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Install OpenStack
Now that we've installed and configured MAAS and successfully deployed a Juju controller, it's time to do some real work; use Juju to deploy OpenStack, the leading open cloud platform.
We have two options when installing OpenStack.
- Install and configure each OpenStack component separately. Adding Ceph, Compute, Swift, RabbitMQ, Keystone and Neutron in this way allows you to see exactly what Juju and MAAS are doing, and consequently, gives you a better understanding of the underlying OpenStack deployment.
- Use a bundle to deploy OpenStack with a single command. A bundle is an encapsulation of a working deployment, including all configuration, resources and references. It allows you to effortlessly recreate a deployment with a single command or share that deployment with other Juju users.
If this is your first foray into MAAS, Juju and OpenStack territory, we'd recommend starting with the first option. This will give you a stronger foundation for maintaining and expanding the default deployment. Our instructions for this option continue below.
Alternatively, jump to Deploying OpenStack as a bundle to learn about deploying as a bundle.
Deploy the Juju controller
Previously, we tested our MAAS and
Juju configuration by deploying a new Juju controller called
maas-controller
. You can check this controller is still
operational by typing juju status
. With the Juju controller
running, the output will look similar to the following:
Model Controller Cloud/Region Version
default maas-controller-two mymaas 2.2.1
App Version Status Scale Charm Store Rev OS Notes
Unit Workload Agent Machine Public address Ports Message
Machine State DNS Inst id Series AZ
If you need to remove and redeploy the controller, use the following two commands:
juju kill-controller maas-controller
juju bootstrap --constraints tags=juju maas maas-controller
During the bootstrap process, Juju will create a model called
default
, as shown in the output from
juju status
above. Models act as
containers for applications, and Juju's default model is great for
experimentation.
We're going to create a new model called uos
to hold our
OpenStack deployment exclusively, making the entire deployment easier to
manage and maintain.
To create a model called uos
(and switch to it), simply
type the following:
juju add-model uos
Deploy OpenStack
We're now going to step through adding each of the various OpenStack
components to the new model. Each application will be installed from the
Charm store. We'll be providing the
configuration for many of the charms as a yaml
file which
we include as we deploy them.
Ceph OSD
We're starting with the Ceph object storage daemon and we want to
configure Ceph to use the second drive of a cloud node,
/dev/sdb
. Change this to match your own configuration if
the device name on your system is different. The configuration is held
in the file called ceph-osd.yaml
:
ceph-osd:
osd-devices: /dev/sdb
osd-reformat: "yes"
We're going to deploy Ceph-OSD to each of the four cloud nodes we've
already tagged with compute
. The following command will
import the settings above and deploy Ceph-OSD to each of the four
nodes:
juju deploy --constraints tags=compute --config ceph-osd.yaml -n 4 ceph-osd
In the background, Juju will ask MAAS to commission the nodes, powering them on and installing Ubuntu. Juju then takes over and installs the necessary packages for the required application.
Remember, you can check on the status of a deployment using the
juju status
command. To see the status of a single charm of
application, append the charm name:
juju status ceph-osd
In this early stage of deployment, the output will look similar to the following:
Model Controller Cloud/Region Version
uoa maas-controller mymaas 2.2-beta1
App Version Status Scale Charm Store Rev OS Notes
ceph-osd 10.2.6 blocked 4 ceph-osd jujucharms 241 ubuntu
Unit Workload Agent Machine Public address Ports Message
ceph-osd/0 blocked idle 0 192.168.100.113 Missing relation: monitor
ceph-osd/1* blocked idle 1 192.168.100.114 Missing relation: monitor
ceph-osd/2 blocked idle 2 192.168.100.115 Missing relation: monitor
ceph-osd/3 blocked idle 3 192.168.100.112 Missing relation: monitor
Machine State DNS Inst id Series AZ Message
0 started 192.168.100.113 fr36gt xenial default Deployed
1 started 192.168.100.114 nnpab4 xenial default Deployed
2 started 192.168.100.115 a83gcy xenial default Deployed
3 started 192.168.100.112 7gan3t xenial default Deployed
Don't worry about the 'Missing relation' messages. We'll add the required relations in a later step. You also don't have to wait for a deployment to finish before adding further applications to Juju. Errors will resolve themselves as applications are deployed and dependencies are met.
