Use case: exposing single external https frontend and
load balancing services using FQDNs.
Support different ports for internal and external endpoints.
Introduced kolla_url filter to normalize urls like:
- https://magnum.external:443/v1
- http://magnum.external:80/v1
Change-Id: I9fb03fe1cebce5c7198d523e015280c69f139cd0
Co-Authored-By: Jakub Darmach <jakub@stackhpc.com>
According to the documentation [1] type of the Cyborg service should
be 'accelerator' and description 'Acceleration Service'. Also, this
change fixes incorrect endpoint URLs, and not configures an admin
endpoint [2] because the documentation [1] not updated yet.
1. https://docs.openstack.org/cyborg/latest/install/common.html
2. Icf3bf08deab2c445361f0a0124d87ad8b0e4e9d9
Closes-Bug: #2020080
Change-Id: I002db50cbad5a90e479498e605bdeab343e129c7
Signed-off-by: Maksim Malchuk <maksim.malchuk@gmail.com>
A combination of durable queues and classic queue mirroring can be used
to provide high availability of RabbitMQ. However, these options should
only be used together, otherwise the system will become unstable. Using
the flag ``om_enable_rabbitmq_high_availability`` will either enable
both options at once, or neither of them.
There are some queues that should not be mirrored:
* ``reply`` queues (these have a single consumer and TTL policy)
* ``fanout`` queues (these have a TTL policy)
* ``amq`` queues (these are auto-delete queues, with a single consumer)
An exclusionary pattern is used in the classic mirroring policy. This
pattern is ``^(?!(amq\\.)|(.*_fanout_)|(reply_)).*``
Change-Id: I51c8023b260eb40b2eaa91bd276b46890c215c25
When running in check mode, some prechecks previously failed because
they use the command module which is silently not run in check mode.
Other prechecks were not running correctly in check mode due to e.g.
looking for a string in empty command output or not querying which
containers are running.
This change fixes these issues.
Closes-Bug: #2002657
Change-Id: I5219cb42c48d5444943a2d48106dc338aa08fa7c
The ``[oslo_messaging_rabbit] heartbeat_in_pthread`` config option
is set to ``true`` for wsgi applications to allow the RabbitMQ
heartbeats to function. For non-wsgi applications it is set to ``false``
as it may otherwise break the service [1].
[1] https://docs.openstack.org/releasenotes/oslo.messaging/zed.html#upgrade-notes
Change-Id: Id89bd6158aff42d59040674308a8672c358ccb3c
Regularly, we experience issues in Kolla Ansible deployments because we
use wrong options in OpenStack configuration files. This is because
OpenStack services ignore unknown options. We also need to keep on top
of deprecated options that may be removed in the future. Integrating
oslo-config-validator into Kolla Ansible will greatly help.
Adds a shared role to run oslo-config-validator on each service. Takes
into account that services have multiple containers, and these may also
use multiple config files. Service roles are extended to use this shared
role. Executed with the new command ``kolla-ansible validate-config``.
Change-Id: Ic10b410fc115646d96d2ce39d9618e7c46cb3fbc
Second part of patchset:
https://review.opendev.org/c/openstack/kolla-ansible/+/799229/
in which was suggested to split patch into smaller ones.
THis change adds container_engine to module parameters
so when we introduce podman, kolla_toolbox can be used
for both engines.
Signed-off-by: Ivan Halomi <i.halomi@partner.samsung.com>
Co-authored-by: Martin Hiner <m.hiner@partner.samsung.com>
Change-Id: Ic2093aa9341a0cb36df8f340cf290d62437504ad
Second part of patchset:
https://review.opendev.org/c/openstack/kolla-ansible/+/799229/
in which was suggested to split patch into smaller ones.
This change adds container_engine variable to kolla_container_facts
module, this prepares module to be used with docker and podman as well
without further changes in roles.
Signed-off-by: Ivan Halomi <i.halomi@partner.samsung.com>
Co-authored-by: Martin Hiner <m.hiner@partner.samsung.com>
Change-Id: I9e8fa30646844ab4a288555f3aafdda345b3a118
This patch adds loadbalancer-config role
which is "wrapper" around haproxy-config
and proxysql-config role which will be added
in follow-up patches.
Change-Id: I64d41507317081e1860a94b9481a85c8d400797d
Fixes an issue where access rules failed to validate:
Cannot validate request with restricted access rules. Set
service_type in [keystone_authtoken] to allow access rule validation
I've used the values from the endpoint. This was mostly a straight
forward copy and paste, except:
- versioned endpoints e.g cinderv3 where I stripped the version
- monasca has multiple endpoints associated with a single service. For
this, I concatenated logging and monitoring to be logging-monitoring.
Closes-Bug: #1965111
Change-Id: Ic4b3ab60abad8c3dd96cd4923a67f2a8f9d195d7
Following up on [1].
The 3 variables are only introducing noise after we removed
the reliance on Keystone's admin port.
[1] I5099b08953789b280c915a6b7a22bdd4e3404076
Change-Id: I3f9dab93042799eda9174257e604fd1844684c1c
Role vars have a higher precedence than role defaults. This allows to
import default vars from another role via vars_files without overriding
project_name (see related bug for details).
