blob: 4183931ea149fa39b438f700205f2a9b2d571dd5 [file] [log] [blame]
.. Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one
or more contributor license agreements. See the NOTICE file
distributed with this work for additional information
regarding copyright ownership. The ASF licenses this file
to you under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the
"License"); you may not use this file except in compliance
with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing,
software distributed under the License is distributed on an
"AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY
KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the
specific language governing permissions and limitations
under the License.
Quick Installation Guide
========================
Overview
--------
What exactly are we building?
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Infrastructure-as-a-Service (IaaS) clouds can be a complex thing to build, and
by definition they have a plethora of options, which often lead to confusion
for even experienced admins who are newcomers to building cloud platforms. The
goal for this runbook is to provide a straightforward set of instructions to
get you up and running with CloudStack with a minimum amount of trouble.
.. warning::
This guide is meant to be used to build CloudStack test/demo cloud only,
as certain networking choices have been made to get you up and running with
minimal amount of time. This guide can NOT be used for production setup.
.. warning::
In case you don't have physical server to "play with", you can use e.g. Oracle VirtualBox 6.1+.
The requirement is that you enable "Enable Nested VT-x/AMD-V" as the Extended Feature on the System page of the Settings of the VM.
You will want to create a VM of "Red Hat (64-bit)" type and 40+GB disk space.
You will need to have 1 NIC in your VM, bridged to the NIC of your laptop/desktop
(wifi or wired NIC, doesn't matter), and optimally to set Adapter Type="Paravirtualized Network (virtio-net)"
for somewhat better network performance (Settings of VM, Network section, Adapter1,
expand "Advanced"). Make sure the NIC on your VM is configured as promiscuous (in VirtualBox,
choose "Allow All" or just "Allow VMs" as the Promiscuous Mode), so that it can pass traffic from
CloudStack's system VMs to the gateway. Also, make sure you have allowed enough ram (6G+) and
enough CPU cores (3+) for demo purposes.
High level overview of the process
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
This guide will focus on building a CloudStack cloud using KVM on CentOS
7.9 with NFS storage and layer-2 isolation using VLANs,
(flat home network can be used for this as well) and on a single piece of
hardware (server/VM)
KVM, or Kernel-based Virtual Machine is a virtualization technology for the
Linux kernel. KVM supports native virtualization atop processors with hardware
virtualization extensions.
Prerequisites
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
To complete this guide you'll need the following items:
#. At least one computer which supports and has enabled hardware virtualization.
#. An `CentOS 7.9 minimal x86_64 install ISO, on bootable media
<http://isoredirect.centos.org/centos/7/isos/x86_64/>`_
#. A /24 network with the gateway being at (e.g.) xxx.xxx.xxx.1, no DHCP is needed
on this network and none of the computers running CloudStack will have a
dynamic address. Again this is done for the sake of simplicity.
Environment
-----------
Before you begin , you need to prepare the environment before you install
CloudStack. We will go over the steps to prepare now.
Operating System
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Using the CentOS 7.9.2009 minimal x86_64 install ISO, you'll need to install
CentOS 7 on your hardware. The defaults will generally be acceptable for this
installation - but make sure to configure IP address/parameters so that you can later install needed
packages from the internet. Later, we will change the network configuration as needed.
Once this installation is complete, you'll want to gain access to your
server - through SSH.
It is always wise to update the system before starting:
.. parsed-literal::
# yum -y upgrade
.. _conf-network:
Configuring the network
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Before going any further, make sure that "bridge-utils" and "net-tools" are installed and available:
.. parsed-literal::
# yum install bridge-utils net-tools -y
Connecting via the console or SSH, you should login as root. We will start by creating
the bridge that Cloudstack will use for networking. Create and open
/etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-cloudbr0 and add the following settings:
.. note::
IP Addressing - Throughout this document we are assuming that you will have
a /24 network for your CloudStack implementation. This can be any RFC 1918
network. However, we are assuming that you will match the machine address
that we are using. Thus we may use 172.16.10.2 and because you might be
using e.g. 192.168.55.0/24 network you would use 192.168.55.2. Another example
would be if you are using i.e. VirtualBox on your local home network on 192.168.1.0/24 network -
in this case you can use a single free IP address from your home range (VirtualBox NIC for this VM
should be in bridged mode for correct functioning)
::
DEVICE=cloudbr0
TYPE=Bridge
ONBOOT=yes
BOOTPROTO=static
IPV6INIT=no
IPV6_AUTOCONF=no
DELAY=5
IPADDR=172.16.10.2 #(or e.g. 192.168.1.2)
GATEWAY=172.16.10.1 #(or e.g. 192.168.1.1 - this would be your physical/home router)
NETMASK=255.255.255.0
DNS1=8.8.8.8
DNS2=8.8.4.4
STP=yes
USERCTL=no
NM_CONTROLLED=no
Save the configuration and exit. We will then edit the NIC so that it
makes use of this bridge.