Nova Compute
We're going use three machines to host the OpenStack Nova Compute
application. The first will use the following configuration file,
compute.yaml
, while we'll use the second and third to
scale-out the same application to two other machines.
nova-compute:
enable-live-migration: True
enable-resize: True
migration-auth-type: ssh
virt-type: qemu
Type the following to deploy nova-compute
to machine
number 1:
juju deploy --to 1 --config compute.yaml nova-compute
And use the following commands to scale-out Nova Compute to machines 2 and 3:
juju add-unit --to 2 nova-compute
juju add-unit --to 3 nova-compute
As before, it's worth checking juju status nova-compute
output to make sure nova-compute
has been deployed to three
machines. Look for lines similar to these:
Machine State DNS Inst id Series AZ Message
1 started 192.168.100.117 7gan3t xenial default Deployed
2 started 192.168.100.118 fr36gt xenial default Deployed
3 started 192.168.100.119 nnpab4 xenial default Deployed
Swift storage
The Swift-storage application is going to be deployed to the first
machine (machine 0
), and scaled across the other three with
the following configuration file:
swift-storage:
block-device: sdc
overwrite: "true"
Here are the four deploy commands for the four machines:
juju deploy --to 0 --config swift-storage.yaml swift-storage
juju add-unit --to 1 swift-storage
juju add-unit --to 2 swift-storage
juju add-unit --to 3 swift-storage
Neutron networking
Next comes Neutron for OpenStack networking. We have just a couple of
configuration options than need to be placed within
neutron.yaml
and we're going to use this for two
applications, neutron-gateway
and
neutron-api
:
neutron-gateway:
ext-port: 'eth1'
neutron-api:
neutron-security-groups: True
First, deploy the gateway:
juju deploy --to 0 --config neutron.yaml neutron-gateway
We're going to colocate the Neutron API on machine 1 by using an LXD container. This is a great solution for both local deployment and for managing cloud instances.
We'll also deploy Neutron OpenvSwitch:
juju deploy --to lxd:1 --config neutron.yaml neutron-api
juju deploy neutron-openvswitch
We've got to a stage where we can start to connect applications together. Juju's ability to add these links, known as a relation in Juju, is one of its best features.
See Managing relationships in the Juju documentation for more information on relations.
Add the network relations with the following commands:
juju add-relation neutron-api neutron-gateway
juju add-relation neutron-api neutron-openvswitch
juju add-relation neutron-openvswitch nova-compute
There are still 'Missing relations' messages in the status output,
leading to the status of some applications to be blocked
.
This is because there are many more relations to be added but they'll
resolve themselves automatically as we add them.
Percona cluster
The Percona XtraDB cluster application comes next, and like Neutron API above, we're going to use LXD.
The following mysql.yaml
is the only configuration we
need:
mysql:
max-connections: 20000
To deploy Percona alongside MySQL:
juju deploy --to lxd:0 --config mysql.yaml percona-cluster mysql
And there's just a single new relation to add:
juju add-relation neutron-api mysql
Keystone
As Keystone handles OpenStack identity management and access, we're
going to use the following contents of keystone.yaml
to set
an admin password for OpenStack:
keystone:
admin-password: openstack
We'll use an LXD container on machine 3 to help balance the load a little. To deploy the application, use the following command:
juju deploy --to lxd:3 --config keystone.yaml keystone
Then add these relations:
juju add-relation keystone mysql
juju add-relation neutron-api keystone
RabbitMQ
We're using RabbitMQ as the messaging server. Deployment requires no further configuration than running the following command:
juju deploy --to lxd:0 rabbitmq-server
This brings along four new connections that need to be made:
juju add-relation neutron-api rabbitmq-server
juju add-relation neutron-openvswitch rabbitmq-server
juju add-relation nova-compute:amqp rabbitmq-server
juju add-relation neutron-gateway:amqp rabbitmq-server:amqp
Nova Cloud Controller
This is the controller service for OpenStack, and includes the nova-scheduler, nova-api and nova-conductor services.
