Install OpenStack¶
In the previous section, we installed Juju and created a Juju controller and model. We are now going to use Juju to install OpenStack itself. There are two methods to choose from:
By individual charm. This method provides a solid understanding of how Juju works and of how OpenStack is put together. Choose this option if you have never installed OpenStack with Juju.
By charm bundle. This method provides an automated means to install OpenStack. Choose this option if you are familiar with how OpenStack is built with Juju.
The current page is devoted to method #1. See Deploying OpenStack from a bundle for method #2.
Important
Irrespective of install method, once the cloud is deployed, the following management practices related to charm versions and machine series are recommended:
The entire suite of charms used to manage the cloud should be upgraded to the latest stable charm revision before any major change is made to the cloud (e.g. migrating to new charms, upgrading cloud services, upgrading machine series). See Charm upgrades for details.
The Juju machines that comprise the cloud should all be running the same series (e.g. ‘bionic’ or ‘focal’, but not a mix of the two). See Series upgrade for details.
Despite the length of this page, only three distinct Juju commands will be employed: juju deploy, juju add-unit, and juju add-relation. You may want to review these pertinent sections of the Juju documentation before continuing:
This page will show how to install a minimal non-HA OpenStack cloud. See OpenStack high availability for guidance on that subject.
OpenStack release¶
As the guide’s Overview section states, OpenStack Ussuri will be deployed atop Ubuntu 20.04 LTS (Focal) cloud nodes. In order to achieve this the default package archive (“distro”) for the cloud nodes will be used during the install of each OpenStack application. Note that some applications are not part of the OpenStack project per se and therefore do not apply (exceptionally, Ceph applications do use this method).
See Perform the upgrade in the OpenStack Upgrades appendix for more details on cloud archive releases and how they are used when upgrading OpenStack.
Important
The chosen OpenStack release may impact the installation and configuration instructions. This guide assumes that OpenStack Ussuri is being deployed.
Installation progress¶
There are many moving parts involved in a charmed OpenStack install. During much of the process there will be components that have not yet been satisfied, which will cause error-like messages to be displayed in the output of the juju status command. Do not be alarmed. Indeed, these are opportunities to learn about the interdependencies of the various pieces of software. Messages such as Missing relation and blocked will vanish once the appropriate applications and relations have been added and processed.
Tip
One convenient way to monitor the installation progress is to have command watch -n 5 -c juju status --color running in a separate terminal.
Deploy OpenStack¶
Assuming you have precisely followed the instructions on the Install Juju page, you should now have a Juju controller called ‘maas-controller’ and an empty Juju model called ‘openstack’. Change to that context now:
juju switch maas-controller:openstack
In the following sections, the various OpenStack components will be added to the ‘openstack’ model. Each application will be installed from the online Charm store and many will have configuration options specified via a YAML file.
Note
You do not need to wait for a Juju command to complete before issuing further ones. However, it can be very instructive to see the effect one command has on the current state of the cloud.
Ceph OSD¶
The ceph-osd application is deployed to four nodes with the ceph-osd charm.
The name of the block devices backing the OSDs is dependent upon the hardware
on the nodes. All possible devices across the nodes should be given as the
value for the osd-devices
option (space-separated). Here, we’ll be using
the same device on each cloud node: /dev/sdb
. File ceph-osd.yaml
contains the configuration.
ceph-osd:
osd-devices: /dev/sdb
source: distro
To deploy the application we’ll make use of the ‘compute’ tag we placed on each of these nodes on the Install MAAS page.
juju deploy -n 4 --config ceph-osd.yaml --constraints tags=compute ceph-osd
If a message from a ceph-osd unit like “Non-pristine devices detected” appears
in the output of juju status you will need to use actions
zap-disk
and add-disk
that come with the ‘ceph-osd’ charm. The
zap-disk
action is destructive in nature. Only use it if you want to purge
the disk of all data and signatures for use by Ceph.
Note
Since ceph-osd was deployed on four nodes and there are only four nodes available in this environment, the usage of the ‘compute’ tag is not strictly necessary.
