[ English | Indonesia | français | Deutsch | English (United Kingdom) | 한국어 (대한민국) | español | русский ]
Understanding the inventory¶
The default layout of containers and services in OpenStack-Ansible (OSA) is
determined by the /etc/openstack_deploy/openstack_user_config.yml
file and
the contents of both the /etc/openstack_deploy/conf.d/
and
/etc/openstack_deploy/env.d/
directories. You use these sources to define
the group mappings that the playbooks use to target hosts and containers for
roles used in the deploy.
You define host groups, which gather the target hosts into inventory groups, through the
/etc/openstack_deploy/openstack_user_config.yml
file and the contents of the/etc/openstack_deploy/conf.d/
directory.You define container groups, which can map from the service components to be deployed up to host groups, through files in the
/etc/openstack_deploy/env.d/
directory.
To customize the layout of the components for your deployment, modify the host groups and container groups appropriately before running the installation playbooks.
Understanding host groups (conf.d structure)¶
As part of the initial configuration, each target host appears either in the
/etc/openstack_deploy/openstack_user_config.yml
file or in files within
the /etc/openstack_deploy/conf.d/
directory. The format used for files in
the conf.d/
directory is identical to the syntax used in the
openstack_user_config.yml
file.
In these files, the target hosts are listed under one or more
headings, such as shared-infra_hosts
or storage_hosts
, which serve as
Ansible group mappings. These groups map to the physical
hosts.
The haproxy.yml.example
file in the conf.d/
directory provides
a simple example of defining a host group (haproxy_hosts
) with two hosts
(infra1
and infra2
).
The swift.yml.example
file provides a more complex example. Here, host
variables for a target host are specified by using the container_vars
key.
OpenStack-Ansible applies all entries under this key as host-specific
variables to any component containers on the specific host.
참고
To manage file size, we recommend that you define new inventory groups,
particularly for new services, by using a new file in the
conf.d/
directory.
Understanding container groups (env.d structure)¶
Additional group mappings are located within files in the
/etc/openstack_deploy/env.d/
directory. These groups are treated as
virtual mappings from the host groups (described above) onto the container
groups, that define where each service deploys. By reviewing files within the
env.d/
directory, you can begin to see the nesting of groups represented
in the default layout.
For example, the shared-infra.yml
file defines a container group,
shared-infra_containers
, as a subset of the all_containers
inventory group. The shared- infra_containers
container group is
mapped to the shared-infra_hosts
host group. All of the service
components in the shared-infra_containers
container group are
deployed to each target host in the shared-infra_hosts host
group.
Within a physical_skel
section, the OpenStack-Ansible dynamic inventory
expects to find a pair of keys. The first key maps to items in the
container_skel
section, and the second key maps to the target host groups
(described above) that are responsible for hosting the service component.
To continue the example, the memcache.yml
file defines the
memcache_container
container group. This group is a subset of the
shared-infra_containers
group, which is itself a subset of
the all_containers
inventory group.
참고
The all_containers
group is automatically defined by OpenStack-Ansible.
Any service component managed by OpenStack-Ansible maps to a subset of the
all_containers
inventory group, directly or indirectly through
another intermediate container group.
The default layout does not rely exclusively on groups being subsets of other
groups. The memcache
component group is part of the memcache_container
group, as well as the memcache_all
group and also contains a memcached
component group. If you review the playbooks/memcached-install.yml
playbook, you see that the playbook applies to hosts in the memcached
group. Other services might have more complex deployment needs. They define and
consume inventory container groups differently. Mapping components to several
groups in this way allows flexible targeting of roles and tasks.