Tag support was extended to all resources that support the std attr mechanism. This patch handles a few remaining updates in the docs. This one is also a candidate for backport to pike if warranted. Change-Id: I7dfc7a371e6af64dde09c0e712424b8e647d7027 Closes-Bug: #1706307
7.5 KiB
Add VRRP to an existing router
This section describes the process of migrating from a classic router to an L3 HA router, which is available starting from the Mitaka release.
Similar to the classic scenario, all network traffic on a project network that requires routing actively traverses only one network node regardless of the quantity of network nodes providing HA for the router. Therefore, this high-availability implementation primarily addresses failure situations instead of bandwidth constraints that limit performance. However, it supports random distribution of routers on different network nodes to reduce the chances of bandwidth constraints and to improve scaling.
This section references parts of deploy-lb-ha-vrrp
and deploy-ovs-ha-vrrp
. For details regarding needed
infrastructure and configuration to allow actual L3 HA deployment, read
the relevant guide before continuing with the migration process.
Migration
The migration process is quite simple, it involves turning down the
router by setting the router's admin_state_up
attribute to
False
, upgrading the router to L3 HA and then setting the
router's admin_state_up
attribute back to
True
.
Warning
Once starting the migration, south-north connections (instances to internet) will be severed. New connections will be able to start only when the migration is complete.
Here is the router we have used in our demonstration:
$ openstack router show router1
+-------------------------+-------------------------------------------+
| Field | Value |
+-------------------------+-------------------------------------------+
| admin_state_up | UP |
| distributed | False |
| external_gateway_info | |
| ha | False |
| id | 6b793b46-d082-4fd5-980f-a6f80cbb0f2a |
| name | router1 |
| project_id | bb8b84ab75be4e19bd0dfe02f6c3f5c1 |
| routes | |
| status | ACTIVE |
| tags | [] |
+-------------------------+-------------------------------------------+
Source the administrative project credentials.
Set the admin_state_up to
False
. This will severe south-north connections until admin_state_up is set toTrue
again.$ openstack router set router1 --disable
Set the
ha
attribute of the router toTrue
.$ openstack router set router1 --ha
Set the admin_state_up to
True
. After this, south-north connections can start.$ openstack router set router1 --enable
Make sure that the router's
ha
attribute has changed toTrue
.$ openstack router show router1 +-------------------------+-------------------------------------------+ | Field | Value | +-------------------------+-------------------------------------------+ | admin_state_up | UP | | distributed | False | | external_gateway_info | | | ha | True | | id | 6b793b46-d082-4fd5-980f-a6f80cbb0f2a | | name | router1 | | project_id | bb8b84ab75be4e19bd0dfe02f6c3f5c1 | | routes | | | status | ACTIVE | | tags | [] | +-------------------------+-------------------------------------------+
L3 HA to Legacy
To return to classic mode, turn down the router again, turning off L3 HA and starting the router again.
Warning
Once starting the migration, south-north connections (instances to internet) will be severed. New connections will be able to start only when the migration is complete.
Here is the router we have used in our demonstration:
$ openstack router show router1
+-------------------------+-------------------------------------------+
| Field | Value |
+-------------------------+-------------------------------------------+
| admin_state_up | DOWN |
| distributed | False |
| external_gateway_info | |
| ha | True |
| id | 6b793b46-d082-4fd5-980f-a6f80cbb0f2a |
| name | router1 |
| project_id | bb8b84ab75be4e19bd0dfe02f6c3f5c1 |
| routes | |
| status | ACTIVE |
| tags | [] |
+-------------------------+-------------------------------------------+
Source the administrative project credentials.
Set the admin_state_up to
False
. This will severe south-north connections until admin_state_up is set toTrue
again.$ openstack router set router1 --disable
Set the
ha
attribute of the router toTrue
.$ openstack router set router1 --no-ha
Set the admin_state_up to
True
. After this, south-north connections can start.$ openstack router set router1 --enable
Make sure that the router's
ha
attribute has changed toFalse
.$ openstack router show router1 +-------------------------+-------------------------------------------+ | Field | Value | +-------------------------+-------------------------------------------+ | admin_state_up | UP | | distributed | False | | external_gateway_info | | | ha | False | | id | 6b793b46-d082-4fd5-980f-a6f80cbb0f2a | | name | router1 | | project_id | bb8b84ab75be4e19bd0dfe02f6c3f5c1 | | routes | | | status | ACTIVE | | tags | [] | +-------------------------+-------------------------------------------+