The following simple controller.yaml
configuration file
will be used:
nova-cloud-controller:
network-manager: "Neutron"
To add the controller to your deployment, enter the following:
juju deploy --to lxd:2 --config controller.yaml nova-cloud-controller
Followed by these add-relation
connections:
juju add-relation nova-cloud-controller mysql
juju add-relation nova-cloud-controller keystone
juju add-relation nova-cloud-controller rabbitmq-server
juju add-relation nova-cloud-controller neutron-gateway
juju add-relation neutron-api nova-cloud-controller
juju add-relation nova-compute nova-cloud-controller
OpenStack Dashboard
We'll deploy the dashboard to another LXD container with a single command:
juju deploy --to lxd:3 openstack-dashboard
And a single relation:
juju add-relation openstack-dashboard keystone
Glance
For the Glance image service, deploy as follows:
juju deploy --to lxd:2 glance
Relations:
juju add-relation nova-cloud-controller glance
juju add-relation nova-compute glance
juju add-relation glance mysql
juju add-relation glance keystone
juju add-relation glance rabbitmq-server
Ceph monitor
For Ceph monitors (which monitor the topology of the Ceph deployment and manage the CRUSH map which is used by clients to read and write data) no additional configuration over the defaults provided is required, so deploy three units with this:
juju deploy --to lxd:1 ceph-mon
juju add-unit --to lxd:2 ceph-mon
juju add-unit --to lxd:3 ceph-mon
With these additional relations:
juju add-relation ceph-osd ceph-mon
juju add-relation nova-compute ceph-mon
juju add-relation glance ceph-mon
Cinder
For Cinder block storage, use the following cinder.yaml
file:
cinder:
glance-api-version: 2
block-device: None
And deploy with this:
juju deploy --to lxd:1 --config cinder.yaml cinder
Relations:
juju add-relation nova-cloud-controller cinder
juju add-relation cinder mysql
juju add-relation cinder keystone
juju add-relation cinder rabbitmq-server
juju add-relation cinder:image-service glance:image-service
juju add-relation cinder ceph-mon
Swift proxy
Swift also needs a unique identifier, best generated with the
uuid
command.
The uuid
command on Ubuntu is in the uuid
package (sudo apt-get install uuid
) and it is best to
produce a version 4 uuid, which is based on random numbers, rather than
a version 1 which is based on the MAC address of a network card and a
timer.
Generate the uuid by running:
uuid -v 4
The output UUID is used for the swift-hash
value in the
swift-proxy.yaml
configuration file:
swift-proxy:
zone-assignment: auto
swift-hash: "a1ee9afe-194c-11e7-bf0f-53d662bc4339"
Use the following command to deploy:
juju deploy --to lxd:0 --config swift-proxy.yaml swift-proxy
These are its two relations:
juju add-relation swift-proxy swift-storage
juju add-relation swift-proxy keystone
NTP
The final component we need to deploy is a Network Time Protocol client, to keep everything in time. This is added with the following simple command:
juju deploy ntp
These last few add-relation
commands finish all the
connections we need to make:
juju add-relation neutron-gateway ntp
juju add-relation ceph-osd ntp
All that's now left to do is wait on the output from
juju status
to show when everything is ready (everything
turns green, if your terminal support colour).
Test OpenStack
After everything has deployed and the output of
juju status
settles, you can check to make sure OpenStack
is working by logging into the Horizon dashboard.
The quickest way to get the IP address for the dashboard is with the following command:
juju status --format=yaml openstack-dashboard | grep public-address | awk '{print $2}'
The URL will be http://<IP ADDRESS>/horizon
. When
you enter this into your browser you can login with admin
and openstack
, unless you changed the password in the
configuration file.
If everything works, you will see something similar to the following:

Next steps
Congratulations, you've successfully deployed a working OpenStack environment using both Juju and MAAS. The next step is to configure OpenStack for use within a production environment.