Open the configuration file of your NIC (e.g. /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-eth0)
and edit it as follows:
.. note::
Interface name (eth0) used as example only. Replace eth0 with your default ethernet interface name.
.. parsed-literal::
TYPE=Ethernet
BOOTPROTO=none
DEFROUTE=yes
NAME=eth0
DEVICE=eth0
ONBOOT=yes
BRIDGE=cloudbr0
.. note::
If your physical nic (eth0 in the case of our example) has already been
setup before following this guide, make sure that there is no duplication
between IP configuration of /etc/config/network-scripts/ifcfg-cloudbr0 and
/etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-eth0 which will cause a failure that
would prevent the network from starting. Basically, IP configuration
of eth0 should be moved to the bridge and eth0 will be added to the bridge.
Now that we have the configuration files properly set up, we need to run a few
commands to start up the network:
.. parsed-literal::
# systemctl disable NetworkManager; systemctl stop NetworkManager
# systemctl enable network
# reboot
.. _conf-hostname:
Hostname
^^^^^^^^
CloudStack requires that the hostname is properly set. If you used the default
options in the installation, then your hostname is currently set to
localhost.localdomain. To test this we will run:
.. parsed-literal::
# hostname --fqdn
At this point it will likely return:
.. parsed-literal::
localhost
To rectify this situation - we'll set the hostname by editing the /etc/hosts
file so that it follows a similar format to this example (remember to replace
the IP with your IP which might be e.g. 192.168.1.2):
.. parsed-literal::
127.0.0.1 localhost localhost.localdomain localhost4 localhost4.localdomain4
::1 localhost localhost.localdomain localhost6 localhost6.localdomain6
172.16.10.2 srvr1.cloud.priv
After you've modified that file, go ahead and restart the network using:
.. parsed-literal::
# systemctl restart network
Now recheck with the
.. parsed-literal::
# hostname --fqdn
and ensure that it returns a FQDN response
.. _conf-selinux:
SELinux
^^^^^^^
At the moment, for CloudStack to work properly SELinux must be set to
permissive or disabled. We want to both configure this for future boots and modify it in
the current running system.
To configure SELinux to be permissive in the running system we need to run the
following command:
.. parsed-literal::
# setenforce 0
To ensure that it remains in that state we need to configure the file
/etc/selinux/config to reflect the permissive state, as shown in this example:
.. parsed-literal::
# This file controls the state of SELinux on the system.
# SELINUX= can take one of these three values:
# enforcing - SELinux security policy is enforced.
# permissive - SELinux prints warnings instead of enforcing.
# disabled - No SELinux policy is loaded.
SELINUX=permissive
# SELINUXTYPE= can take one of these two values:
# targeted - Targeted processes are protected,
# mls - Multi Level Security protection.
SELINUXTYPE=targeted
.. _conf-ntp:
NTP
^^^
NTP configuration is a necessity for keeping all of the clocks in your cloud
servers in sync. However, NTP is not installed by default. So we'll install
and and configure NTP at this stage. Installation is accomplished as follows:
.. parsed-literal::
# yum -y install ntp
The actual default configuration is fine for our purposes, so we merely need
to enable it and set it to start on boot as follows:
.. parsed-literal::
# systemctl enable ntpd
# systemctl start ntpd
.. _qigconf-pkg-repo:
Configuring the CloudStack Package Repository
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
We need to configure the machine to use a CloudStack package repository.
.. note::
The Apache CloudStack official releases are source code. As such there are
no 'official' binaries available. The full installation guide describes how
to take the source release and generate RPMs and and yum repository. This
guide attempts to keep things as simple as possible, and thus we are using
one of the community-provided yum repositories. Furthermore, this example
assumes a |release| Cloudstack install - substitute versions as needed.
To add the CloudStack repository, create /etc/yum.repos.d/cloudstack.repo and
insert the following information.
.. parsed-literal::
[cloudstack]
name=cloudstack
baseurl=http://download.cloudstack.org/centos/$releasever/|version|/
enabled=1
gpgcheck=0
NFS
~~~
Our configuration is going to use NFS for both primary and secondary storage.
We are going to go ahead and setup two NFS shares for those purposes. We'll
start out by installing nfs-utils.
