Multinode Deployment of Kolla¶
Deploy a registry¶
A Docker registry is a locally hosted registry that replaces the need to pull from the Docker Hub to get images. Kolla can function with or without a local registry, however for a multinode deployment some type of registry is mandatory. Only one registry must be deployed, although HA features exist for registry services.
The Docker registry prior to version 2.3 has extremely bad performance because all container data is pushed for every image rather than taking advantage of Docker layering to optimize push operations. For more information reference pokey registry. The Kolla community recommends using registry 2.3 or later.
The registry may be configured either as a local registry with support for storing images, or as a pull-through cache for Docker hub.
Option 1: local registry¶
docker run -d \
--name registry \
--restart=always \
-p 4000:5000 \
-v registry:/var/lib/registry \
registry:2
Here we are using port 4000 to avoid a conflict with Keystone. If the registry
is not running on the same host as Keystone, the -p
argument may be
omitted.
Edit globals.yml
and add the following, where 192.168.1.100:4000
is the
IP address and port on which the registry is listening:
docker_registry: 192.168.1.100:4000
Option 2: registry mirror¶
The Docker registry can be configured as a pull through cache to proxy the
official Kolla images hosted in Docker Hub. In order to configure the local
registry as a pull through cache, pass the environment variable
REGISTRY_PROXY_REMOTEURL
through to the registry container. Pushing to a
registry configured as a pull-through cache is unsupported. For more
information, Reference the Docker Documentation.
docker run -d \
--name registry \
--restart=always \
-p 4000:5000 \
-v registry:/var/lib/registry \
-e REGISTRY_PROXY_REMOTEURL=https://registry-1.docker.io \
registry:2
Edit globals.yml
and add the following, where 192.168.1.100:4000
is the
IP address and port on which the registry is listening:
docker_custom_config:
registry-mirrors:
- http://192.168.1.100:4000
Edit the Inventory File¶
The ansible inventory file contains all the information needed to determine
what services will land on which hosts. Edit the inventory file in the
Kolla-Ansible directory ansible/inventory/multinode
. If Kolla-Ansible
was installed with pip, it can be found in /usr/share/kolla-ansible
.
Add the IP addresses or hostnames to a group and the services associated with
that group will land on that host. IP addresses or hostnames must be added to
the groups control, network, compute, monitoring and storage. Also, define
additional behavioral inventory parameters such as ansible_ssh_user
,
ansible_become
and ansible_private_key_file/ansible_ssh_pass
which
controls how ansible interacts with remote hosts.
Note
Ansible uses SSH to connect the deployment host and target hosts. For more information about SSH authentication please reference Ansible documentation.
# These initial groups are the only groups required to be modified. The
# additional groups are for more control of the environment.
[control]
# These hostname must be resolvable from your deployment host
control01 ansible_ssh_user=<ssh-username> ansible_become=True ansible_private_key_file=<path/to/private-key-file>
192.168.122.24 ansible_ssh_user=<ssh-username> ansible_become=True ansible_private_key_file=<path/to/private-key-file>
Note
Additional inventory parameters might be required according to your environment setup. Reference Ansible Documentation for more information.
For more advanced roles, the operator can edit which services will be associated in with each group. Keep in mind that some services have to be grouped together and changing these around can break your deployment:
[kibana:children]
control
[elasticsearch:children]
control
[haproxy:children]
network
Host and group variables¶
Typically, Kolla Ansible configuration is stored in the globals.yml
file.
Variables in this file apply to all hosts. In an environment with multiple
hosts, it may become necessary to have different values for variables for
different hosts. A common example of this is for network interface
configuration, e.g. api_interface
.
Ansible’s host and group variables can be assigned in a variety of ways. Simplest is in the inventory file itself:
# Host with a host variable.
[control]
control01 api_interface=eth3
# Group with a group variable.
[control:vars]
api_interface=eth4
This can quickly start to become difficult to maintain, so it may be preferable
to use host_vars
or group_vars
directories containing YAML files with
host or group variables:
inventory/
group_vars/
control
host_vars/
control01
multinode
Ansible’s variable precedence rules
are quite complex, but it is worth becoming familiar with them if using host
and group variables. The playbook group variables in
ansible/group_vars/all.yml
define global defaults, and these take
precedence over variables defined in an inventory file and inventory
group_vars/all
, but not over inventory group_vars/*
. Variables in
‘extra’ files (globals.yml
) have the highest precedence, so any variables
which must differ between hosts must not be in globals.yml
.
Deploying Kolla¶
Note
If there are multiple keepalived clusters running within the same layer 2
network, edit the file /etc/kolla/globals.yml
and specify a
keepalived_virtual_router_id
. The keepalived_virtual_router_id
should
be unique and belong to the range 0 to 255.
Note
If glance is configured to use file
as backend, only one glance_api
container will be started. file
is enabled by default when no other
backend is specified in /etc/kolla/globals.yml
.
First, check that the deployment targets are in a state where Kolla may deploy to them:
kolla-ansible prechecks -i <path/to/multinode/inventory/file>
Note
RabbitMQ doesn’t work with IP addresses, hence the IP address of
api_interface
should be resolvable by hostnames to make sure that all
RabbitMQ Cluster hosts can resolve each others hostnames beforehand.
Run the deployment:
kolla-ansible deploy -i <path/to/multinode/inventory/file>