Configuration

local.conf

DevStack configuration is modified via the file local.conf. It is a modified INI format file that introduces a meta-section header to carry additional information regarding the configuration files to be changed.

A sample is provided in devstack/samples

The new header is similar to a normal INI section header but with double brackets ([[ ... ]]) and two internal fields separated by a pipe (|). Note that there are no spaces between the double brackets and the internal fields. Likewise, there are no spaces between the pipe and the internal fields:

'[[' <phase> '|' <config-file-name> ']]'

where <phase> is one of a set of phase names defined by stack.sh and <config-file-name> is the configuration filename. The filename is eval’ed in the stack.sh context so all environment variables are available and may be used. Using the project config file variables in the header is strongly suggested (see the NOVA_CONF example below). If the path of the config file does not exist it is skipped.

The defined phases are:

  • local - extracts localrc from local.conf before stackrc is sourced

  • post-config - runs after the layer 2 services are configured and before they are started

  • extra - runs after services are started and before any files in extra.d are executed

  • post-extra - runs after files in extra.d are executed

  • test-config - runs after tempest (and plugins) are configured

The file is processed strictly in sequence; meta-sections may be specified more than once but if any settings are duplicated the last to appear in the file will be used.

[[post-config|$NOVA_CONF]]
[DEFAULT]
use_syslog = True

[osapi_v3]
enabled = False

A specific meta-section local|localrc is used to provide a default localrc file (actually .localrc.auto). This allows all custom settings for DevStack to be contained in a single file. If localrc exists it will be used instead to preserve backward-compatibility.

[[local|localrc]]
IPV4_ADDRS_SAFE_TO_USE=10.254.1.0/24
ADMIN_PASSWORD=speciale
LOGFILE=$DEST/logs/stack.sh.log

Note that Q_PLUGIN_CONF_FILE is unique in that it is assumed to NOT start with a / (slash) character. A slash will need to be added:

[[post-config|/$Q_PLUGIN_CONF_FILE]]

Also note that the localrc section is sourced as a shell script fragment and MUST conform to the shell requirements, specifically no whitespace around = (equals).

openrc

openrc configures login credentials suitable for use with the OpenStack command-line tools. openrc sources stackrc at the beginning (which in turn sources the localrc section of local.conf) in order to pick up HOST_IP and/or SERVICE_HOST to use in the endpoints. The values shown below are the default values.

OS_PROJECT_NAME (OS_TENANT_NAME)

Keystone has standardized the term project as the entity that owns resources. In some places references still exist to the previous term tenant for this use. Also, project_name is preferred to project_id. OS_TENANT_NAME remains supported for compatibility with older tools.

OS_PROJECT_NAME=demo
OS_USERNAME

In addition to the owning entity (project), OpenStack calls the entity performing the action user.

OS_USERNAME=demo
OS_PASSWORD

Keystone’s default authentication requires a password be provided. The usual cautions about putting passwords in environment variables apply, for most DevStack uses this may be an acceptable tradeoff.

OS_PASSWORD=secret
HOST_IP, SERVICE_HOST

Set API endpoint host using HOST_IP. SERVICE_HOST may also be used to specify the endpoint, which is convenient for some local.conf configurations. Typically, HOST_IP is set in the localrc section.

HOST_IP=127.0.0.1
SERVICE_HOST=$HOST_IP
OS_AUTH_URL

Authenticating against an OpenStack cloud using Keystone returns a Token and Service Catalog. The catalog contains the endpoints for all services the user/tenant has access to - including Nova, Glance, Keystone and Swift.

OS_AUTH_URL=http://$SERVICE_HOST:5000/v3.0
KEYSTONECLIENT_DEBUG, NOVACLIENT_DEBUG

Set command-line client log level to DEBUG. These are commented out by default.

# export KEYSTONECLIENT_DEBUG=1
# export NOVACLIENT_DEBUG=1

Minimal Configuration

While stack.sh is happy to run without a localrc section in local.conf, devlife is better when there are a few minimal variables set. This is an example of a minimal configuration that touches the values that most often need to be set.

  • no logging

  • pre-set the passwords to prevent interactive prompts

  • move network ranges away from the local network (IPV4_ADDRS_SAFE_TO_USE and FLOATING_RANGE, commented out below)

  • set the host IP if detection is unreliable (HOST_IP, commented out below)

[[local|localrc]]
ADMIN_PASSWORD=secret
DATABASE_PASSWORD=$ADMIN_PASSWORD
RABBIT_PASSWORD=$ADMIN_PASSWORD
SERVICE_PASSWORD=$ADMIN_PASSWORD
#IPV4_ADDRS_SAFE_TO_USE=172.31.1.0/24
#FLOATING_RANGE=192.168.20.0/25
#HOST_IP=10.3.4.5

If the *_PASSWORD variables are not set here you will be prompted to enter values for them by stack.sh.