.. parsed-literal::
# yum -y install nfs-utils
We now need to configure NFS to serve up two different shares. This is handled
in the /etc/exports file. You should ensure that it has the following content:
.. parsed-literal::
/export/secondary \*(rw,async,no_root_squash,no_subtree_check)
/export/primary \*(rw,async,no_root_squash,no_subtree_check)
You will note that we specified two directories that don't exist (yet) on the
system. We'll go ahead and create those directories and set permissions
appropriately on them with the following commands:
.. parsed-literal::
# mkdir -p /export/primary
# mkdir /export/secondary
CentOS 7.x releases use NFSv4 by default. NFSv4 requires that domain setting
matches on all clients. In our case, the domain is cloud.priv, so ensure that
the domain setting in /etc/idmapd.conf is uncommented and set as follows:
.. parsed-literal::
Domain = cloud.priv
Now you'll need to add the configuration values at the bottom in the file
/etc/sysconfig/nfs (or merely uncomment and set them)
.. parsed-literal::
LOCKD_TCPPORT=32803
LOCKD_UDPPORT=32769
MOUNTD_PORT=892
RQUOTAD_PORT=875
STATD_PORT=662
STATD_OUTGOING_PORT=2020
For simplicity, we need to disable the firewall, so that it will not block connections.
.. note::
Configuration of the firewall on CentOS7 is beyond the purview of this
guide.
To do so, simply use the following two commands:
.. parsed-literal::
# systemctl stop firewalld
# systemctl disable firewalld
We now need to configure the nfs service to start on boot and actually start
it on the host by executing the following commands:
.. parsed-literal::
# systemctl enable rpcbind
# systemctl enable nfs
# systemctl start rpcbind
# systemctl start nfs
Management Server Installation
------------------------------
We're going to install the CloudStack management server and surrounding tools.
Database Installation and Configuration
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
We'll start with installing MySQL and configuring some options to ensure it
runs well with CloudStack.
First, as CentOS 7 no longer provides the MySQL binaries, we need to add a MySQL community repository,
that will provide MySQL Server (and the Python MySQL connector later) :
.. parsed-literal::
# yum -y install wget
# wget http://repo.mysql.com/mysql-community-release-el7-5.noarch.rpm
# rpm -ivh mysql-community-release-el7-5.noarch.rpm
Install by running the following command:
.. parsed-literal::
# yum -y install mysql-server
This should install MySQL 5.x, as of the time of writing this guide.
With MySQL now installed we need to make a few configuration changes to
/etc/my.cnf. Specifically we need to add the following options to the [mysqld]
section:
.. parsed-literal::
innodb_rollback_on_timeout=1
innodb_lock_wait_timeout=600
max_connections=350
log-bin=mysql-bin
binlog-format = 'ROW'
.. note::
For Ubuntu 16.04 and later, make sure you specify a ``server-id`` in your ``.cnf`` file for binary logging. Set the ``server-id`` according to your database setup.
.. parsed-literal::
server-id=source-01
innodb_rollback_on_timeout=1
innodb_lock_wait_timeout=600
max_connections=350
log-bin=mysql-bin
binlog-format = 'ROW'
Now that MySQL is properly configured we can start it and configure it to
start on boot as follows:
.. parsed-literal::
# systemctl enable mysqld
# systemctl start mysqld
MySQL Connector Installation
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Install Python MySQL connector from the MySQL community repository (which we've added previously):
.. parsed-literal::
# yum -y install mysql-connector-python
Please note that the previously required ``mysql-connector-java`` library is now bundled with CloudStack
Management server and is no longer required to be installed separately.
Installation
~~~~~~~~~~~~
We are now going to install the management server. We do that by executing the
following command:
.. parsed-literal::
# yum -y install cloudstack-management
CloudStack |version| requires Java 11 JRE. Installing the management server
will automatically install Java 11, but it's good to explicitly confirm that Java 11
is the selected/active one (in case you had a previous Java version already installed):
.. parsed-literal::
$ alternatives --config java
Make sure that Java 11 is selected.
With the application itself installed we can now setup the database, we'll do
that with the following command and options:
.. parsed-literal::
# cloudstack-setup-databases cloud:password@localhost --deploy-as=root
When this process is finished, you should see a message like "CloudStack has
successfully initialized the database."
Now that the database has been created, we can take the final step in setting
up the management server by issuing the following command:
.. parsed-literal::
# cloudstack-setup-management
System Template Setup
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
CloudStack uses a number of system VMs to provide functionality for accessing
the console of virtual machines, providing various networking services, and
managing various aspects of storage.
We need to download the systemVM template and deploy that to the secondary storage.
We will use the local path (/export/secondary) since we are already on the NFS server itself,
but otherwise you would need to mount your Secondary Storage to a temporary mount point, and use
that mount point instead of the /export/secondary path.