Change-Id: I3d919736e53d6f3e1a70d1267cf42c8d2c0ad221
Related-Bug: #1951785
The admin interface for endpoints never had any real use, the
functionality was the same as for the public or internal endpoints,
except for Keystone. Even for Keystone with API v3 it would no longer
really be needed, but it is still being required by some libraries that
cannot be changed in order to stay backwards compatible.
Signed-off-by: Dr. Jens Harbott <harbott@osism.tech>
Change-Id: Icf3bf08deab2c445361f0a0124d87ad8b0e4e9d9
We get a nice optimisation by using a filtered loop instead
of task skipping per service with 'when'.
Partially-Implements: blueprint performance-improvements
Change-Id: I8f68100870ab90cb2d6b68a66a4c97df9ea4ff52
The auth_uri option is deprecated in favor of www_authenticate_uri and
removed in the S release. We have done it before, but we missed
cyborg.conf.
TrivialFix
Change-Id: I630f69fd346e3291d3b8c6f6870af79e65211c85
By default, Ansible injects a variable for every fact, prefixed with
ansible_. This can result in a large number of variables for each host,
which at scale can incur a performance penalty. Ansible provides a
configuration option [0] that can be set to False to prevent this
injection of facts. In this case, facts should be referenced via
ansible_facts.<fact>.
This change updates all references to Ansible facts within Kolla Ansible
from using individual fact variables to using the items in the
ansible_facts dictionary. This allows users to disable fact variable
injection in their Ansible configuration, which may provide some
performance improvement.
This change disables fact variable injection in the ansible
configuration used in CI, to catch any attempts to use the injected
variables.
[0] https://docs.ansible.com/ansible/latest/reference_appendices/config.html#inject-facts-as-vars
Change-Id: I7e9d5c9b8b9164d4aee3abb4e37c8f28d98ff5d1
Partially-Implements: blueprint performance-improvements
host -> host_ip[0]
Remove deprecated configuration notification_topics.
WARNING oslo_config.cfg [-] Deprecated: Option "notification_topics"
from group "DEFAULT" is deprecated. Use option "topics" from
group "oslo_messaging_notifications".
[0]https://docs.openstack.org/cyborg/latest/configuration/sample-config.html
Change-Id: Ia5d53fb60d34c1509c6cdb905cbd0a93dd1c8b3d
This change enables the use of Docker healthchecks for cyborg
services.
Implements: blueprint container-health-check
Change-Id: I5326b142eaa826f97c32498cd2a9a0cba65be698
This reverts commit 9cae59be51e8d2d798830042a5fd448a4aa5e7dc.
Reason for revert: This patch was found to introduce issues with fluentd customisation. The underlying issue is not currently fully understood, but could be a sign of other obscure issues.
Change-Id: Ia4859c23d85699621a3b734d6cedb70225576dfc
Closes-Bug: #1906288
Main plays are action-redirect-stubs, ideal for import_tasks.
This avoids 'include' penalty and makes logs/ara look nicer.
Fixes haproxy and rabbitmq not to check the host group as well.
Change-Id: I46136fc40b815e341befff80b54a91ef431eabc0
Partially-Implements: blueprint performance-improvements
Config plays do not need to check containers. This avoids skipping
tasks during the genconfig action.
Ironic and Glance rolling upgrades are handled specially.
Swift and Bifrost do not use the handlers at all.
Partially-Implements: blueprint performance-improvements
Change-Id: I140bf71d62e8f0932c96270d1f08940a5ba4542a
When the internal VIP is moved in the event of a failure of the active
controller, OpenStack services can become unresponsive as they try to
talk with MariaDB using connections from the SQLAlchemy pool.
It has been argued that OpenStack doesn't really need to use connection
pooling with MariaDB [1]. This commit reduces the use of connection
pooling via two configuration options:
- max_pool_size is set to 1 to allow only a single connection in the
pool (it is not possible to disable connection pooling entirely via
oslo.db, and max_pool_size = 0 means unlimited pool size)
- lower connection_recycle_time from the default of one hour to 10
seconds, which means the single connection in the pool will be
recreated regularly
These settings have shown better reactivity of the system in the event
of a failover.
[1] http://lists.openstack.org/pipermail/openstack-dev/2015-April/061808.html
Change-Id: Ib6a62d4428db9b95569314084090472870417f3d
Closes-Bug: #1896635
This change adds support for encryption of communication between
OpenStack services and RabbitMQ. Server certificates are supported, but
currently client certificates are not.
The kolla-ansible certificates command has been updated to support
generating certificates for RabbitMQ for development and testing.
RabbitMQ TLS is enabled in the all-in-one source CI jobs, or when
The Zuul 'tls_enabled' variable is true.
Change-Id: I4f1d04150fb2b5af085b762890092f87ae6076b5
Implements: blueprint message-queue-ssl-support
Including tasks has a performance penalty when compared with importing
tasks. If the include has a condition associated with it, then the
overhead of the include may be lower than the overhead of skipping all
imported tasks. In the case of the register.yml and bootstrap.yml
includes, all of the tasks in the included file use run_once: True.