Nova compute¶
The nova-compute application is deployed to one node with the nova-compute
charm. We’ll then scale-out the application to two other machines. File
nova-compute.yaml
contains the configuration:
nova-compute:
enable-live-migration: true
enable-resize: true
migration-auth-type: ssh
openstack-origin: distro
The initial node must be targeted by machine since there are no more free Juju machines (MAAS nodes) available. This means we’re placing multiple services on our nodes. We’ve chosen machines 1, 2, and 3:
juju deploy -n 3 --to 1,2,3 --config nova-compute.yaml nova-compute
Note
The ‘nova-compute’ charm is designed to support one image format type per
application at any given time. Changing format (see charm option
libvirt-image-backend
) while existing instances are using the prior
format will require manual image conversion for each instance. See bug LP
#1826888.
Swift storage¶
The swift-storage application is deployed to three nodes (machines 0, 2, and
3) with the swift-storage charm. File swift-storage.yaml
contains the
configuration:
swift-storage:
block-device: sdc
overwrite: "true"
openstack-origin: distro
This configuration points to block device /dev/sdc
. Adjust according to
your available hardware. In a production environment, avoid using a loopback
device.
Deploy to the three machines:
juju deploy -n 3 --to 0,2,3 --config swift-storage.yaml swift-storage
MySQL InnoDB Cluster¶
MySQL InnoDB Cluster always requires at least three database units. They will be containerised on machines 0, 1, and 2:
juju deploy -n 3 --to lxd:0,lxd:1,lxd:2 mysql-innodb-cluster
Vault¶
Vault is necessary for managing the TLS certificates that will enable encrypted communication between cloud applications.
Deploy it in this way:
juju deploy --to lxd:3 vault
This is the first application to be joined with the cloud database that was set up in the previous section. The process is:
create an application-specific instance of mysql-router (a subordinate)
add a relation between that mysql-router instance and the database
add a relation between the application and the mysql-router instance
The combination of steps 2 and 3 joins the application to the cloud database.
Here are the corresponding commands for Vault:
juju deploy mysql-router vault-mysql-router
juju add-relation vault-mysql-router:db-router mysql-innodb-cluster:db-router
juju add-relation vault-mysql-router:shared-db vault:shared-db
Vault now needs to be initialised and unsealed. The vault charm will also need to be authorised to carry out certain tasks. These steps are covered on the Vault page. Perform them now.
Once the above is completed the Unit section output to command juju status should look similar to this:
Unit Workload Agent Machine Public address Ports Message
ceph-osd/0* blocked idle 0 10.0.0.206 Missing relation: monitor
ceph-osd/1 blocked idle 1 10.0.0.208 Missing relation: monitor
ceph-osd/2 blocked idle 2 10.0.0.209 Missing relation: monitor
ceph-osd/3 blocked idle 3 10.0.0.213 Missing relation: monitor
mysql-innodb-cluster/0* active idle 0/lxd/0 10.0.0.211 Unit is ready: Mode: R/W
mysql-innodb-cluster/1 active idle 1/lxd/0 10.0.0.212 Unit is ready: Mode: R/O
mysql-innodb-cluster/2 active idle 2/lxd/0 10.0.0.214 Unit is ready: Mode: R/O
nova-compute/0* blocked idle 1 10.0.0.208 Missing relations: image, messaging
nova-compute/1 blocked idle 2 10.0.0.209 Missing relations: image, messaging
nova-compute/2 blocked idle 3 10.0.0.213 Missing relations: messaging, image
swift-storage/0* blocked idle 0 10.0.0.206 Missing relations: proxy
swift-storage/1 blocked idle 2 10.0.0.209 Missing relations: proxy
swift-storage/2 blocked idle 3 10.0.0.213 Missing relations: proxy
vault/0* active idle 3/lxd/0 10.0.0.217 8200/tcp Unit is ready (active: true, mlock: disabled)
vault-mysql-router/0* active idle 10.0.0.217 Unit is ready
Neutron networking¶
Neutron networking is implemented with four applications:
neutron-api
neutron-api-plugin-ovn (subordinate)
ovn-central
ovn-chassis (subordinate)
File neutron.yaml
contains the configuration necessary for three of them:
ovn-chassis:
bridge-interface-mappings: br-ex:eth1
ovn-bridge-mappings: physnet1:br-ex
neutron-api:
neutron-security-groups: true
flat-network-providers: physnet1
openstack-origin: distro
ovn-central:
source: distro
The bridge-interface-mappings
setting refers to a network interface that
the OVN Chassis will bind to. In the above example it is ‘eth1’ and it should
be an unused interface. In MAAS this interface must be given an IP mode of
‘Unconfigured’ (see Post-commission configuration in the MAAS
documentation). All four nodes should have this interface to ensure that any
node is able to accommodate OVN Chassis.
