Install Juju¶
In the previous section, we set up the base environment in the form of a MAAS cluster. We are now going to implement Juju as a management solution for that environment. The main goal will be the creation of a Juju controller, the administrative node for a Juju-managed cloud.
Install Juju¶
To install Juju:
sudo snap install juju --classic --channel 2.9
Add MAAS to Juju¶
Add the MAAS cluster so Juju will be able to manage it as a cloud. We’ll do
this via a cloud definition file, such as maas-cloud.yaml
:
clouds:
maas-one:
type: maas
auth-types: [oauth1]
endpoint: http://10.246.112.3:5240/MAAS
We’ve called the cloud ‘maas-one’ and its endpoint is based on the IP address of the MAAS system.
The cloud is added in this way:
juju add-cloud --client -f maas-cloud.yaml maas-one
View the updated list of clouds known to the current Juju client with the juju clouds --client command.
Add the MAAS credentials¶
Add the MAAS credentials so Juju can interact with the newly added cloud.
We’ll again use a file to import our information, such as maas-creds.yaml
:
credentials:
maas-one:
anyuser:
auth-type: oauth1
maas-oauth: LGJ8svffZZ5kSdeA8E:9kVM7jJpHGG6J9apk3:KE65tLnjpPuqVHZ6vb97T8VWfVB9tM3j
We’ve included the name of the cloud ‘maas-one’ and a new user ‘anyuser’. The
long key is the MAAS API key for the MAAS ‘admin’ user. This key was placed in
file ~/admin-api-key
on the MAAS system during the Install MAAS step on the previous page. It can also be obtained from the
‘admin’ user’s profile in the web UI.
The credentials are added in this way:
juju add-credential --client -f maas-creds.yaml maas-one
View the updated list of credentials known to the current Juju client with the juju credentials --client --show-secrets --format yaml command.
Create the Juju controller¶
Create the controller (using the ‘jammy’ series) for the ‘maas-one’ cloud, and call it ‘maas-controller’:
juju bootstrap --bootstrap-series=jammy --constraints tags=juju maas-one maas-controller
The --constraints
option allows us to effectively select a node in the MAAS
cluster. Recall that we attached a tag of ‘juju’ to the lower-resourced MAAS
node during the Tag nodes step on the previous page.
The MAAS web UI will show the node being deployed. The whole process will take about five minutes.
View the updated list of controllers known to the current Juju client with the juju controllers command.
Create the model¶
The OpenStack deployment will be placed in its own Juju model for organisational purposes. Create the model ‘openstack’ and specify our desired series of ‘jammy’:
juju add-model --config default-series=jammy openstack
The output of the juju status command summarises the Juju aspect of the environment. It should now look very similar to this:
Model Controller Cloud/Region Version SLA Timestamp
openstack maas-controller maas-one/default 2.9.38 unsupported 20:28:32Z
Model "admin/openstack" is empty.
Next steps¶
The next step is to use Juju to deploy OpenStack. This will involve deploying the OpenStack applications and adding relations between them. Go to Install OpenStack now.