Warning

Only use alphanumeric characters in your passwords, as some services fail to work when using special characters.

The network ranges must not overlap with any networks in use on the host. Overlap is not uncommon as RFC-1918 ‘private’ ranges are commonly used for both the local networking and Nova’s fixed and floating ranges.

HOST_IP is normally detected on the first run of stack.sh but often is indeterminate on later runs due to the IP being moved from an Ethernet interface to a bridge on the host. Setting it here also makes it available for openrc to set OS_AUTH_URL. HOST_IP is not set by default.

HOST_IPV6 is normally detected on the first run of stack.sh but will not be set if there is no IPv6 address on the default Ethernet interface. Setting it here also makes it available for openrc to set OS_AUTH_URL. HOST_IPV6 is not set by default.

For architecture specific configurations which differ from the x86 default here, see arch-configuration.

Historical Notes

Historically DevStack obtained all local configuration and customizations from a localrc file. In Oct 2013 the local.conf configuration method was introduced (in review 46768) to simplify this process.

Configuration Notes

Service Repos

The Git repositories used to check out the source for each service are controlled by a pair of variables set for each service. *_REPO points to the repository and *_BRANCH selects which branch to check out. These may be overridden in local.conf to pull source from a different repo for testing, such as a Gerrit branch proposal. GIT_BASE points to the primary repository server.

NOVA_REPO=$GIT_BASE/openstack/nova.git
NOVA_BRANCH=master

To pull a branch directly from Gerrit, get the repo and branch from the Gerrit review page:

git fetch https://review.opendev.org/openstack/nova \
    refs/changes/50/5050/1 && git checkout FETCH_HEAD

The repo is the stanza following fetch and the branch is the stanza following that:

NOVA_REPO=https://review.opendev.org/openstack/nova
NOVA_BRANCH=refs/changes/50/5050/1

Installation Directory

The DevStack install directory is set by the DEST variable. By default it is /opt/stack.

By setting it early in the localrc section you can reference it in later variables. It can be useful to set it even though it is not changed from the default value.

DEST=/opt/stack

Logging

Enable Logging

By default stack.sh output is only written to the console where it runs. It can be sent to a file in addition to the console by setting LOGFILE to the fully-qualified name of the destination log file. A timestamp will be appended to the given filename for each run of stack.sh.

LOGFILE=$DEST/logs/stack.sh.log

Old log files are cleaned automatically if LOGDAYS is set to the number of days of old log files to keep.

LOGDAYS=2

Some coloring is used during the DevStack runs to make it easier to see what is going on. This can be disabled with:

LOG_COLOR=False

When using the logfile, by default logs are sent to the console and the file. You can set VERBOSE to false if you only wish the logs to be sent to the file (this may avoid having double-logging in some cases where you are capturing the script output and the log files). If VERBOSE is true you can additionally set VERBOSE_NO_TIMESTAMP to avoid timestamps being added to each output line sent to the console. This can be useful in some situations where the console output is being captured by a runner or framework (e.g. Ansible) that adds its own timestamps. Note that the log lines sent to the LOGFILE will still be prefixed with a timestamp.

Logging the Service Output

By default, services run under systemd and are natively logging to the systemd journal.

To query the logs use the journalctl command, such as:

sudo journalctl --unit devstack@*

More examples can be found in Querying Logs.

Example Logging Configuration

For example, non-interactive installs probably wish to save output to a file, keep service logs and disable color in the stored files.

[[local|localrc]]
DEST=/opt/stack/
LOGFILE=$DEST/stack.sh.log
LOG_COLOR=False

Database Backend

Multiple database backends are available. The available databases are defined in the lib/databases directory. mysql is the default database, choose a different one by putting the following in the localrc section:

disable_service mysql
enable_service postgresql

mysql is the default database.

RPC Backend

Support for a RabbitMQ RPC backend is included. Additional RPC backends may be available via external plugins. Enabling or disabling RabbitMQ is handled via the usual service functions and ENABLED_SERVICES.

Example disabling RabbitMQ in local.conf:

disable_service rabbit

Apache Frontend

The Apache web server is enabled for services that support via WSGI. Today this means HTTPD and uWSGI but historically this meant HTTPD + mod_wsgi. This historical legacy is captured by the naming of many variables, which include MOD_WSGI rather than UWSGI.

