Red Hat Training

A Red Hat training course is available for Red Hat OpenStack Platform

Product Guide

Red Hat OpenStack Platform 13

Overview of Red Hat OpenStack Platform

OpenStack Documentation Team

Abstract

This guide provides a high-level overview of the Red Hat OpenStack Platform environment.

Making open source more inclusive

Red Hat is committed to replacing problematic language in our code, documentation, and web properties. We are beginning with these four terms: master, slave, blacklist, and whitelist. Because of the enormity of this endeavor, these changes will be implemented gradually over several upcoming releases. For more details, see our CTO Chris Wright’s message.

Chapter 1. Understanding Red Hat OpenStack Platform

Red Hat OpenStack Platform (RHOSP) provides the foundation to build a private or public Infrastructure-as-a-Service (IaaS) cloud on top of Red Hat Enterprise Linux. It is a scalable, fault-tolerant platform for the development of cloud-enabled workloads.

RHOSP delivers an integrated foundation to create, deploy, and scale a secure and reliable public or private OpenStack cloud.

RHOSP is packaged so that available physical hardware can be turned into a private, public, or hybrid cloud platform that includes:

  • Fully distributed object storage
  • Persistent block-level storage
  • Virtual machine provisioning engine and image storage
  • Authentication and authorization mechanisms
  • Integrated networking
  • Web browser-based interface accessible to users and administrators

The RHOSP IaaS cloud is implemented by a collection of interacting services that control its computing, storage, and networking resources. The cloud is managed with a web-based interface which allows administrators to control, provision, and automate OpenStack resources. Additionally, the OpenStack infrastructure is facilitated through an extensive API, which is also available to end users of the cloud.

1.1. Advantages of using Red Hat OpenStack Platform

You can use Red Hat OpenStack Platform (RHOSP) to combine virtualization, networking, and storage based on your requirements. Some of the advantages of RHOSP are as follows:

  • You can create public, private or hybrid clouds that can be scaled up or down based on your requirements.
  • You can deploy cloud-enabled workloads based on your needs and for the duration you need it.
  • You can address customer demands in hours or minutes instead of weeks or days, without sacrificing security, performance, or budget.
  • RHOSP keeps your cloud environments stable and agile by using included hybrid cloud management, monitoring, and reporting with Red Hat CloudForms.

1.2. Relationship between RDO and OpenStack Foundation

OpenStack Foundation promotes the global development, distribution and adoption of the OpenStack cloud operating system. The goal of the OpenStack Foundation is to serve developers, users, and the entire ecosystem globally by providing a set of shared resources to grow the footprint of public and private OpenStack clouds, enable technology vendors targeting the platform and assist developers in producing the best cloud software in the industry.

RPM Distribution of OpenStack (RDO) is a freely-available, community-supported distribution of the Red Hat’s flavor of OpenStack that runs on Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) and its derivatives, such as CentOS. RDO also makes the latest OpenStack development release available for Fedora. In addition to providing a set of software packages, RDO is also a community of users of cloud computing platform on Red Hat-based operating systems to get help and compare notes on running OpenStack. RDO aims to be the natural option for anyone that wants to run the most recently released version of OpenStack on supported systems.

If you are looking for enterprise-level support, or information on partner certification, Red Hat also offers Red Hat OpenStack Platform.

Chapter 2. Software

The Red Hat OpenStack Platform IaaS cloud is implemented as a collection of interacting services that control compute, storage, and networking resources. The cloud can be managed with a web-based dashboard or command-line clients, which allow administrators to control, provision, and automate OpenStack resources. OpenStack also has an extensive API, which is also available to all cloud users.

The following diagram provides a high-level overview of the OpenStack core services and their relationship with each other.

OpenStack component relationships

The following table describes each component shown in the diagram and provides links for the component documentation section.

Table 2.1. Core services

 ServiceCodeDescription

One

Dashboard

horizon

Web browser-based dashboard that you use to manage OpenStack services.