Execute the followint script:
.. parsed-literal::
/usr/share/cloudstack-common/scripts/storage/secondary/cloud-install-sys-tmplt \
-m /export/secondary \
-u |sysvm64-url-kvm| \
-h kvm -F
That concludes our setup of the management server. We still need to configure
CloudStack, but we will do that after we get our hypervisor set up.
KVM Setup and Installation
--------------------------
Prerequisites
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
We are using the management server as a compute node as well, which
means that we have already performed many of the prerequisite steps when
setting up the management server, but we will list them here for clarity.
Those steps are:
:ref:`conf-network`
:ref:`conf-hostname`
:ref:`conf-selinux`
:ref:`conf-ntp`
:ref:`qigconf-pkg-repo`
You don't need to do that for the management server now as we've already done that.
Installation
~~~~~~~~~~~~
Installation of the KVM agent is trivial with just a single command, but
afterwards we'll need to configure a few things. We need to install the EPEL repository also.
.. parsed-literal::
# yum -y install epel-release
# yum -y install cloudstack-agent
KVM Configuration
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
We have two different parts of KVM to configure, libvirt, and QEMU.
QEMU Configuration
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
We need to edit the QEMU VNC configuration. This is done by editing /etc/libvirt/qemu.conf
and ensuring the following line is present and uncommented.
::
vnc_listen=0.0.0.0
Libvirt Configuration
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
CloudStack uses libvirt for managing virtual machines. Therefore it is vital
that libvirt is configured correctly. Libvirt is a dependency of cloud-agent
and should already be installed.
#. Even though we are using a single host, the following steps are recommended
to get faimilar with the general requirements.
In order to have live migration working libvirt has to listen for unsecured
TCP connections. We also need to turn off libvirts attempt to use Multicast
DNS advertising. Both of these settings are in /etc/libvirt/libvirtd.conf
Set the following paramaters:
::
listen_tls = 0
listen_tcp = 1
tcp_port = "16509"
auth_tcp = "none"
mdns_adv = 0
#. Turning on "listen_tcp" in libvirtd.conf is not enough, we have to change
the parameters as well we also need to modify /etc/sysconfig/libvirtd:
Uncomment the following line:
::
#LIBVIRTD_ARGS="--listen"
#. Restart libvirt
.. parsed-literal::
# systemctl restart libvirtd
KVM configuration complete
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
For the sake of completeness, you should check if KVM is running OK on your
machine (you should see kvm_intel or kvm_amd modules shown as loaded):
.. parsed-literal::
# lsmod | grep kvm
kvm_intel 55496 0
kvm 337772 1 kvm_intel
kvm_amd # if you are in AMD cpu
That concludes our installation and configuration of KVM, and we'll now move
to using the CloudStack UI for the actual configuration of our cloud.
Configuration
-------------
UI Access
~~~~~~~~~
To get access to CloudStack's web interface, merely point your browser to
the IP address of your machine e.g. http://172.16.10.2:8080/client
The default username is 'admin', and the default password is 'password'.
Setting up a Zone
-----------------
Zone Type
~~~~~~~~~
A zone is the largest organization entity in CloudStack - and we'll be
creating one.
.. warning::
We will be configuring an Advanced Zone in a way that will allow us to access both
the "Management" network of the cloud as well as the "Public" network - we will do so
by using the same CIDR (but different part of it, i.e. different IP ranges) for both
"Management" (Pod) and "Public" networks - which is something your would NEVER do
in a production - this is done strictly for testing purposes only in this guide!
Click "Continue with Installation" to continue - you will be offered to change your
root admin password - please do so, and click on OK.
A new Zone wizard will pop-up. Please chose Advanced (don't tick the "Security Groups") and click on Next.
Zone Details
~~~~~~~~~~~~
On this page, we enter where our DNS servers are located.
CloudStack distinguishes between internal and public DNS. Internal DNS is
assumed to be capable of resolving internal-only hostnames, such as your
NFS server’s DNS name. Public DNS is provided to the guest VMs to resolve
public IP addresses. You can enter the same DNS server for both types, but
if you do so, you must make sure that both internal and public IP addresses
can route to the DNS server. In our specific case we will not use any names
for resources internally, and we will indeed set them to look to the same
external resource so as to not add a namerserver setup to our list of
requirements.
#. Name - we will set this to the ever-descriptive 'Zone1' for our cloud.
#. IPv4 DNS 1 - we will set this to ``8.8.8.8`` for our cloud.
#. IPV4 DNS 2 - we will set this to ``8.8.4.4`` for our cloud.
