Book Image

OpenStack Administration with Ansible

By : Walter Bentley
Book Image

OpenStack Administration with Ansible

By: Walter Bentley

Overview of this book

Most organizations are seeking methods to improve business agility because they have realized just having a cloud is not enough. Being able to improve application deployments, reduce infrastructure downtime, and eliminate daily manual tasks can only be accomplished through some sort of automation. Packed with real-world OpenStack administrative tasks, this book will walk you through working examples and explain how these tasks can be automated using one of the most popular open source automation tools—Ansible. We will start with a brief overview of OpenStack and Ansible and highlight some best practices. Each chapter will provide an introduction to handling various Cloud Operator administration tasks such as creating multiple users/tenants, setting up Multi-Tenant Isolation, customizing your clouds quotas, taking instance snapshots, evacuating compute hosts for maintenance, and running cloud health checks, and a step-by-step tutorial on how to automate these tasks with Ansible.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
OpenStack Administration with Ansible
Credits
About the Author
Acknowledgments
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Ansible overview


Ansible in its simplest form has been described as a Python-based open source IT automation tool that can be used to configure\manage systems, deploy software (or almost anything), and provide orchestration to a process. These are just a few of the many possible use cases for Ansible. In my previous life, as a production support infrastructure engineer, I wish such a tool existed, so that I could have had much more sleep and a lot less grey hair.

One thing that always stood out to me in regards to Ansible is that the developer's first and foremost goal was to create a tool that offers simplicity and maximum ease of use. In a world filled with complicated and intricate software, keeping it simple goes a long way for most IT professionals.

Sticking to the goal of keeping things simple, Ansible handles configuration/management of hosts solely through Secure Shell (SSH) and absolutely no daemon or agent is required; the server or workstation where you run the playbooks from only...