* Move DHCP information into a document of its own. * Move custom IPA building to installation guide. * Separate the remote Ironic section. Change-Id: I766e5ccd2569ea58e84be5fbc063df6cf5e0ca54
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Configuring the integrated DHCP server
Setting static DHCP assignments with the integrated DHCP server
You can set up a static DHCP reservation using the
ipv4_address
parameter and setting the
inventory_dhcp
setting to a value of true
.
This will result in the first MAC address defined in the list of
hardware MAC addresses to receive a static address assignment in
dnsmasq.
Forcing DNS to resolve to ipv4_address
dnsmasq will resolve all entries to the IP assigned to each server in
the leases file. However, this IP will not always be the desired one, if
you are working with multiple networks. To force DNS to always resolve
to ipv4_address
please set the inventory_dns
setting to a value of true
. This will result in each server
to resolve to ipv4_address
by explicitly using address
capabilities of dnsmasq.
Extending dnsmasq configuration
Bifrost manages the dnsmasq configuration file in
/etc/dnsmasq.conf
. It is not recommended to make manual
modifications to this file after it has been written. dnsmasq supports
the use of additional configuration files in
/etc/dnsmasq.d
, allowing extension of the dnsmasq
configuration provided by bifrost. It is possible to use this mechanism
provide additional DHCP options to systems managed by ironic, or even to
create a DHCP boot environment for systems not managed by ironic. For
example, create a file /etc/dnsmasq.d/example.conf
with the
following contents:
dhcp-match=set:<tag>,<match criteria>
dhcp-boot=tag:<tag>,<boot options>
The tag, match critera and boot options should be modified for your
environment. Here we use dnsmasq tags to match against hosts that we
want to manage. dnsmasq will use the last matching tagged
dhcp-boot
option for a host or an untagged default
dhcp-boot
option if there were no matches. These options
will be inserted at the conf-dir=/etc/dnsmasq.d
line of the
dnsmasq configuration file. Once configured, send the HUP
signal to dnsmasq, which will cause it to reread its configuration:
killall -HUP dnsmasq
Using Bifrost with your own DHCP server
The possibility exists that a user may already have a Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) server on their network.
Currently Ironic, when configured with Bifrost in standalone mode, does not utilize a DHCP provider. This would require a manual configuration of the DHCP server to deploy an image. Bifrost utilizes dnsmasq for this functionality; however, any DHCP server can be utilized. This is largely intended to function in the context of a single flat network although conceivably the nodes can be segregated.
What is required:
- DHCP server on the network segment
- Appropriate permissions to change DHCP settings
- Network access to the API and conductor. Keep in mind the iPXE image does not support ICMP redirects.
Example DHCP server configurations
In the examples below port 8080 is used. However, the port number may vary depending on the environment configuration.
dnsmasq:
dhcp-match=set:ipxe,175 # iPXE sends a 175 option.
dhcp-boot=tag:ipxe,http://<Bifrost Host IP Address>:8080/boot.ipxe
dhcp-boot=/undionly.kpxe,<TFTP Server Hostname>,<TFTP Server IP Address>
Internet Systems Consortium DHCPd:
if exists user-class and option user-class = "iPXE" {
filename "http://<Bifrost Host IP Address>:8080/boot.ipxe";
} else {
filename "/undionly.kpxe";
next-server <TFTP Server IP Address>;
}
Architecture
It should be emphasized that Ironic in standalone mode is intended to be used only in a trusted environment.
+-------------+
| DHCP Server |
+-------------+
|
+--------Trusted-Network----------+
| |
+-------------+ +-----------+
|Ironic Server| | Server |
+-------------+ +-----------+