Quickstart
The quick start intends to provide the most near-production experience possible, as it is architected purely towards production-only environments. In order to get a quick production-ready experience of Atmosphere, you will need access to an OpenStack cloud.
The quick start is powered by Molecule and it is used in continuous integration running against the VEXXHOST public cloud so that would be an easy target to use to try it out.
You will need the following quotas set up in your cloud account:
8 instances
32 cores
128GB RAM
360GB storage
These resources will be used to create a total of 8 instances broken up as follows:
3 Controller nodes
3 Ceph OSD nodes
2 Compute nodes
First of all, you’ll have to make sure you clone the repository locally to your
system with git
by running the following command:
$ git clone https://opendev.org/vexxhost/ansible-collection-atmosphere
You will need tox
installed on your operating system. You will need to make
sure that you have the appropriate OpenStack environment variables set (such
as OS_CLOUD
or OS_AUTH_URL
, etc.). You can also use the following
environment variables to tweak the behaviour of the Heat stack that is created:
ATMOSPHERE_STACK_NAME
The name of the Heat stack to be created (defaults to
atmosphere
).ATMOSPHERE_PUBLIC_NETWORK
The name of the public network to attach floating IPs from (defaults to
public
).ATMOSPHERE_IMAGE
The name or UUID of the image to be used for deploying the instances ( defaults to
Ubuntu 20.04.3 LTS (x86_64) [2021-10-04]
).ATMOSPHERE_INSTANCE_TYPE
The instance type used to deploy all of the different instances (defaults to
v3-standard-4
).ATMOSPHERE_NAMESERVERS
A comma-separated list of nameservers to be used for the instances (defaults to 1.1.1.1).
ATMOSPHERE_USERNAME
The username what is used to login into the instances (defaults to
ubuntu
).ATMOSPHERE_DNS_SUFFIX_NAME
The DNS domainname that is used for the API and Horizon. (defaults to
nip.io
).ATMOSPHERE_ACME_SERVER
The ACME server, currenly this is from Letsencrypt, with StepCA from smallstep it is possible to run a internal ACME server. The CA of that ACME server should be present in the instance image.
Once you’re ready to get started, you can run the following command to build the Heat stack and
$ tox -e molecule -- converge
This will create a Heat stack with the name atmosphere
and start deploying
the cloud. Once it’s complete, you can login to any of the systems by using
the login
sub-command. For exampel, to login to the first controller node,
you can run the following:
$ tox -e molecule -- login -h ctl1
In all the controllers, you will find an openrc
file location inside the
root
account home directory, as well as the OpenStack client installed there
as well. You can use it by running the following after logging in:
$ source /root/openrc
$ openstack server list
The Kubernetes administrator configuration will also be available on all of the
control plane nodes, you can simply use it by running kubectl
commands on
any of the controllers as root
:
$ kubectl get nodes -owide
Once you’re done with your environment and you need to tear it down, you can
use the destroy
sub-command:
$ tox -e molecule -- destroy
For more information about the different commands used by Molecule, you can refer to the Molecule documentation.