The flat-network-providers
setting enables the Neutron flat network
provider used in this example scenario and gives it the name of ‘physnet1’. The
flat network provider and its name will be referenced when we Set up
public networking on the next page.
The ovn-bridge-mappings
setting maps the data-port interface to the flat
network provider.
The main OVN application is ovn-central and it requires at least three units. They will be containerised on machines 0, 1, and 2:
juju deploy -n 3 --to lxd:0,lxd:1,lxd:2 --config neutron.yaml ovn-central
The neutron-api application will be containerised on machine 1:
juju deploy --to lxd:1 --config neutron.yaml neutron-api
Deploy the subordinate charm applications:
juju deploy neutron-api-plugin-ovn
juju deploy --config neutron.yaml ovn-chassis
Add the necessary relations:
juju add-relation neutron-api-plugin-ovn:neutron-plugin neutron-api:neutron-plugin-api-subordinate
juju add-relation neutron-api-plugin-ovn:ovsdb-cms ovn-central:ovsdb-cms
juju add-relation ovn-chassis:ovsdb ovn-central:ovsdb
juju add-relation ovn-chassis:nova-compute nova-compute:neutron-plugin
juju add-relation neutron-api:certificates vault:certificates
juju add-relation neutron-api-plugin-ovn:certificates vault:certificates
juju add-relation ovn-central:certificates vault:certificates
juju add-relation ovn-chassis:certificates vault:certificates
Join neutron-api to the cloud database:
juju deploy mysql-router neutron-api-mysql-router
juju add-relation neutron-api-mysql-router:db-router mysql-innodb-cluster:db-router
juju add-relation neutron-api-mysql-router:shared-db neutron-api:shared-db
Keystone¶
The keystone application will be containerised on machine 0.
To deploy:
juju deploy --to lxd:0 --config openstack-origin=distro keystone
Join keystone to the cloud database:
juju deploy mysql-router keystone-mysql-router
juju add-relation keystone-mysql-router:db-router mysql-innodb-cluster:db-router
juju add-relation keystone-mysql-router:shared-db keystone:shared-db
Two additional relations can be added at this time:
juju add-relation keystone:identity-service neutron-api:identity-service
juju add-relation keystone:certificates vault:certificates
RabbitMQ¶
The rabbitmq-server application will be containerised on machine 2 with the rabbitmq-server charm:
juju deploy --to lxd:2 rabbitmq-server
Two relations can be added at this time:
juju add-relation rabbitmq-server:amqp neutron-api:amqp
juju add-relation rabbitmq-server:amqp nova-compute:amqp
At this time the Unit section output to command juju status should look similar to this:
Unit Workload Agent Machine Public address Ports Message
ceph-osd/0* blocked idle 0 10.0.0.206 Missing relation: monitor
ceph-osd/1 blocked idle 1 10.0.0.208 Missing relation: monitor
ceph-osd/2 blocked idle 2 10.0.0.209 Missing relation: monitor
ceph-osd/3 blocked idle 3 10.0.0.213 Missing relation: monitor
keystone/0* active idle 0/lxd/2 10.0.0.223 5000/tcp Unit is ready
keystone-mysql-router/0* active idle 10.0.0.223 Unit is ready
mysql-innodb-cluster/0* active idle 0/lxd/0 10.0.0.211 Unit is ready: Mode: R/W
mysql-innodb-cluster/1 active idle 1/lxd/0 10.0.0.212 Unit is ready: Mode: R/O
mysql-innodb-cluster/2 active idle 2/lxd/0 10.0.0.214 Unit is ready: Mode: R/O
neutron-api/0* active idle 1/lxd/2 10.0.0.220 9696/tcp Unit is ready
neutron-api-mysql-router/0* active idle 10.0.0.220 Unit is ready
neutron-api-plugin-ovn/0* active idle 10.0.0.220 Unit is ready
nova-compute/0* blocked idle 1 10.0.0.208 Missing relations: image