Some services support alternative deployment strategies (e.g. eventlet). You can enable these ENABLE_HTTPD_MOD_WSGI_SERVICES to False in your local.conf. In addition, each service that can be run under HTTPD + mod_wsgi also has an override toggle available that can be set in your local.conf. These are, however, slowly being removed as services have adopted standardized deployment mechanisms and more generally moved away from eventlet.

Example (Swift):

SWIFT_USE_MOD_WSGI="True"

Example (Heat):

HEAT_USE_MOD_WSGI="True"

Libraries from Git

By default devstack installs OpenStack server components from git, however it installs client libraries from released versions on pypi. This is appropriate if you are working on server development, but if you want to see how an unreleased version of the client affects the system you can have devstack install it from upstream, or from local git trees by specifying it in LIBS_FROM_GIT. Multiple libraries can be specified as a comma separated list.

LIBS_FROM_GIT=python-keystoneclient,oslo.config

Setting the variable to ALL will activate the download for all libraries.

Virtual Environments

Enable the use of Python virtual environments by setting USE_VENV to True. This will enable the creation of venvs for each project that is defined in the PROJECT_VENV array.

Each entry in the PROJECT_VENV array contains the directory name of a venv to be used for the project. The array index is the project name. Multiple projects can use the same venv if desired.

PROJECT_VENV["glance"]=${GLANCE_DIR}.venv

ADDITIONAL_VENV_PACKAGES is a comma-separated list of additional packages to be installed into each venv. Often projects will not have certain packages listed in its requirements.txt file because they are ‘optional’ requirements, i.e. only needed for certain configurations. By default, the enabled databases will have their Python bindings added when they are enabled.

ADDITIONAL_VENV_PACKAGES="python-foo, python-bar"

A clean install every time

By default stack.sh only clones the project repos if they do not exist in $DEST. stack.sh will freshen each repo on each run if RECLONE is set to yes. This avoids having to manually remove repos in order to get the current branch from $GIT_BASE.

RECLONE=yes

Upgrade packages installed by pip

By default stack.sh only installs Python packages if no version is currently installed or the current version does not match a specified requirement. If PIP_UPGRADE is set to True then existing required Python packages will be upgraded to the most recent version that matches requirements.

PIP_UPGRADE=True

Guest Images

Images provided in URLS via the comma-separated IMAGE_URLS variable will be downloaded and uploaded to glance by DevStack.

Default guest-images are predefined for each type of hypervisor and their testing-requirements in stack.sh. Setting DOWNLOAD_DEFAULT_IMAGES=False will prevent DevStack downloading these default images; in that case, you will want to populate IMAGE_URLS with sufficient images to satisfy testing-requirements.

DOWNLOAD_DEFAULT_IMAGES=False
IMAGE_URLS="http://foo.bar.com/image.qcow,"
IMAGE_URLS+="http://foo.bar.com/image2.qcow"

Instance Type

DEFAULT_INSTANCE_TYPE can be used to configure the default instance type. When this parameter is not specified, Devstack creates additional micro & nano flavors for really small instances to run Tempest tests.

For guests with larger memory requirements, DEFAULT_INSTANCE_TYPE should be specified in the configuration file so Tempest selects the default flavors instead.

KVM on Power with QEMU 2.4 requires 512 MB to load the firmware - QEMU 2.4 - PowerPC so users running instances on ppc64/ppc64le can choose one of the default created flavors as follows:

DEFAULT_INSTANCE_TYPE=m1.tiny

IP Version

IP_VERSION can be used to configure Neutron to create either an IPv4, IPv6, or dual-stack self-service project data-network by with either IP_VERSION=4, IP_VERSION=6, or IP_VERSION=4+6 respectively.

IP_VERSION=4+6

The following optional variables can be used to alter the default IPv6 behavior:

IPV6_RA_MODE=slaac
IPV6_ADDRESS_MODE=slaac
IPV6_ADDRS_SAFE_TO_USE=fd$IPV6_GLOBAL_ID::/56
IPV6_PRIVATE_NETWORK_GATEWAY=fd$IPV6_GLOBAL_ID::1

Note: IPV6_ADDRS_SAFE_TO_USE and IPV6_PRIVATE_NETWORK_GATEWAY can be configured with any valid IPv6 prefix. The default values make use of an auto-generated IPV6_GLOBAL_ID to comply with RFC4193.

Service IP Version

DevStack can enable service operation over either IPv4 or IPv6 by setting SERVICE_IP_VERSION to either SERVICE_IP_VERSION=4 or SERVICE_IP_VERSION=6 respectively.

