Book Image

Extending OpenStack

By : Omar Khedher
Book Image

Extending OpenStack

By: Omar Khedher

Overview of this book

OpenStack is a very popular cloud computing platform that has enabled several organizations during the last few years to successfully implement their Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) platforms. This book will guide you through new features of the latest OpenStack releases and how to bring them into production straightaway in an agile way. It starts by showing you how to expand your current OpenStack setup and how to approach your next OpenStack Data Center generation deployment. You will discover how to extend your storage and network capacity and also take advantage of containerization technology such as Docker and Kubernetes in OpenStack. Additionally, you'll explore the power of big data as a Service terminology implemented in OpenStack by integrating the Sahara project. This book will teach you how to build Hadoop clusters and launch jobs in a very simple way. Then you'll automate and deploy applications on top of OpenStack. You will discover how to write your own plugin in the Murano project. The final part of the book will go through best practices for security such as identity, access management, and authentication exposed by Keystone in OpenStack. By the end of this book, you will be ready to extend and customize your private cloud based on your requirements.
Table of Contents (12 chapters)

Decomposing the compute power

The compute service in Nova is considered to be the core component of OpenStack. Understanding how to scale out the workload among several identical compute nodes might require to briefly revisit the building blocks of Nova:

  • nova-compute: This runs on the compute node as described in Chapter 1, Inflating the OpenStack Setup. It is responsible for communicating with the hypervisors. Nova-compute interacts with each hypervisor by means of drivers. It creates compute resources by picking up requests from the message queue.
  • nova-scheduler: This runs on the cloud controller as described in Chapter 1, Inflating the OpenStack Setup. It is responsible for finding the right placement (physical server) of the initiated request to create a VM. The request will be left in the message queue along with additional information regarding the server information where...