The run_once flag improves performance at scale drastically, so
importing these tasks unconditionally will have a lower overhead than a
conditional include task. It therefore makes sense to switch to use
import_tasks there.
See [1] for benchmarks of run_once.
[1] https://github.com/stackhpc/ansible-scaling/blob/master/doc/run-once.md
Change-Id: Ic67631ca3ea3fb2081a6f8978e85b1522522d40d
Partially-Implements: blueprint performance-improvements
Including tasks has a performance penalty when compared with importing
tasks. If the include has a condition associated with it, then the
overhead of the include may be lower than the overhead of skipping all
imported tasks. For unconditionally included tasks, switching to
import_tasks provides a clear benefit.
Benchmarking of include vs. import is available at [1].
This change switches from include_tasks to import_tasks where there is
no condition applied to the include.
[1] https://github.com/stackhpc/ansible-scaling/blob/master/doc/include-and-import.md#task-include-and-import
Partially-Implements: blueprint performance-improvements
Change-Id: Ia45af4a198e422773d9f009c7f7b2e32ce9e3b97
The goal for this push request is to normalize the construction and use
of internal, external, and admin URLs. While extending Kolla-ansible
to enable a more flexible method to manage external URLs, we noticed
that the same URL was constructed multiple times in different parts
of the code. This can make it difficult for people that want to work
with these URLs and create inconsistencies in a large code base with
time. Therefore, we are proposing here the use of
"single Kolla-ansible variable" per endpoint URL, which facilitates
for people that are interested in overriding/extending these URLs.
As an example, we extended Kolla-ansible to facilitate the "override"
of public (external) URLs with the following standard
"<component/serviceName>.<companyBaseUrl>".
Therefore, the "NAT/redirect" in the SSL termination system (HAproxy,
HTTPD or some other) is done via the service name, and not by the port.
This allows operators to easily and automatically create more friendly
URL names. To develop this feature, we first applied this patch that
we are sending now to the community. We did that to reduce the surface
of changes in Kolla-ansible.
Another example is the integration of Kolla-ansible and Consul, which
we also implemented internally, and also requires URLs changes.
Therefore, this PR is essential to reduce code duplicity, and to
facility users/developers to work/customize the services URLs.
Change-Id: I73d483e01476e779a5155b2e18dd5ea25f514e93
Signed-off-by: Rafael Weingärtner <rafael@apache.org>
Previously we mounted /etc/timezone if the kolla_base_distro is debian
or ubuntu. This would fail prechecks if debian or ubuntu images were
deployed on CentOS. While this is not a supported combination, for
correctness we should fix the condition to reference the host OS rather
than the container OS, since that is where the /etc/timezone file is
located.
Change-Id: Ifc252ae793e6974356fcdca810b373f362d24ba5
Closes-Bug: #1882553
Including tasks has a performance penalty when compared with importing
tasks. If the include has a condition associated with it, then the
overhead of the include may be lower than the overhead of skipping all
imported tasks. In the case of the check-containers.yml include, the
included file only has a single task, so the overhead of skipping this
task will not be greater than the overhead of the task import. It
therefore makes sense to switch to use import_tasks there.
Partially-Implements: blueprint performance-improvements
Change-Id: I65d911670649960708b9f6a4c110d1a7df1ad8f7
The common role was previously added as a dependency to all other roles.
It would set a fact after running on a host to avoid running twice. This
had the nice effect that deploying any service would automatically pull
in the common services for that host. When using tags, any services with
matching tags would also run the common role. This could be both
surprising and sometimes useful.
When using Ansible at large scale, there is a penalty associated with
executing a task against a large number of hosts, even if it is skipped.
The common role introduces some overhead, just in determining that it
has already run.
This change extracts the common role into a separate play, and removes
the dependency on it from all other roles. New groups have been added
for cron, fluentd, and kolla-toolbox, similar to other services. This
changes the behaviour in the following ways:
* The common role is now run for all hosts at the beginning, rather than
prior to their first enabled service
* Hosts must be in the necessary group for each of the common services
in order to have that service deployed. This is mostly to avoid
deploying on localhost or the deployment host
* If tags are specified for another service e.g. nova, the common role
will *not* automatically run for matching hosts. The common tag must
be specified explicitly
The last of these is probably the largest behaviour change. While it
would be possible to determine which hosts should automatically run the
common role, it would be quite complex, and would introduce some
overhead that would probably negate the benefit of splitting out the
common role.
Partially-Implements: blueprint performance-improvements
Change-Id: I6a4676bf6efeebc61383ec7a406db07c7a868b2a
There are a number of tasks where we conditionally use include_tasks
with a condition, and the condition is always true. This change removes
these conditions, in preparation for switching unconditional task
includes to task imports.
Partially-Implements: blueprint performance-improvements
Change-Id: I3804c440fe3552950d9d434ef5409f685c39bbcf
non-root user has no permission to create directory under /opt
directory. use "become: true" to resolve it.
Change-Id: I155efc4b1e0691da0aaf6ef19ca709e9dc2d9168