ovn-chassis/1 active idle 10.0.0.208 Unit is ready
nova-compute/1 blocked idle 2 10.0.0.209 Missing relations: image
ovn-chassis/0* active idle 10.0.0.209 Unit is ready
nova-compute/2 blocked idle 3 10.0.0.213 Missing relations: image
ovn-chassis/2 active idle 10.0.0.213 Unit is ready
ovn-central/0* active idle 0/lxd/1 10.0.0.218 6641/tcp,6642/tcp Unit is ready (leader: ovnnb_db, ovnsb_db northd: active)
ovn-central/1 active idle 1/lxd/1 10.0.0.221 6641/tcp,6642/tcp Unit is ready
ovn-central/2 active idle 2/lxd/1 10.0.0.219 6641/tcp,6642/tcp Unit is ready
rabbitmq-server/0* active idle 2/lxd/2 10.0.0.222 5672/tcp Unit is ready
swift-storage/0* blocked idle 0 10.0.0.206 Missing relations: proxy
swift-storage/1 blocked idle 2 10.0.0.209 Missing relations: proxy
swift-storage/2 blocked idle 3 10.0.0.213 Missing relations: proxy
vault/0* active idle 3/lxd/0 10.0.0.217 8200/tcp Unit is ready (active: true, mlock: disabled)
vault-mysql-router/0* active idle 10.0.0.217 Unit is ready
Nova cloud controller¶
The nova-cloud-controller application, which includes nova-scheduler, nova-api,
and nova-conductor services, will be containerised on machine 0 with the
nova-cloud-controller charm. File nova-cloud-controller.yaml
contains
the configuration:
nova-cloud-controller:
network-manager: Neutron
openstack-origin: distro
To deploy:
juju deploy --to lxd:3 --config nova-cloud-controller.yaml nova-cloud-controller
Join nova-cloud-controller to the cloud database:
juju deploy mysql-router ncc-mysql-router
juju add-relation ncc-mysql-router:db-router mysql-innodb-cluster:db-router
juju add-relation ncc-mysql-router:shared-db nova-cloud-controller:shared-db
Note
To keep juju status output compact the expected
nova-cloud-controller-mysql-router
application name has been shortened
to ncc-mysql-router
.
Five additional relations can be added at this time:
juju add-relation nova-cloud-controller:identity-service keystone:identity-service
juju add-relation nova-cloud-controller:amqp rabbitmq-server:amqp
juju add-relation nova-cloud-controller:neutron-api neutron-api:neutron-api
juju add-relation nova-cloud-controller:cloud-compute nova-compute:cloud-compute
juju add-relation nova-cloud-controller:certificates vault:certificates
Placement¶
The placement application will be containerised on machine 2 with the placement charm.
To deploy:
juju deploy --to lxd:3 --config openstack-origin=distro placement
Join placement to the cloud database:
juju deploy mysql-router placement-mysql-router
juju add-relation placement-mysql-router:db-router mysql-innodb-cluster:db-router
juju add-relation placement-mysql-router:shared-db placement:shared-db
Three additional relations can be added at this time:
juju add-relation placement:identity-service keystone:identity-service
juju add-relation placement:placement nova-cloud-controller:placement
juju add-relation placement:certificates vault:certificates
OpenStack dashboard¶
The openstack-dashboard application (Horizon) will be containerised on machine 1 with the openstack-dashboard charm.
To deploy:
juju deploy --to lxd:1 --config openstack-origin=distro openstack-dashboard
Join openstack-dashboard to the cloud database:
juju deploy mysql-router dashboard-mysql-router
juju add-relation dashboard-mysql-router:db-router mysql-innodb-cluster:db-router
juju add-relation dashboard-mysql-router:shared-db openstack-dashboard:shared-db
Note
To keep juju status output compact the expected
openstack-dashboard-mysql-router
application name has been shortened to
dashboard-mysql-router
.
