openstack-manuals/doc/common/get_started_logical_architecture.rst
chen-xing 5a56683f8d [admin-guide]fix the size of the architecture diagram
Change-Id: I4f5b10529fd40252f2af2382e2361950b5e686a9
Closes-Bug: #1557968
2016-03-18 10:47:21 +08:00

1.7 KiB

Logical architecture

To design, deploy, and configure OpenStack, administrators must understand the logical architecture.

As shown in get_started_conceptual_architecture, OpenStack consists of several independent parts, named the OpenStack services. All services authenticate through a common Identity service. Individual services interact with each other through public APIs, except where privileged administrator commands are necessary.

Internally, OpenStack services are composed of several processes. All services have at least one API process, which listens for API requests, preprocesses them and passes them on to other parts of the service. With the exception of the Identity service, the actual work is done by distinct processes.

For communication between the processes of one service, an AMQP message broker is used. The service's state is stored in a database. When deploying and configuring your OpenStack cloud, you can choose among several message broker and database solutions, such as RabbitMQ, Qpid, MySQL, MariaDB, and SQLite.

Users can access OpenStack via the web-based user interface implemented by the get_started_dashboard, via command-line clients and by issuing API requests through tools like browser plug-ins or curl. For applications, several SDKs are available. Ultimately, all these access methods issue REST API calls to the various OpenStack services.

The following diagram shows the most common, but not the only possible, architecture for an OpenStack cloud:

Logical architecture