System for quickly installing an OpenStack cloud from upstream git for testing and development.
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Jay Pipes b297d2d0a8 Fixes LP #996571 - Alternate Tempest user
Adds an alternate user to Keystone for Tempest

Tempest has a number of tests that are skipped if
the compute.alt_username is the same as compute.username
or None. Here, we modify files/keystone_data.sh to add
an additional regular user called alt_demo if Tempest
is enabled in stackrc. We also make corresponding changes
to the tools/configure_tempest.sh script to make use
of this alternate user credential

Change-Id: I551f3b378f843c62fffcf6effa916056708d54d3
2012-05-10 11:25:39 -04:00
exercises Update quantum.sh for glance client change 2012-04-30 15:30:30 -05:00
files Fixes LP #996571 - Alternate Tempest user 2012-05-10 11:25:39 -04:00
samples Add local.sh support and samples of local.sh and locarc 2012-03-28 16:35:15 -05:00
tests B) Use keystone config files from source; move to /etc/keystone 2012-04-05 18:10:13 -05:00
tools Fixes LP #996571 - Alternate Tempest user 2012-05-10 11:25:39 -04:00
.gitignore Add local.sh support and samples of local.sh and locarc 2012-03-28 16:35:15 -05:00
.gitreview
AUTHORS Allow wget to handle Non-English output 2012-05-03 18:29:26 +08:00
eucarc Move all EC2 cred creation to eucarc 2012-03-09 21:41:00 -06:00
exercise.sh Allow skipping exercises. 2012-03-28 11:34:51 +01:00
exerciserc Create exerciserc to configure exercises 2012-03-12 11:44:32 -05:00
functions E) Add support for Fedora 16 2012-04-11 14:55:47 -05:00
HACKING.rst Allow skipping exercises. 2012-03-28 11:34:51 +01:00
LICENSE Add Apache 2 LICENSE file 2012-04-18 01:45:35 -05:00
openrc Don't use $USERNAME in openrc. 2012-03-28 16:22:08 -04:00
README.md E) Add support for Fedora 16 2012-04-11 14:55:47 -05:00
rejoin-stack.sh Restart openstack services after running stack.sh 2012-02-23 12:08:43 -06:00
stack.sh Merge "Adds LinuxBridge plugin setup support." 2012-05-08 18:16:41 +00:00
stackrc Invite python-openstackclient to the party. 2012-05-01 00:07:29 -05:00
unstack.sh E) Add support for Fedora 16 2012-04-11 14:55:47 -05:00

DevStack is a set of scripts and utilities to quickly deploy an OpenStack cloud.

Goals

  • To quickly build dev OpenStack environments in a clean Ubuntu or Fedora environment
  • To describe working configurations of OpenStack (which code branches work together? what do config files look like for those branches?)
  • To make it easier for developers to dive into OpenStack so that they can productively contribute without having to understand every part of the system at once
  • To make it easy to prototype cross-project features
  • To sanity-check OpenStack builds (used in gating commits to the primary repos)

Read more at http://devstack.org (built from the gh-pages branch)

IMPORTANT: Be sure to carefully read stack.sh and any other scripts you execute before you run them, as they install software and may alter your networking configuration. We strongly recommend that you run stack.sh in a clean and disposable vm when you are first getting started.

Devstack on Xenserver

If you would like to use Xenserver as the hypervisor, please refer to the instructions in ./tools/xen/README.md.

Versions

The devstack master branch generally points to trunk versions of OpenStack components. For older, stable versions, look for branches named stable/[release] in the DevStack repo. For example, you can do the following to create a diablo OpenStack cloud:

git checkout stable/diablo
./stack.sh

You can also pick specific OpenStack project releases by setting the appropriate *_BRANCH variables in localrc (look in stackrc for the default set). Usually just before a release there will be milestone-proposed branches that need to be tested::

GLANCE_REPO=https://github.com/openstack/glance.git
GLANCE_BRANCH=milestone-proposed

Start A Dev Cloud

Installing in a dedicated disposable vm is safer than installing on your dev machine! To start a dev cloud:

./stack.sh

When the script finishes executing, you should be able to access OpenStack endpoints, like so:

We also provide an environment file that you can use to interact with your cloud via CLI:

# source openrc file to load your environment with osapi and ec2 creds
. openrc
# list instances
nova list

If the EC2 API is your cup-o-tea, you can create credentials and use euca2ools:

# source eucarc to generate EC2 credentials and set up the environment
. eucarc
# list instances using ec2 api
euca-describe-instances

Customizing

You can override environment variables used in stack.sh by creating file name localrc. It is likely that you will need to do this to tweak your networking configuration should you need to access your cloud from a different host.

Swift

Swift is not installed by default, you can enable easily by adding this to your localrc:

ENABLED_SERVICE="$ENABLED_SERVICES,swift"

If you want a minimal Swift install with only Swift and Keystone you can have this instead in your localrc:

ENABLED_SERVICES="key,mysql,swift"

If you use Swift with Keystone, Swift will authenticate against it. You will need to make sure to use the Keystone URL to auth against.

Swift will be acting as a S3 endpoint for Keystone so effectively replacing the nova-objectstore.

Only Swift proxy server is launched in the screen session all other services are started in background and managed by swift-init tool.

By default Swift will configure 3 replicas (and one spare) which could be IO intensive on a small vm, if you only want to do some quick testing of the API you can choose to only have one replica by customizing the variable SWIFT_REPLICAS in your localrc.