansible_user=<bootstrap user> -e ansible_python_interpreter=/usr/bin/python
Subsequent bootstrap considerations¶
It is possible to run the bootstrapping process against a cloud that has already been bootstrapped, for example to apply configuration from a newer release of Kolla Ansible. In this case, further considerations should be made.
It is possible that the Docker engine package will be updated. This will cause the Docker engine to restart, in addition to all running containers. There are three main approaches to avoiding all control plane services restarting simultaneously.
The first option is to use the --limit
command line argument to apply the
command to hosts in batches, ensuring there is always a quorum for clustered
services (e.g. MariaDB):
kolla-ansible bootstrap-servers -i INVENTORY --limit controller0,compute[0-1]
kolla-ansible bootstrap-servers -i INVENTORY --limit controller1,compute[2-3]
kolla-ansible bootstrap-servers -i INVENTORY --limit controller2,compute[4-5]
The second option is to execute individual plays on hosts in batches:
kolla-ansible bootstrap-servers -i INVENTORY -e kolla_serial=30%
The last option is to use the Docker live-restore
configuration option to
avoid restarting containers when the Docker engine is restarted. There have
been issues reported with using this option however, so use it at your own
risk.
Ensure that any operation that causes the Docker engine to be updated has been tested, particularly when moving from legacy Docker packages to Docker Community Edition. See Package repositories for details.
Customisation of /etc/hosts
¶
This is optional, and enabled by customize_etc_hosts
, which is true
by
default.
Ensures that
localhost
is in/etc/hosts
Adds an entry for the IP of the API interface of each host to
/etc/hosts
.
Creation of user and group¶
This is optional, and enabled by create_kolla_user
, which is true
by
default.
Ensures that a group exists with the name defined by the variable
kolla_group
with defaultkolla
.Ensures that a user exists with the name defined by the variable
kolla_user
with defaultkolla
. The user’s primary group is defined bykolla_group
. The user is added to thesudo
group.An SSH public key is authorised for
kolla_user
. The key is defined by thepublic_key
value of thekolla_ssh_key
mapping variable, typically defined inpasswords.yml
.If the
create_kolla_user_sudoers
variable is set, a sudoers profile will be configured forkolla_user
, which grants passwordless sudo.
Kolla configuration directory¶
Kolla ansible service configuration is written to hosts in a directory defined
by node_config_directory
, which by default is /etc/kolla/
. This
directory will be created. If create_kolla_user
is set, the owner and group
of the directory will be set to kolla_user
and kolla_group
respectively.
Package installation and removal¶
Lists of packages are defined for installation and removal. On Debian family
systems, these are defined by debian_pkg_install
and
ubuntu_pkg_removals
respectively. On Red Hat family systems, these are
defined by redhat_pkg_install
and redhat_pkg_removals
respectively.
Docker engine installation and configuration¶
Docker engine is a key dependency of Kolla Ansible, and various configuration options are provided.
Package repositories¶
If the enable_docker_repo
flag is set, then a package repository for Docker
packages will be configured. Kolla Ansible uses the
‘Community Edition’ packages from https://download.docker.com.
Various other configuration options are available beginning
docker_(apt|yum)_
. Typically these do not need to be changed.
Configuration¶
The docker_storage_driver
variable is optional. If set, it defines the
storage (graph) driver to
use for Docker.
The docker_runtime_directory
variable is optional. If set, it defines the
runtime (data-root
) directory for Docker.
The docker_registry
variable, which is not set by default, defines the
address of the Docker registry. If the variable is not set, Dockerhub will be
used.
The docker_registry_insecure
variable, which defaults to true
if
docker_registry
is set, or false
otherwise, defines whether to
configure docker_registry
as an insecure registry. Insecure registries use
HTTP rather than HTTPS.
The docker_log_max_file
variable, which defaults to 5
, defines the
maximum number of log files to retain per container. The
docker_log_max_size
variable, which defaults to 50m
, defines the
maximum size of each rotated log file per container.
Additional options for the Docker engine can be passed in
docker_custom_config
variable. It will be stored in daemon.json
config
file. Example:
{
"experimental": false
}
Disabling firewalls¶
Kolla Ansible does not support configuration of host firewalls, and instead attempts to disable them.
On Debian family systems where the UFW firewall is enabled, a default policy will be added to allow all traffic.
On Red Hat family systems where firewalld is installed, it will be disabled.
Creation of Python virtual environment¶
This is optional, and enabled by setting virtualenv
to a path to a Python
virtual environment to create. By default, a virtual environment is not used.
If virtualenv_site_packages
is set, (default is true
) the virtual
environment will inherit packages from the global site-packages directory. This
is typically required for modules such as yum and apt which are not available
on PyPI. See Target Hosts for further information.
Configuration of Apparmor¶
On Ubuntu systems, the libvirtd
Apparmor profile will be removed.
Configuration of SELinux¶
On Red Hat family systems, if change_selinux
is set (default is true
),
then the SELinux state will be set to selinux_state
(default
permissive
). See Kolla Security for further information.
Configuration of NTP daemon¶
This is optional, and enabled by enable_host_ntp
, which is false
by
default.