When set to 4 devstack services will open listen sockets on 0.0.0.0 and service endpoints will be registered using HOST_IP as the address.

When set to 6 devstack services will open listen sockets on :: and service endpoints will be registered using HOST_IPV6 as the address.

The default value for this setting is 4. Dual-mode support, for example 4+6 is not currently supported. HOST_IPV6 can optionally be used to alter the default IPv6 address:

HOST_IPV6=${some_local_ipv6_address}

Tunnel IP Version

DevStack can enable tunnel operation over either IPv4 or IPv6 by setting TUNNEL_IP_VERSION to either TUNNEL_IP_VERSION=4 or TUNNEL_IP_VERSION=6 respectively.

When set to 4 Neutron will use an IPv4 address for tunnel endpoints, for example, HOST_IP.

When set to 6 Neutron will use an IPv6 address for tunnel endpoints, for example, HOST_IPV6.

The default value for this setting is 4. Dual-mode support, for example 4+6 is not supported, as this value must match the address family of the local tunnel endpoint IP(v6) address.

The value of TUNNEL_IP_VERSION has a direct relationship to the setting of TUNNEL_ENDPOINT_IP, which will default to HOST_IP when set to 4, and HOST_IPV6 when set to 6.

Multi-node setup

See the multi-node lab guide

Projects

Neutron

See the neutron configuration guide for details on configuration of Neutron

Swift

Swift is disabled by default. When enabled, it is configured with only one replica to avoid being IO/memory intensive on a small VM.

If you would like to enable Swift you can add this to your localrc section:

enable_service s-proxy s-object s-container s-account

If you want a minimal Swift install with only Swift and Keystone you can have this instead in your localrc section:

disable_all_services
enable_service key mysql s-proxy s-object s-container s-account

If you only want to do some testing of a real normal swift cluster with multiple replicas you can do so by customizing the variable SWIFT_REPLICAS in your localrc section (usually to 3).

You can manually override the ring building to use specific storage nodes, for example when you want to test a multinode environment. In this case you have to set a space-separated list of IPs in SWIFT_STORAGE_IPS in your localrc section that should be used as Swift storage nodes. Please note that this does not create a multinode setup, it is only used when adding nodes to the Swift rings.

SWIFT_STORAGE_IPS="192.168.1.10 192.168.1.11 192.168.1.12"
Swift S3

If you are enabling s3api in ENABLED_SERVICES DevStack will install the s3api middleware emulation. Swift will be configured to act as a S3 endpoint for Keystone so effectively replacing the nova-objectstore.

Only Swift proxy server is launched in the systemd system all other services are started in background and managed by swift-init tool.

Tempest

If tempest has been successfully configured, a basic set of smoke tests can be run as follows:

$ cd /opt/stack/tempest
$ tox -e smoke

By default tempest is downloaded and the config file is generated, but the tempest package is not installed in the system’s global site-packages (the package install includes installing dependences). So tempest won’t run outside of tox. If you would like to install it add the following to your localrc section:

INSTALL_TEMPEST=True

Cinder

The logical volume group used to hold the Cinder-managed volumes is set by VOLUME_GROUP_NAME, the logical volume name prefix is set with VOLUME_NAME_PREFIX and the size of the volume backing file is set with VOLUME_BACKING_FILE_SIZE.

VOLUME_GROUP_NAME="stack-volumes"
VOLUME_NAME_PREFIX="volume-"
VOLUME_BACKING_FILE_SIZE=24G

When running highly concurrent tests, the default per-project quotas for volumes, backups, or snapshots may be too small. These can be adjusted by setting CINDER_QUOTA_VOLUMES, CINDER_QUOTA_BACKUPS, or CINDER_QUOTA_SNAPSHOTS to the desired value. (The default for each is 10.)

DevStack’s Cinder LVM configuration module currently supports both iSCSI and NVMe connections, and we can choose which one to use with options CINDER_TARGET_HELPER, CINDER_TARGET_PROTOCOL, CINDER_TARGET_PREFIX, and CINDER_TARGET_PORT.

