Overview
The nova-cloud-controller charm deploys a suite of OpenStack Nova services:
Important: This documentation supports version 3.x
of the Juju client.
See the OpenStack Charm
guide if you are using the 2.9.x
client.
Usage
Configuration
This section covers common and/or important configuration options. See file
config.yaml
for the full list of options, along with their descriptions and
default values. See the Juju documentation for details
on configuring applications.
cache-known-hosts
Controls whether or not the charm will use the current cache for hostname/IP
resolution queries for nova-compute units. This occurs whenever information
that is passed over the nova-compute:cloud-compute
relation changes (e.g. a
nova-compute unit is added). The default value is ‘true’. See section SSH host
lookup caching for details.
console-proxy-ip
Sets a client accessible proxy IP address that allows for VM console access. It should route to the nova-cloud-controller unit when the application is not under HA. When it is, the value of ‘local’ will point to the VIP.
Ensure that option console-access-protocol
is set to a value other than
‘None’.
VNC clients should be configured accordingly. In the case of a VIP, it will need to be determined.
console-access-protocol
Specifies the protocol to use when accessing the console of a VM. Supported values are: ‘None’, ‘spice’, ‘xvpvnc’, ‘novnc’, and ‘vnc’ (for both xvpvnc and novnc). Type ‘xvpvnc’ is not supported with UCA release ‘bionic-ussuri’ or with series ‘focal’ or later.
Caution: VMs are configured with a specific protocol at creation time. Console access for existing VMs will therefore break if this value is changed to something different.
network-manager
Defines the network manager for the cloud. Supported values are:
- ‘FlatDHCPManager’ for nova-network (the default)
- ‘FlatManager’ - for nova-network
- ‘Neutron’ - for a full SDN solution
When using ‘Neutron’ the neutron-gateway charm should be used to provide L3 routing and DHCP Services.
openstack-origin
States the software sources. A common value is an OpenStack UCA release (e.g. ‘cloud:bionic-ussuri’ or ‘cloud:focal-wallaby’). See Ubuntu Cloud Archive. The underlying host’s existing apt sources will be used if this option is not specified (this behaviour can be explicitly chosen by using the value of ‘distro’).
Deployment
These deployment instructions assume the following applications are present: keystone, rabbitmq-server, neutron-api, nova-compute, and a cloud database.
File ncc.yaml
contains an example configuration:
nova-cloud-controller:
network-manager: Neutron
openstack-origin: cloud:focal-wallaby
Nova cloud controller is often containerised. Here a single unit is deployed to a new container on machine ‘3’:
juju deploy --to lxd:3 --config ncc.yaml nova-cloud-controller
Note: The cloud’s database is determined by the series: prior to focal percona-cluster is used, otherwise it is mysql-innodb-cluster. In the example deployment below mysql-innodb-cluster is used.
Join nova-cloud-controller to the cloud database:
juju deploy mysql-router ncc-mysql-router
juju integrate ncc-mysql-router:db-router mysql-innodb-cluster:db-router
juju integrate ncc-mysql-router:shared-db nova-cloud-controller:shared-db
Five additional relations can be added:
juju integrate nova-cloud-controller:identity-service keystone:identity-service
juju integrate nova-cloud-controller:amqp rabbitmq-server:amqp
juju integrate nova-cloud-controller:neutron-api neutron-api:neutron-api
juju integrate nova-cloud-controller:cloud-compute nova-compute:cloud-compute
TLS
Enable TLS by adding a relation to an existing vault application:
juju integrate nova-cloud-controller:certificates vault:certificates
See Managing TLS certificates in the OpenStack Charms Deployment Guide for more information on TLS.
Note: This charm also supports TLS configuration via charm options
ssl_cert
,ssl_key
, andssl_ca
.
Actions
This section covers Juju actions supported by the charm.
Actions allow specific operations to be performed on a per-unit basis. To
display action descriptions run juju actions --schema nova-cloud-controller
.
If the charm is not deployed then see file actions.yaml
.
archive-data
clear-unit-knownhost-cache
openstack-upgrade
pause
resume
security-checklist
sync-compute-availability-zones
High availability
When more than one unit is deployed with the hacluster application the charm will bring up an HA active/active cluster.
