OpenDaylight is a highly available, modular, extensible, scalable and multi-protocol controller infrastructure built for SDN deployments on modern heterogeneous multi-vendor networks.
OpenStack can use OpenDaylight as its network management provider through the Modular Layer 2 (ML2) north-bound plug-in. OpenDaylight manages the network flows for the OpenStack compute nodes via the OVSDB south-bound plug-in.
Integrating these allows Kuryr to be used to bridge (both baremetal and nested) containers and VM networking in a OpenDaylight-based OpenStack deployment. Kuryr acts as the container networking interface for OpenDaylight.
The next points describe how to test OpenStack with ODL using DevStack. We will start by describing how to test the baremetal case on a single host, and then cover a nested environemnt where containers are created inside VMs.
It’s best to use a throwaway dev system for running DevStack. Your best bet is to use either CentOS 7 or the latest Ubuntu LTS (16.04, Xenial).
stack
user.$ git clone https://git.openstack.org/openstack-dev/devstack.git
$ sudo ./devstack/tools/create-stack-user.sh
stack
user and clone DevStack and kuryr-kubernetes.$ sudo su - stack
$ git clone https://git.openstack.org/openstack-dev/devstack.git
$ git clone https://git.openstack.org/openstack/kuryr-kubernetes.git
kuryr-kubernetes comes with a sample DevStack configuration file for ODL you can start with. For example, you may want to set some values for the various PASSWORD variables in that file, or change the LBaaS service provider to use. Feel free to edit it if you’d like, but it should work as-is.
$ cd devstack
$ cp ../kuryr-kubernetes/devstack/local.conf.odl.sample local.conf
Optionally, the ports pool funcionality can be enabled by following: How to enable ports pool with devstack.
This is going to take a while. It installs a bunch of packages, clones a bunch of git repos, and installs everything from these git repos.
$ ./stack.sh
Once DevStack completes successfully, you should see output that looks something like this:
This is your host IP address: 192.168.5.10
This is your host IPv6 address: ::1
Keystone is serving at http://192.168.5.10/identity/
The default users are: admin and demo
The password: pass
Devstack does not wire up the public network by default so we must do some extra steps for floating IP usage as well as external connectivity:
$ sudo ip link set br-ex up
$ sudo ip route add 172.24.4.0/24 dev br-ex
$ sudo ip addr add 172.24.4.1/24 dev br-ex
Then you can create forwarding and NAT rules that will cause “external” traffic from your instances to get rewritten to your network controller’s ip address and sent out on the network:
$ sudo iptables -A FORWARD -d 172.24.4.0/24 -j ACCEPT
$ sudo iptables -A FORWARD -s 172.24.4.0/24 -j ACCEPT
$ sudo iptables -t nat -I POSTROUTING 1 -s 172.24.4.1/24 -j MASQUERADE
In order to check the default configuration, in term of networks, subnets, security groups and loadbalancers created upon a successful devstack stacking, you can check the Inspect default Configuration.
Once the environment is ready, we can test that network connectivity works among pods. To do that check out Testing Network Connectivity.
Another deployment option is the nested-vlan where containers are created inside OpenStack VMs by using the Trunk ports support. Thus, first we need to deploy an undercloud devstack environment with the needed components to create VMs (e.g., Glance, Nova, Neutron, Keystone, …), as well as the needed ODL configurations such as enabling the trunk support that will be needed for the VM. And then install the overcloud deployment inside the VM with the kuryr components.
The steps to deploy the undercloud environment are the same described above for the Single Node Test Environment with the different of the sample local.conf to use (step 4), in this case:
$ cd devstack
$ cp ../kuryr-kubernetes/devstack/local.conf.pod-in-vm.undercloud.odl.sample local.conf
The main differences with the default odl local.conf sample are that:
- There is no need to enable the kuryr-kubernetes plugin as this will be installed inside the VM (overcloud).
- There is no need to enable the kuryr related services as they will also be installed inside the VM: kuryr-kubernetes, kubelet, kubernetes-api, kubernetes-controller-manager, kubernetes-scheduler and kubelet.
- Nova and Glance components need to be enabled to be able to create the VM where we will install the overcloud.
- ODL Trunk service plugin need to be enable to ensure Trunk ports support.
Once the undercloud deployment has finished, the next steps are related to create the overcloud VM by using a parent port of a Trunk so that containers can be created inside with their own networks. To do that we follow the next steps detailed at Boot VM with a Trunk Port.
Once the VM is up and running, we can start with the overcloud configuration. The steps to perform are the same as without ODL integration, i.e., the same steps as for ML2/OVS:
Log in into the VM:
$ ssh -i id_rsa_demo centos@FLOATING_IP
Deploy devstack following steps 3 and 4 detailed at How to try out nested-pods locally (VLAN + trunk).
Similarly to the baremetal testing, we can create a demo deployment at the overcloud VM, scale it to any number of pods and expose the service to check if the deployment was successful. To do that check out Testing Nested Network Connectivity.
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