#. Internal DNS1 - we will also set this to ``8.8.8.8`` for our cloud.
#. Internal DNS2 - we will also set this to ``8.8.4.4`` for our cloud.
#. Hypervisor - this will be the primary hypervisor used in this zone. In our
case, we will select KVM.
Click "Next" to continue.
Physical Network
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
There are various network isolation methods supported by Cloudstack. The
default VLAN option will be sufficient for our purposes. For improved
performance and/or security, Cloudstack allows different traffic types to run
over specifically dedicated network interface cards attached to hypervisors.
We will not be making any changes here, the default settings are fine
for this demo installation of Cloudstack.
Click "Next" to continue.
Public Traffic
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Publicly-accessible IPs must be allocated for this purpose in normal/public cloud installations,
but since we are deploying merely a demo/test env, we will use a PART of our local network (e.g. from .11 to .20 or other free range)
#. Gateway - We'll use ``172.16.10.1`` #or whatever is your physical gateway e.g. 192.168.1.1
#. Netmask - We'll use ``255.255.255.0``
#. VLAN/VNI - We'll leave this one empty
#. Start IP - We'll use ``172.16.10.11`` # (or e.g. 192.168.1.11)
#. End IP - We'll use ``172.16.10.20`` # (or e.g. 192.168.1.20)
Click "Add" to add the range.
Click "Next" to continue.
Pod Configuration
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Here we will configure a range for Cloudstack's internal management traffic - CloudStack
will assign IPs from this range to system VMs. This will also be part of our local network
(i.e. different part of your local home network, from .21 to .30), with the rest of the IP parameters
(netmaks/gateway) being the same as used for the Public Traffic.
#. Pod Name - We'll use ``Pod1`` for our cloud.
#. Reserved system gateway - we'll use ``172.16.10.1`` # (or whatever is your physical gateway e.g. 192.168.1.1)
#. Reserved system netmask - we'll use ``255.255.255.0``
#. Start reserved system IPs - we will use ``172.16.10.21`` # (or e.g. 192.168.1.21)
#. End Reserved system IP - we will use ``172.16.10.30`` # (or e.g. 192.168.1.30)
Click "Next" to continue.
Guest Traffic
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Next we will configure a range of VLAN IDs for our guest VMs.
A range of ``100`` - ``200`` would suffice.
Click "Next" to continue.
Cluster
~~~~~~~
Multiple clusters can belong to a pod and multiple hosts can belong to a
cluster. We will have one cluster and we have to give our cluster a name.
Enter ``Cluster1``
Click "Next" to continue.
Host
~~~~
This is where we specify the details of our hypervisor host. In our case,
we are running the management server on the same machine that we will be using
as a hypervisor.
#. Hostname - we'll use the IP address ``172.16.10.2`` since we didn't set up a
DNS server for name resolution. (this is your local server, so swap with the correct IP)
#. Username - we'll use ``root``
#. Password - enter the operating system password for the root user
Click "Next" to continue.
Primary Storage
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
With your cluster now setup - you should be prompted for primary storage
information. Enter the following values in the fields:
#. Name - We'll use ``Primary1``
#. Scope - We'll use ``Cluster`` even though either is fine in this case. With
"Zone" scope, all hosts in all clusters would have access to this storage
pool.
#. Protocol - We'll use ``NFS``
#. Server - We'll be using the IP address ``172.16.10.2`` (this is your local server, so swap with the correct IP)
#. Path - Well define ``/export/primary`` as the path we are using
Click "Next" to continue.
Secondary Storage
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
You'll be prompted for secondary storage information - populate it as follows:
#. Provider - Choose ``NFS``
#. Name - ``Secondary1``
#. NFS server - We'll use the IP address ``172.16.10.2`` (this is your local server, so swap with the correct IP)
#. Path - We'll use ``/export/secondary``
Click "Next" to continue.
Now, click "Launch Zone" and your cloud should begin setup - it may take
several minutes for setup to finalize.
When done, click on "Enable Zone" and your zone will be ready.
That's it, you are done with installation of your Apache CloudStack demo cloud.
To check the health of your CloudStack installation, go to Infrastructure --> System VMs and refresh
the UI from time to time - you should see “S-1-VM” and “V-2-VM” system VMs (SSVM and CPVM) in State=Running and Agent State=Up
After that you can go to Images --> Templates, click on the built-in template named "CentOS 5.5(64-bit) no GUI (KVM)",
then click on "Zones" tab - and observe how the Status is moving from a few percents downloaded up to fully downloaded,
after which the Status will show as "Download Complete" and "Ready" column will say "Yes".
After this is done, you will be able to deploy a VM from this template.