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Akihiro Motoki f06e401adf Add HA mode support for Neutron router
HA (high availability) mode support is one of the important topics in
Neutron Juno, and this patch adds HA router mode support to Horizon.

This commit also changes the default value of enable_distributed_router
in the example local_settings.py to False. In Juno release of Neutron,
the distributed router and L3 HA mode cannot be enabled at the same
time and only L3-agent deployment with L3 Router service plugin
support both features. Thus I believe it is reasonable to make both
options default to False to avoid unnecessary confusions to operators.

Closes-Bug: #1370110
Change-Id: I77b0292b761f08b4580846f6d58443f7df9a1f6b
2014-09-26 17:08:26 +09:00
2014-03-21 15:30:03 +01:00
2014-07-08 09:50:14 -07:00
2014-04-03 17:34:32 +02:00
2011-10-28 09:50:35 -04:00
2013-10-25 14:49:23 +08:00
2014-07-09 14:47:57 +08:00
2011-01-12 13:43:31 -08:00
2014-03-31 10:32:44 +02:00
2014-05-01 13:44:26 +00:00

Horizon (OpenStack Dashboard)

Horizon is a Django-based project aimed at providing a complete OpenStack Dashboard along with an extensible framework for building new dashboards from reusable components. The openstack_dashboard module is a reference implementation of a Django site that uses the horizon app to provide web-based interactions with the various OpenStack projects.

For release management:

For blueprints and feature specifications:

For issue tracking:

Getting Started

For local development, first create a virtualenv for the project. In the tools directory there is a script to create one for you:

$ python tools/install_venv.py

Alternatively, the run_tests.sh script will also install the environment for you and then run the full test suite to verify everything is installed and functioning correctly.

Now that the virtualenv is created, you need to configure your local environment. To do this, create a local_settings.py file in the openstack_dashboard/local/ directory. There is a local_settings.py.example file there that may be used as a template.

If all is well you should able to run the development server locally:

$ tools/with_venv.sh ./manage.py runserver

or, as a shortcut:

$ ./run_tests.sh --runserver

Setting Up OpenStack

The recommended tool for installing and configuring the core OpenStack components is Devstack. Refer to their documentation for getting Nova, Keystone, Glance, etc. up and running.

Note

The minimum required set of OpenStack services running includes the following:

  • Nova (compute, api, scheduler, network, and volume services)
  • Glance
  • Keystone

Optional support is provided for Swift.

Development

For development, start with the getting started instructions above. Once you have a working virtualenv and all the necessary packages, read on.

If dependencies are added to either horizon or openstack_dashboard, they should be added to requirements.txt.

The run_tests.sh script invokes tests and analyses on both of these components in its process, and it is what Jenkins uses to verify the stability of the project. If run before an environment is set up, it will ask if you wish to install one.

To run the unit tests:

$ ./run_tests.sh

Building Contributor Documentation

This documentation is written by contributors, for contributors.

The source is maintained in the doc/source directory using reStructuredText and built by Sphinx

  • Building Automatically:

    $ ./run_tests.sh --docs
  • Building Manually:

    $ tools/with_venv.sh sphinx-build doc/source doc/build/html

Results are in the doc/build/html directory

Description
OpenStack Dashboard (Horizon)
Readme 334 MiB
Languages
Python 63.2%
JavaScript 28.7%
HTML 6.5%
SCSS 1.5%