Two

Identity

keystone

Centralized service for authentication and authorization of OpenStack services and for managing users, projects, and roles.

Three

OpenStack Networking

neutron

Provides connectivity between the interfaces of OpenStack services.

Three

Load balancing service

octavia

Provides load-balancing services for the cloud.

Four

Block Storage

cinder

Manages persistent block storage volumes for virtual machines.

Five

Compute

nova

Manages and provisions virtual machines running on hypervisor nodes.

Six

Image

glance

Registry service that you use to store resources such as virtual machine images and volume snapshots.

Seven

Object Storage

swift

Allows users to store and retrieve files and arbitrary data.

Eight

Telemetry

ceilometer

Provides measurements of cloud resources.

Nine

Orchestration

heat

Template-based orchestration engine that supports automatic creation of resource stacks.

Each OpenStack service contains a functional group of Linux services and other components. For example, the glance-api and glance-registry Linux services, together with a MariaDB database, implement the Image service.

2.1. Components

This section describes each of the OpenStack components in some detail:

  • OpenStack Dashboard (horizon)

    OpenStack Dashboard provides a graphical user interface for users and administrators to perform operations such as creating and launching instances, managing networking, and setting access control.

    The Dashboard service provides the Project, Admin, and Settings default dashboards. The modular design enables the dashboard to interface with other products such as billing, monitoring, and additional management tools.

  • OpenStack Identity (keystone)

    OpenStack Identity provides user authentication and authorization to all OpenStack components. Identity supports multiple authentication mechanisms, including user name and password credentials, token-based systems, and AWS-style log-ins.

  • OpenStack Networking (neutron)

    OpenStack Networking handles creation and management of a virtual networking infrastructure in the OpenStack cloud. Infrastructure elements include networks, subnets, and routers.

  • Load-balancing service (octavia)

    The OpenStack Load-balancing service (octavia) provides a Load Balancing-as-a-Service (LBaaS) implementation for Red Hat OpenStack Platform director installations. To achieve load balancing, octavia supports enabling multiple provider drivers. The reference provider driver (Amphora provider driver) is an open-source, scalable, and highly available load balancing provider. It accomplishes its delivery of load balancing services by managing a fleet of virtual machines—collectively known as amphorae—which it spins up on demand.

  • OpenStack Block Storage (cinder)

    OpenStack Block Storage provides persistent block storage management for virtual hard drives. Block Storage enables the user to create and delete block devices, and to manage attachment of block devices to servers.

  • OpenStack Compute (nova)

    OpenStack Compute serves as the core of the OpenStack cloud by providing virtual machines on demand. Compute schedules virtual machines to run on a set of nodes by defining drivers that interact with underlying virtualization mechanisms, and by exposing the functionality to the other OpenStack components.

  • OpenStack Image Service (glance)

    OpenStack Image acts as a registry for virtual disk images. Users can add new images or take a snapshot of an existing server for immediate storage. You can use the snapshots for backup or as templates for new servers.

  • OpenStack Object Storage (swift)

    Object Storage provides an HTTP-accessible storage system for large amounts of data, including static entities such as videos, images, email messages, files, or VM images. Objects are stored as binaries on the underlying file system along with metadata stored in the extended attributes of each file.

  • OpenStack Telemetry (ceilometer)

    OpenStack Telemetry provides user-level usage data for OpenStack-based clouds. The data can be used for customer billing, system monitoring, or alerts. Telemetry can collect data from notifications sent by existing OpenStack components such as Compute usage events, or by polling OpenStack infrastructure resources such as libvirt.

  • OpenStack Orchestration (heat)

    OpenStack Orchestration provides templates to create and manage cloud resources such as storage, networking, instances, or applications. Templates are used to create stacks, which are collections of resources.

  • OpenStack Data Processing (sahara)

    OpenStack Data Processing enables the provisioning and management of Hadoop clusters on OpenStack. Hadoop stores and analyze large amounts of unstructured and structured data in clusters.