Two additional relations are required:
juju add-relation openstack-dashboard:identity-service keystone:identity-service
juju add-relation openstack-dashboard:certificates vault:certificates
Glance¶
The glance application will be containerised on machine 2 with the glance charm.
To deploy:
juju deploy --to lxd:3 --config openstack-origin=distro glance
Join glance to the cloud database:
juju deploy mysql-router glance-mysql-router
juju add-relation glance-mysql-router:db-router mysql-innodb-cluster:db-router
juju add-relation glance-mysql-router:shared-db glance:shared-db
Four additional relations can be added at this time:
juju add-relation glance:image-service nova-cloud-controller:image-service
juju add-relation glance:image-service nova-compute:image-service
juju add-relation glance:identity-service keystone:identity-service
juju add-relation glance:certificates vault:certificates
At this time the Unit section output to command juju status should look similar to this:
Unit Workload Agent Machine Public address Ports Message
ceph-osd/0* blocked idle 0 10.0.0.206 Missing relation: monitor
ceph-osd/1 blocked idle 1 10.0.0.208 Missing relation: monitor
ceph-osd/2 blocked idle 2 10.0.0.209 Missing relation: monitor
ceph-osd/3 blocked idle 3 10.0.0.213 Missing relation: monitor
glance/0* active idle 3/lxd/3 10.0.0.224 9292/tcp Unit is ready
glance-mysql-router/0* active idle 10.0.0.224 Unit is ready
keystone/0* active idle 0/lxd/2 10.0.0.223 5000/tcp Unit is ready
keystone-mysql-router/0* active idle 10.0.0.223 Unit is ready
mysql-innodb-cluster/0* active idle 0/lxd/0 10.0.0.211 Unit is ready: Mode: R/W
mysql-innodb-cluster/1 active idle 1/lxd/0 10.0.0.212 Unit is ready: Mode: R/O
mysql-innodb-cluster/2 active idle 2/lxd/0 10.0.0.214 Unit is ready: Mode: R/O
neutron-api/0* active idle 1/lxd/2 10.0.0.220 9696/tcp Unit is ready
neutron-api-mysql-router/0* active idle 10.0.0.220 Unit is ready
neutron-api-plugin-ovn/0* active idle 10.0.0.220 Unit is ready
nova-cloud-controller/0* active idle 3/lxd/1 10.0.0.216 8774/tcp,8775/tcp Unit is ready
ncc-mysql-router/0* active idle 10.0.0.216 Unit is ready
nova-compute/0* active idle 1 10.0.0.208 Unit is ready
ovn-chassis/1 active idle 10.0.0.208 Unit is ready
nova-compute/1 active idle 2 10.0.0.209 Unit is ready
ovn-chassis/0* active idle 10.0.0.209 Unit is ready
nova-compute/2 active idle 3 10.0.0.213 Unit is ready
ovn-chassis/2 active idle 10.0.0.213 Unit is ready
openstack-dashboard/0* active idle 1/lxd/3 10.0.0.210 80/tcp,443/tcp Unit is ready
dashboard-mysql-router/0* active idle 10.0.0.210 Unit is ready
ovn-central/0* active idle 0/lxd/1 10.0.0.218 6641/tcp,6642/tcp Unit is ready (leader: ovnnb_db, ovnsb_db northd: active)
ovn-central/1 active idle 1/lxd/1 10.0.0.221 6641/tcp,6642/tcp Unit is ready
ovn-central/2 active idle 2/lxd/1 10.0.0.219 6641/tcp,6642/tcp Unit is ready
placement/0* active idle 3/lxd/2 10.0.0.215 8778/tcp Unit is ready
placement-mysql-router/0* active idle 10.0.0.215 Unit is ready
rabbitmq-server/0* active idle 2/lxd/2 10.0.0.222 5672/tcp Unit is ready
swift-storage/0* blocked idle 0 10.0.0.206 Missing relations: proxy
swift-storage/1 blocked idle 2 10.0.0.209 Missing relations: proxy
swift-storage/2 blocked idle 3 10.0.0.213 Missing relations: proxy
vault/0* active idle 3/lxd/0 10.0.0.217 8200/tcp Unit is ready (active: true, mlock: disabled)
vault-mysql-router/0* active idle 10.0.0.217 Unit is ready
Ceph monitor¶
The ceph-mon application will be containerised on machines 0, 1, and 2 with the ceph-mon charm.
