Installation Tutorial¶
- Service Overview
- Install and configure controller node
- Install and configure a share node
- Verify operation
- Creating and using shared file systems
- Creating shares with Shared File Systems Option 1 (DHSS = False)
- Create a share type
- Create a share
- Allow access to the share
- Mount the share on a compute instance
- Creating shares with Shared File Systems Option 2 (DHSS = True)
- Create a share
- Allow access to the share
- Mount the share on a compute instance
- Next steps
The OpenStack Shared File Systems service (manila) provides coordinated access to shared or distributed file systems. The method in which the share is provisioned and consumed is determined by the Shared File Systems driver, or drivers in the case of a multi-backend configuration. There are a variety of drivers that support NFS, CIFS, HDFS, GlusterFS, CEPHFS, MAPRFS and other protocols as well.
The Shared File Systems API and scheduler services typically run on the controller nodes. Depending upon the drivers used, the share service can run on controllers, compute nodes, or storage nodes.
Important
For simplicity, this guide describes configuring the Shared File Systems service to use one of either:
the
generic
back end with thedriver_handles_share_servers
mode (DHSS) enabled that uses the Compute service (nova), Image service (glance), Networking service (neutron) and Block storage service (cinder); or,the
LVM
back end withdriver_handles_share_servers
mode (DHSS) disabled.
The storage protocol used and referenced in this guide is NFS
. As
stated above, the Shared File System service supports different storage
protocols depending on the back end chosen.
For the generic
back end, networking service configuration requires
the capability of networks being attached to a public router in order to
create share networks. If using this back end, ensure that Compute,
Networking and Block storage services are properly working before you
proceed. For networking service, ensure that option 2 (deploying the
networking service with support for self-service networks) is properly
configured.
This installation tutorial also assumes that installation and configuration of OpenStack packages, Network Time Protocol, database engine and message queue has been completed as per the instructions in the OpenStack Installation Guide.. The Identity Service (keystone) has to be pre-configured with suggested client environment scripts.
For more information on various Shared File Systems storage back ends, see the Shared File Systems Configuration Reference..
To learn more about installation dependencies noted above, see the OpenStack Installation Guide.