  • OpenStack Bare Metal Provisioning (ironic)

    Use OpenStack Bare Metal Provisioning to provision physical or bare metal machines for a variety of hardware vendors with hardware-specific drivers. Bare Metal Provisioning integrates with the Compute service to provision the bare metal machines in the same way that virtual machines are provisioned, and provides a solution for the bare-metal-to-trusted-project use case.

  • OpenStack Shared-Filesystems-as-a-Service (manila)

    OpenStack Shared-Filesystems-as-a-Service provides shared file systems that Compute instances can use. The basic resources offered by the Shared File Systems are shares, snapshots and share networks.

  • OpenStack DNS-as-a-Service (designate)

    Note

    This feature is available in this release as a Technology Preview, and therefore is not fully supported by Red Hat. It should only be used for testing, and should not be deployed in a production environment. For more information about Technology Preview features, see the Scope of Coverage Details.

    DNSaaS includes a REST API for domain and record management, is multi-tenanted, and integrates with OpenStack Identity Service (keystone) for authentication. DNSaaS includes a framework for integration with Compute (nova) and OpenStack Networking (neutron) notifications, allowing auto-generated DNS records. In addition, DNSaaS includes integration support for PowerDNS and Bind9.

  • OpenStack Key Manager Service (barbican)

    OpenStack Key Manager Service is a REST API designed for the secure storage, provisioning and management of secrets such as passwords, encryption keys and X.509 Certificates. This includes keying material such as Symmetric Keys, Asymmetric Keys, Certificates and raw binary data.

  • Red Hat OpenStack Platform Director

    The Red Hat OpenStack Platform director is a toolset for installing and managing a complete OpenStack environment. It is based primarily on the OpenStack project TripleO, which is an abbreviation for "OpenStack-On-OpenStack". This project takes advantage of OpenStack components to install a fully operational OpenStack environment; this includes new OpenStack components that provision and control bare metal systems to use as OpenStack nodes. This provides a simple method for installing a complete Red Hat OpenStack Platform environment that is both lean and robust. The Red Hat OpenStack Platform director uses two main concepts: an Undercloud and an Overcloud. The Undercloud installs and configures the Overcloud.

  • OpenStack High Availability

    To keep your OpenStack environment up and running efficiently, Red Hat OpenStack Platform Director lets you create configurations that offer high availability and load balancing across all major services in OpenStack.

  • OpenStack Operational Tools

    Red Hat OpenStack Platform comes with an optional suite of tools, such as, Centralized Logging, Availability Monitoring, and Performance Monitoring, that are designed to help you maintain your OpenStack environment.

2.2. Integration

You can integrate Red Hat OpenStack Platform with the following Third-Party software - Tested and Approved Software

2.3. Installation Summary

Red Hat supports the installation of Red Hat OpenStack Platform using the following methods:

  • Using the Red Hat OpenStack Platform director: Recommended for Enterprise deployments. The Red Hat OpenStack Platform director is a toolset for installing and managing a complete OpenStack environment. It is based primarily on the OpenStack project TripleO, which is an abbreviation for "OpenStack-On-OpenStack". This project takes advantage of OpenStack components to install a fully operational OpenStack environment; this includes new OpenStack components that provision and control bare metal systems to use as OpenStack nodes. This provides a simple method for installing a complete Red Hat OpenStack Platform environment that is both lean and robust.

    The Red Hat OpenStack Platform director uses two main concepts: an Undercloud and an Overcloud. The Undercloud installs and configures the Overcloud. For more information, see Red Hat OpenStack Platform Director Installation and Usage.

  • Using packstack: OpenStack deployment consists of a public network and a private network on one machine, hosting one CirrOS-image instance, with an attached storage volume. Installed OpenStack services include: Block Storage, Compute, Dashboard, Identity, Image, OpenStack Networking, Object Storage, and Telemetry. Packstack is a command-line utility that rapidly deploys OpenStack.