To deploy:
juju deploy -n 3 --to lxd:0,lxd:1,lxd:2 --config source=distro ceph-mon
Three relations can be added at this time:
juju add-relation ceph-mon:osd ceph-osd:mon
juju add-relation ceph-mon:client nova-compute:ceph
juju add-relation ceph-mon:client glance:ceph
For the above relations,
The nova-compute:ceph relation makes Ceph the storage backend for Nova non-bootable disk images. The nova-compute charm option
libvirt-image-backend
must be set to ‘rbd’ for this to take effect.The glance:ceph relation makes Ceph the storage backend for Glance.
Cinder¶
The cinder application will be containerised on machine 1 with the cinder
charm. File cinder.yaml
contains the configuration:
cinder:
glance-api-version: 2
block-device: None
openstack-origin: distro
To deploy:
juju deploy --to lxd:1 --config cinder.yaml cinder
Join cinder to the cloud database:
juju deploy mysql-router cinder-mysql-router
juju add-relation cinder-mysql-router:db-router mysql-innodb-cluster:db-router
juju add-relation cinder-mysql-router:shared-db cinder:shared-db
Four additional relations can be added at this time:
juju add-relation cinder:cinder-volume-service nova-cloud-controller:cinder-volume-service
juju add-relation cinder:identity-service keystone:identity-service
juju add-relation cinder:amqp rabbitmq-server:amqp
juju add-relation cinder:image-service glance:image-service
The above glance:image-service relation will enable Cinder to consume the Glance API (e.g. making Cinder able to perform volume snapshots of Glance images).
Like Glance, Cinder will use Ceph as its storage backend (hence block-device:
None
in the configuration file). This will be implemented via the
cinder-ceph subordinate charm:
juju deploy cinder-ceph
Four relations need to be added:
juju add-relation cinder-ceph:storage-backend cinder:storage-backend
juju add-relation cinder-ceph:ceph ceph-mon:client
juju add-relation cinder-ceph:ceph-access nova-compute:ceph-access
juju add-relation cinder:certificates vault:certificates
Swift proxy¶
The swift-proxy application will be containerised on machine 3 with the
swift-proxy charm. File swift-proxy.yaml
contains the configuration:
swift-proxy:
zone-assignment: auto
swift-hash: "<uuid>"
Swift proxy needs to be supplied with a unique identifier (UUID). Generate one
with the uuid -v 4 command (you may need to first install the
uuid
deb package) and insert it into the file.
To deploy:
juju deploy --to lxd:3 --config swift-proxy.yaml swift-proxy
Two relations are needed:
juju add-relation swift-proxy:swift-storage swift-storage:swift-storage
juju add-relation swift-proxy:identity-service keystone:identity-service
NTP¶
The final component is an NTP client to keep the time on each cloud node synchronised. This is done with the ntp subordinate charm:
juju deploy ntp
The below relation will add an ntp unit alongside each ceph-osd unit, and thus on each of the four cloud nodes:
juju add-relation ceph-osd:juju-info ntp:juju-info
Final results and dashboard access¶
Once all the applications have been deployed and the relations between them have been added we need to wait for the output of juju status to settle. The final results should be devoid of any error-like messages. Example output (including relations) for a successful cloud deployment is given here.
One milestone in the deployment of OpenStack is the first login to the Horizon dashboard. You will need its IP address and the admin password.
Obtain the address in this way:
juju status --format=yaml openstack-dashboard | grep public-address | awk '{print $2}' | head -1
The password is queried from Keystone:
juju run --unit keystone/0 leader-get admin_passwd
In this example, the address is ‘10.0.0.210’ and the password is ‘kohy6shoh3diWav5’.
The dashboard URL then becomes:
http://10.0.0.210/horizon
And the credentials are:
Once logged in you should see something like this:
To enable instance console access from within Horizon:
juju config nova-cloud-controller console-access-protocol=novnc
Next steps¶
You have successfully deployed OpenStack using both Juju and MAAS. The next step is to render the cloud functional for users. This will involve setting up networks, images, and a user environment. Go to Configure OpenStack now.