This cookbook provides common setup recipes, helper methods and attributes that describe an OpenStack deployment as part of the OpenStack reference deployment Chef for OpenStack.
Please relate to the official OpenStack Configuration Reference for a more detailed documentation on operating and administration of an OpenStack cluster:
http://docs.openstack.org/mitaka/config-reference/index.html
- Chef 12 or higher
- chefdk 0.15.15 for testing (also includes berkshelf for cookbook dependency resolution)
- ubuntu
- redhat
- centos
The following cookbooks are dependencies:
- 'apt', '~> 2.8'
- 'database', '~> 4.0.2'
- 'mariadb', '~> 0.3.1'
- 'mysql', '~> 6.0.13'
- 'yum', '~> 3.5.4'
- 'yum-epel', '~> 0.6.0'
- 'galera', '~> 0.4.1'
Please see the extensive inline documentation in attributes/*.rb
for
descriptions of all the settable attributes for this cookbook.
Note that all attributes are in the default["openstack"]
"namespace"
Since the mitaka release, we moved to a completely new way to generate all OpenStack service configuration files. The base template is the 'openstack-service.conf.erb' included in the templates of this cookbook. In each of the service cookbook (e.g. openstack-network, openstack-identity or openstack-compute), the service configuration file (e.g neutron.conf, keystone.conf or nova.conf) gets generated directly from attributes set inside of the cookbook. To merge all the configuration options (including the secrets) properly, before handing them over as '@service_config' to the mentioned template above, we use the methods defined in 'libraries/config_helpers'.
For examples how to use these attributes, please refer to the attribute files included in the service cookbooks (e.g. attributes/neutron_conf.rb in openstack-network or attributes/keystone_conf.rb in openstack-identity). The basic structure of all these attributes always follows this model:
# usual config option that should evventually be saved to the node object
default['openstack'][service]['conf'][section][key][value]
# configuration options like passwords that should not be saved in the node
# object
default['openstack'][service]['conf_secrets'][section][key][value]
- Install the common python openstack client package
- Installs/Configures common recipes
- Installs/Configures common logging
- Iterates over the contents of the
node['openstack']['sysctl']
hash and writes the entries to/etc/sysctl.d/60-openstack.conf
.
This cookbook contains Libraries to work with passwords and secrets in databags. Databags can be unencrypted (for dev) or encrypted (for prod). In addition to traditionally encrypted data bags they can also be created as chef-vault items. To read more about chef-vault and how to use it, go to https://docs.chef.io/chef_vault.html.
Documentation for Attributes for selecting databag format can be found in the attributes section of this cookbook.
Documentation for format of these Databags can be found in the Openstack Chef Repo repository.
This cookbook provides the openstack_common_database LWRP, which replaces the old database library function 'db_create_with_user'. When this cookbook is included as dependency, this LWRP can be used to create databases needed by the OpenStack services.
depends 'openstack-common'
openstack_common_database 'compute' do
service 'compute' # name_attribute
user 'nova'
pass 'supersecret'
end
An example of the usage can be seen here https://github.com/stackforge/cookbook-openstack-ops-database/blob/master/recipes/openstack-db.rb.
This cookbook exposes a set of default library routines:
cli
-- Used to call openstack CLIsendpoint
-- Used to return a::URI
object representing the named OpenStack endpointadmin_endpoint
-- Used to return a::URI
object representing the named OpenStack admin endpoint if one was specified. Otherwise, it will return the same value asendpoint
.internal_endpoint
-- Used to return a::URI
object representing the named OpenStack internal endpoint if one was specified. Otherwise, it will return the same value asendpoint
.public_endpoint
-- Used to return a::URI
object representing the named OpenStack public endpoint if one was specified. Otherwise, it will return the same value asendpoint
.endpoints
-- Useful for operating on all OpenStack endpointsdb
-- Returns a Hash of information about a named OpenStack databasedb_uri
-- Returns the SQLAlchemy RFC-1738 DB URI (see: http://rfc.net/rfc1738.html) for a named OpenStack databasesecret
-- Returns the value of an encrypted data bag for a named OpenStack secret key and key-sectionget_password
-- Ease-of-use helper that returns the decrypted password for a named database, service or keystone user.matchers
-- A custom matcher(render_config_file) for testing ini format file section content by with_section_content.
The following are code examples showing the above library routines in action.
Remember when using the library routines exposed by this library to include
the Openstack routines in your recipe's ::Chef::Recipe
namespace, like so:
class ::Chef::Recipe
include ::Openstack
end
Example of using the endpoint
routine:
nova_api_ep = endpoint "compute-api"
::Chef::Log.info("Using Openstack Compute API endpoint at #{nova_api_ep.to_s}")
# Note that endpoint URIs may contain variable interpolation markers such
# as `%(tenant_id)s`, so you may need to decode them. Do so like this:
require "uri"
puts ::URI.decode nova_api_ap.to_s
Example of using the get_password
and db_uri
routine:
db_pass = get_password "db" "cinder"
db_user = node["cinder"]["db"]["user"]
sql_connection = db_uri "volume", db_user, db_pass
template "/etc/cinder/cinder.conf" do
source "cinder.conf.erb"
owner node["cinder"]["user"]
group node["cinder"]["group"]
mode 00644
variables(
"sql_connection" => sql_connection
)
end
Use the Openstack::uri_from_hash
routine to helpfully return a ::URI::Generic
object for a hash that contains any of the following keys:
host
uri
port
path
scheme
If the uri
key is in the hash, that will be used as the URI, otherwise the URI
will be constructed from the various parts of the hash corresponding to the keys
above.
# Suppose node hash contains the following subhash in the :identity_service key:
# {
# :host => 'identity.example.com',
# :port => 5000,
# :scheme => 'https'
# }
uri = ::Openstack::uri_from_hash(node[:identity_service])
# uri.to_s would == "https://identity.example.com:5000"
The routine will return nil if neither a uri
or host
key exists in the
supplied hash.
Don't like prefixing calls to the library's routines with ::Openstack
? Do this:
class ::Chef::Recipe
include ::Openstack
end
in your recipe.
Author | Jay Pipes ([email protected]) |
Author | John Dewey ([email protected]) |
Author | Matt Ray ([email protected]) |
Author | Craig Tracey ([email protected]) |
Author | Sean Gallagher ([email protected]) |
Author | Ionut Artarisi ([email protected]) |
Author | Chen Zhiwei ([email protected]) |
Author | Brett Campbell ([email protected]) |
Author | Mark Vanderwiel ([email protected]) |
Author | Jan Klare ([email protected]) |
Author | Christoph Albers ([email protected]) |
Copyright | Copyright (c) 2012-2013, AT&T Services, Inc. |
Copyright | Copyright (c) 2013, Opscode, Inc. |
Copyright | Copyright (c) 2013, Craig Tracey |
Copyright | Copyright (c) 2013-2014, SUSE Linux GmbH |
Copyright | Copyright (c) 2013-2015, IBM, Corp. |
Copyright | Copyright (c) 2013-2014, Rackspace US, Inc. |
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License.