Adding sudo to the example commands in the quick start section. Also adding '-' as su argument in order to use the stack user's env (home). Change-Id: I23ab38104d05c3f4c8d48b55e66cf19dc4e4f90d
4.1 KiB
It is really easy for online docs to meander over time as people attempt to add the small bit of additional information they think people need, into an existing information architecture. In order to prevent that we need to be a bit strict as to what's on this front page.
This should only be the quick start narrative. Which should end with 2 sections: what you can do with devstack once it's set up, and how to go beyond this setup. Both should be a set of quick links to other documents to let people explore from there.
DevStack
DevStack is a series of extensible scripts used to quickly bring up a complete OpenStack environment based on the latest versions of everything from git master. It is used interactively as a development environment and as the basis for much of the OpenStack project's functional testing.
The source is available at https://git.openstack.org/cgit/openstack-dev/devstack.
Warning
DevStack will make substantial changes to your system during installation. Only run DevStack on servers or virtual machines that are dedicated to this purpose.
Quick Start
Install Linux
Start with a clean and minimal install of a Linux system. Devstack attempts to support Ubuntu 14.04/16.04, Fedora 23/24, CentOS/RHEL 7, as well as Debian and OpenSUSE.
If you do not have a preference, Ubuntu 16.04 is the most tested, and will probably go the smoothest.
Add Stack User
Devstack should be run as a non-root user with sudo enabled (standard logins to cloud images such as "ubuntu" or "cloud-user" are usually fine).
You can quickly create a separate stack user to run DevStack with
$ sudo adduser stack
Since this user will be making many changes to your system, it should have sudo privileges:
$ sudo tee <<<"stack ALL=(ALL) NOPASSWD: ALL" /etc/sudoers
$ sudo su - stack
Download DevStack
$ git clone https://git.openstack.org/openstack-dev/devstack
$ cd devstack
The devstack
repo contains a script that installs
OpenStack and templates for configuration files
Create a local.conf
Create a local.conf
file with 4 passwords preset at the
root of the devstack git repo. :
[[local|localrc]]
ADMIN_PASSWORD=secret
DATABASE_PASSWORD=$ADMIN_PASSWORD
RABBIT_PASSWORD=$ADMIN_PASSWORD
SERVICE_PASSWORD=$ADMIN_PASSWORD
This is the minimum required config to get started with DevStack.
Start the install
./stack.sh
This will take a 15 - 20 minutes, largely depending on the speed of your internet connection. Many git trees and packages will be installed during this process.
Profit!
You now have a working DevStack! Congrats!
Your devstack will have installed keystone
,
glance
, nova
, cinder
,
neutron
, and horizon
. Floating IPs will be
available, guests have access to the external world.
You can access horizon to experience the web interface to OpenStack, and manage vms, networks, volumes, and images from there.
You can source openrc
in your shell, and then use the
openstack
command line tool to manage your devstack.
You can cd /opt/stack/tempest
and run tempest tests that
have been configured to work with your devstack.
You can make code changes to OpenStack and validate them
<development>
.
Going further
Learn more about our configuration system <configuration>
to
customize devstack for your needs. Including making adjustments to the
default networking <networking>
.
Read guides <guides>
for specific setups people have
(note: guides are point in time contributions, and may not always be
kept up to date to the latest devstack).
Enable devstack plugins <plugins>
to support additional
services, features, and configuration not present in base devstack.
Get the big picture <overview>
of what we are trying
to do with devstack, and help us by contributing to the project
<hacking>
.