Defaults use iSCSI with the LIO target manager:

CINDER_TARGET_HELPER="lioadm"
CINDER_TARGET_PROTOCOL="iscsi"
CINDER_TARGET_PREFIX="iqn.2010-10.org.openstack:"
CINDER_TARGET_PORT=3260

Additionally there are 3 supported transport protocols for NVMe, nvmet_rdma, nvmet_tcp, and nvmet_fc, and when the nvmet target is selected the protocol, prefix, and port defaults will change to more sensible defaults for NVMe:

CINDER_TARGET_HELPER="nvmet"
CINDER_TARGET_PROTOCOL="nvmet_rdma"
CINDER_TARGET_PREFIX="nvme-subsystem-1"
CINDER_TARGET_PORT=4420

When selecting the RDMA transport protocol DevStack will create on Cinder nodes a Software RoCE device on top of the HOST_IP_IFACE and if it is not defined then on top of the interface with IP address HOST_IP or HOST_IPV6.

This Soft-RoCE device will always be created on the Nova compute side since we cannot tell beforehand whether there will be an RDMA connection or not.

Keystone

Multi-Region Setup

We want to setup two devstack (RegionOne and RegionTwo) with shared keystone (same users and services) and horizon. Keystone and Horizon will be located in RegionOne. Full spec is available at: https://wiki.openstack.org/wiki/Heat/Blueprints/Multi_Region_Support_for_Heat.

In RegionOne:

REGION_NAME=RegionOne

In RegionTwo:

disable_service horizon
KEYSTONE_SERVICE_HOST=<KEYSTONE_IP_ADDRESS_FROM_REGION_ONE>
REGION_NAME=RegionTwo
KEYSTONE_REGION_NAME=RegionOne

In the devstack for RegionOne, we set REGION_NAME as RegionOne, so region of the services started in this devstack are registered as RegionOne. In devstack for RegionTwo, similarly, we set REGION_NAME as RegionTwo since we want services started in this devstack to be registered in RegionTwo. But Keystone service is started and registered in RegionOne, not RegionTwo, so we use KEYSTONE_REGION_NAME to specify the region of Keystone service. KEYSTONE_REGION_NAME has a default value the same as REGION_NAME thus we omit it in the configuration of RegionOne.

Glance

The default image size quota of 1GiB may be too small if larger images are to be used. Change the default at setup time with:

GLANCE_LIMIT_IMAGE_SIZE_TOTAL=5000

or at runtime via:

openstack --os-cloud devstack-system-admin registered limit set \
  --service glance --default-limit 5000 --region RegionOne image_size_total

Architectures

The upstream CI runs exclusively on nodes with x86 architectures, but OpenStack supports even more architectures. Some of them need to configure Devstack in a certain way.

KVM on s390x (IBM z Systems)

KVM on s390x (IBM z Systems) is supported since the Kilo release. For an all-in-one setup, these minimal settings in the local.conf file are needed:

[[local|localrc]]
ADMIN_PASSWORD=secret
DATABASE_PASSWORD=$ADMIN_PASSWORD
RABBIT_PASSWORD=$ADMIN_PASSWORD
SERVICE_PASSWORD=$ADMIN_PASSWORD

DOWNLOAD_DEFAULT_IMAGES=False
IMAGE_URLS="https://cloud-images.ubuntu.com/xenial/current/xenial-server-cloudimg-s390x-disk1.img"

# Provide a custom etcd3 binary download URL and ints sha256.
# The binary must be located under '/<etcd version>/etcd-<etcd-version>-linux-s390x.tar.gz'
# on this URL.
# Build instructions for etcd3: https://github.com/linux-on-ibm-z/docs/wiki/Building-etcd
ETCD_DOWNLOAD_URL=<your-etcd-download-url>
ETCD_SHA256=<your-etcd3-sha256>

enable_service n-sproxy
disable_service n-novnc

[[post-config|$NOVA_CONF]]

[serial_console]
base_url=ws://$HOST_IP:6083/  # optional

Reasoning:

  • The default image of Devstack is x86 only, so we deactivate the download with DOWNLOAD_DEFAULT_IMAGES. The referenced guest image in the code above (IMAGE_URLS) serves as an example. The list of possible s390x guest images is not limited to that.

  • This platform doesn’t support a graphical console like VNC or SPICE. The technical reason is the missing framebuffer on the platform. This means we rely on the substitute feature serial console which needs the proxy service n-sproxy. We also disable VNC’s proxy n-novnc for that reason . The configuration in the post-config section is only needed if you want to use the serial console outside of the all-in-one setup.

  • A link to an etcd3 binary and its sha256 needs to be provided as the binary for s390x is not hosted on github like it is for other architectures. For more details see https://bugs.launchpad.net/devstack/+bug/1693192. Etcd3 can easily be built along https://github.com/linux-on-ibm-z/docs/wiki/Building-etcd.

Note

To run Tempest against this Devstack all-in-one, you’ll need to use a guest image which is smaller than 1GB when uncompressed. The example image from above is bigger than that!