There are two mutually exclusive high availability options: using virtual IP(s) or DNS. In both cases the hacluster subordinate charm is used to provide the Corosync and Pacemaker backend HA functionality.
See OpenStack high availability in the OpenStack Charms Deployment Guide for details.
Spaces
This charm supports the use of Juju Network Spaces, allowing the charm to be bound to network space configurations managed directly by Juju. This is only supported with Juju 2.0 and above.
API endpoints can be bound to distinct network spaces supporting the network separation of public, internal and admin endpoints.
Access to the underlying MySQL instance can also be bound to a specific space using the shared-db relation.
To use this feature, use the --bind option when deploying the charm:
juju deploy nova-cloud-controller --bind \
"public=public-space \
internal=internal-space \
admin=admin-space \
shared-db=internal-space"
Alternatively, these can also be provided as part of a Juju native bundle configuration:
nova-cloud-controller:
charm: cs:xenial/nova-cloud-controller
num_units: 1
bindings:
public: public-space
admin: admin-space
internal: internal-space
shared-db: internal-space
Note: Spaces must be configured in the underlying provider prior to attempting to use them.
Note: Existing deployments using
os-*-network
configuration options will continue to function; these options are preferred over any network space binding provided if set.
Charm-managed quotas
The charm can optionally set project quotas, which affect both new and existing projects. These quotas are set with the following configuration options:
quota-cores
quota-count-usage-from-placement
quota-injected-files
quota-injected-file-size
quota-injected-path-size
quota-instances
quota-key-pairs
quota-metadata-items
quota-ram
quota-server-groups
quota-server-group-members
Given that OpenStack quotas can be set in a variety of ways, the order of precedence (from higher to lower) for the enforcing of quotas is:
- quotas set by the operator manually
- quotas set by the nova-cloud-controller charm
- default quotas of the OpenStack service
For information on OpenStack quotas see Manage quotas in the Nova documentation.
SSH host lookup caching
Caching SSH known hosts reduces ‘cloud-compute’ hook execution time. It does this by reducing the number of lookups performed by the nova-cloud-controller charm during SSH connection negotiations when distributing a new unit’s SSH keys among existing units of the same application group. These keys are needed for VM migrations to succeed.
The cache is populated (or refreshed) when option cache-known-hosts
is set to
‘false’, in which case DNS lookups are always performed. The cache is queried
by the charm when it is set to ‘true’, where a lookup is only performed (adding
the result to the cache) when the cache is unable satisfy the query.
When a modification is made to DNS resolution, the clear-unit-knownhost-cache
action should be used. This action refreshes the charm’s cache and updates the
known_hosts
file on the nova-compute units. Information can be updated
selectively by targeting a specific unit, an application group, or all
application groups:
juju run-action --wait nova-cloud-controller/0 clear-unit-knownhost-cache target=nova-compute/2
juju run-action --wait nova-cloud-controller/0 clear-unit-knownhost-cache target=nova-compute
juju run-action --wait nova-cloud-controller/0 clear-unit-knownhost-cache
When nova-cloud-controller is under HA, the same invocation must be run on all nova-cloud-controller units.
Policy overrides
Policy overrides is an advanced feature that allows an operator to override the default policy of an OpenStack service. The policies that the service supports, the defaults it implements in its code, and the defaults that a charm may include should all be clearly understood before proceeding.
Caution: It is possible to break the system (for tenants and other services) if policies are incorrectly applied to the service.
Policy statements are placed in a YAML file. This file (or files) is then (ZIP) compressed into a single file and used as an application resource. The override is then enabled via a Boolean charm option.
Here are the essential commands (filenames are arbitrary):
zip overrides.zip override-file.yaml
juju attach-resource nova-cloud-controller policyd-override=overrides.zip
juju config nova-cloud-controller use-policyd-override=true
See appendix Policy overrides in the OpenStack Charms Deployment Guide for a thorough treatment of this feature.
Documentation
The OpenStack Charms project maintains two documentation guides:
- OpenStack Charm Guide: for project information, including development and support notes
- OpenStack Charms Deployment Guide: for charm usage information
Bugs
Please report bugs on Launchpad.
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