Difference between revisions of "How to install Openstack Newton"

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===update Interface===
 
===update Interface===
In my environment I have a DHCP server and a DNS server on the lab network and all the install on the lab network are done by pxe boot and a preseed file that auto configure my first network interface. My interface file looks like the one below. If you do not have a DHCP or DNS server you can do this manually.
+
In my environment I have a DHCP server and a DNS server on the lab network and all the install on the lab network are done by pxe boot and a preseed file that auto configure my first network interface. My interface file looks like the one below. If you do not have a DHCP or DNS server you can do this manually.
  
 
  # The primary network interface
 
  # The primary network interface

Revision as of 13:42, 15 July 2018

For this tutorial, we will be installing Openstack Newton on Ubuntu 16.04 (Xenial). You can use the same tutorial also on Debian 8 (Jessie) but this will install Openstack Mitaka. This tutorial is to help people that wants to start to learn Openstack.

Prerequisites

To complete this tutorial, you'll need the following:

  • 1 controller node
  • 1 compute node

Hardware requirements

According to the Openstack Documentation, to run several CicrOS instances you will need:

  • Controller Node: 1 processor, 4 GB memory, and 5 GB storage
  • Compute Node: 1 processor, 2 GB memory, and 10 GB storage

This this tutorial I am using:

  • Controller Node: 2 processors, 16 GB memory, 2x250GB disks in a Raid1 configuration and 2 NIC's (eno1 and eno2)
  • Compute Node: 2 processors, 16 GB memory, 2x350GB disks in a Raid1 configuration and 2 NIC's (eno1 and eno2)

Your environment doesn't have to have 2 disks in Raid1 configuration, 1 disk will be okay.

Networking

I am using a Cisco switch to setup 2 VLAN's

  • manegment VLAN
  • Provider VLAN ( Internet)

If you don't have a Cisco switch, you can use two 4 port switches

Network.png

Controller node

Update hosts file

Make sure the node has Ubuntu 16.04 installed with all updates. If you do not have a DNS server in your environment manually update the hosts file

/etc/hosts

controller mgmt_IP_address    controller.your_domain_name      controller
compute mgmt_IP_address       computer.your_domain_name        compute

example

10.192.16.38                  controller.dfw.ppnet             controller
10.192.16.67                  compute.dfw.ppnet                computer

In my case I have a DNS server in my environement so my /etc/hosts file looks like this:

127.0.0.1       localhost
10.192.16.38     controller.dfw.ppnet   controller
# The following lines are desirable for IPv6 capable hosts
::1     localhost ip6-localhost ip6-loopback
ff02::1 ip6-allnodes
ff02::2 ip6-allrouters

update Interface

In my environment I have a DHCP server and a DNS server on the lab network and all the install on the lab network are done by pxe boot and a preseed file that auto configure my first network interface. My interface file looks like the one below. If you do not have a DHCP or DNS server you can do this manually.

# The primary network interface
auto eno1
iface eno1 inet static
       address 10.192.16.38
       netmask 255.255.252.0
       network 10.192.16.0
       broadcast 10.192.19.255
       gateway 10.192.16.1
       # dns-* options are implemented by the resolvconf package, if installed
       dns-nameservers 10.192.16.2 10.192.16.4
       dns-search dfw.ppnet
# The secondery network interface
auto eno2
iface eno2 inet static
       address 10.192.0.75
       network 10.192.0.0
       netmask 255.255.255.0

Compute node

References

https://docs.openstack.org/newton/install-guide-ubuntu/