Book Image

OpenStack Essentials - Second Edition

By : Dan Radez
Book Image

OpenStack Essentials - Second Edition

By: Dan Radez

Overview of this book

OpenStack is a widely popular platform for cloud computing. Applications that are built for this platform are resilient to failure and convenient to scale. This book, an update to our extremely popular OpenStack Essentials (published in May 2015) will help you master not only the essential bits, but will also examine the new features of the latest OpenStack release - Mitaka; showcasing how to put them to work straight away. This book begins with the installation and demonstration of the architecture. This book will tech you the core 8 topics of OpenStack. They are Keystone for Identity Management, Glance for Image management, Neutron for network management, Nova for instance management, Cinder for Block storage, Swift for Object storage, Ceilometer for Telemetry and Heat for Orchestration. Further more you will learn about launching and configuring Docker containers and also about scaling them horizontally. You will also learn about monitoring and Troubleshooting OpenStack.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
OpenStack Essentials Second Edition
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Ceph setup


Triple-O has built-in support to deploy a Ceph cluster and use it as the primary backing store for Cinder and for Glance. In Chapter 1, RDO Installation, there was a ceph parameter and a storage environment file that were passed to the overcloud deployment command. They set up Ceph as the backing store for your Triple-O deployment. If you left those two options out of the deployment command, Triple-O would default back to LVM as the backing store for Cinder.

GlusterFS setup

This demonstration shows an example starting with an LVM-configured backing store. If you would like to do this example, you will need to start with a deployment that has LVM configured and not Ceph.

Conveniently enough, a simple GlusterFS installation is not extremely complicated to set up. Assume three rpm-based Linux nodes named gluster1, gluster2, and gluster3 with an sdb drive attached for use by a GlusterFS storage cluster. The file system XFS is recommended although an ext4 file system will work fine in...