    Note

    Packstack deployments are intended only for POC-type testing environments, and are not suitable for production. By default, the public network is only routable from the OpenStack host.

    For more information, see Evaluating OpenStack: Single-Node Deployment

See Installing and Managing Red Hat OpenStack Platform for a comparison of these installation options.

2.4. Subscriptions

To install Red Hat OpenStack Platform, you must register all systems in the OpenStack environment with Red Hat Subscription Manager, and subscribe to the required channels. The guides listed below detail the channels and repositories you must subscribe to before deploying Red Hat OpenStack Platform.

Chapter 3. Hardware

Red Hat OpenStack Platform can be deployed on trusted cloud providers. See Hardware - Tested and Approved for the certified list of products.

Chapter 4. Finding More Information

The following table includes deployment references for components mentioned in this guide.

For additional manuals for Red Hat OpenStack Platform, see Product Documentation for Red Hat OpenStack Platform 13.

ComponentReference

Red Hat Enterprise Linux

Red Hat OpenStack Platform is supported the latest version of Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7. For information on installing Red Hat Enterprise Linux, see the corresponding installation guide at: Product Documentation for Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7.

Red Hat OpenStack Platform

To install OpenStack components and their dependencies, use the Red Hat OpenStack Platform director. Director uses a basic OpenStack undercloud, which is then used to provision and manage the OpenStack nodes in the final overcloud.

Be aware that you will need one extra host machine for the installation of the undercloud, in addition to the environment necessary for the deployed overcloud. For detailed instructions, see the Director Installation and Usage guide.

High Availability

For the configuration of additional high availability components (for example, HAProxy), see the High Availability Deployment and Usage guide.

For information about configuring live migration, see Migrating virtual machine instances between Compute nodes in the Instances and Images Guide.

Octavia

The OpenStack Load-balancing service (Octavia) provides a Load Balancing-as-a-Service (LBaaS) version 2 implementation for Red Hat OpenStack platform director installations. For more information, see the Using Octavia for Load Balancing-as-a-Service guide.

Pacemaker

Pacemaker is integrated into Red Hat Enterprise Linux as an add-on. To set up Red Hat Enterprise Linux for high availability, see the High Availability Add-On Overview guide.

Legal Notice

Copyright © 2021 Red Hat, Inc.
The text of and illustrations in this document are licensed by Red Hat under a Creative Commons Attribution–Share Alike 3.0 Unported license ("CC-BY-SA"). An explanation of CC-BY-SA is available at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/. In accordance with CC-BY-SA, if you distribute this document or an adaptation of it, you must provide the URL for the original version.
Red Hat, as the licensor of this document, waives the right to enforce, and agrees not to assert, Section 4d of CC-BY-SA to the fullest extent permitted by applicable law.
Red Hat, Red Hat Enterprise Linux, the Shadowman logo, the Red Hat logo, JBoss, OpenShift, Fedora, the Infinity logo, and RHCE are trademarks of Red Hat, Inc., registered in the United States and other countries.
Linux® is the registered trademark of Linus Torvalds in the United States and other countries.
Java® is a registered trademark of Oracle and/or its affiliates.
XFS® is a trademark of Silicon Graphics International Corp. or its subsidiaries in the United States and/or other countries.
MySQL® is a registered trademark of MySQL AB in the United States, the European Union and other countries.
Node.js® is an official trademark of Joyent. Red Hat is not formally related to or endorsed by the official Joyent Node.js open source or commercial project.
The OpenStack® Word Mark and OpenStack logo are either registered trademarks/service marks or trademarks/service marks of the OpenStack Foundation, in the United States and other countries and are used with the OpenStack Foundation's permission. We are not affiliated with, endorsed or sponsored by the OpenStack Foundation, or the OpenStack community.
All other trademarks are the property of their respective owners.