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 Configure the dashboard

You can configure the dashboard for a simple HTTP deployment.

You can configure the dashboard for a secured HTTPS deployment. While the standard installation uses a non-encrypted HTTP channel, you can enable SSL support for the dashboard.

Also, you can configure the size of the VNC window in the dashboard.

 Configure the dashboard for HTTP

You can configure the dashboard for a simple HTTP deployment. The standard installation uses a non-encrypted HTTP channel.

 
  1. Specify the host for your OpenStack Identity service endpoint in the local_settings.py file with the OPENSTACK_HOST setting.

    The following example shows this setting:

    import os
    
    from django.utils.translation import ugettext_lazy as _
    
    DEBUG = False
    TEMPLATE_DEBUG = DEBUG
    PROD = True
    USE_SSL = False
    
    SITE_BRANDING = 'OpenStack Dashboard'
    
    # Ubuntu-specific: Enables an extra panel in the 'Settings' section
    # that easily generates a Juju environments.yaml for download,
    # preconfigured with endpoints and credentials required for bootstrap
    # and service deployment.
    ENABLE_JUJU_PANEL = True
    
    # Note: You should change this value
    SECRET_KEY = 'elj1IWiLoWHgryYxFT6j7cM5fGOOxWY0'
    
    # Specify a regular expression to validate user passwords.
    # HORIZON_CONFIG = {
    #     "password_validator": {
    #         "regex": '.*',
    #         "help_text": _("Your password does not meet the requirements.")
    #     }
    # }
    
    LOCAL_PATH = os.path.dirname(os.path.abspath(__file__))
    
    CACHES = {
    	'default': {
    		'BACKEND' : 'django.core.cache.backends.memcached.MemcachedCache',
    		'LOCATION' : '127.0.0.1:11211'
    	}
    }
    
    # Send email to the console by default
    EMAIL_BACKEND = 'django.core.mail.backends.console.EmailBackend'
    # Or send them to /dev/null
    #EMAIL_BACKEND = 'django.core.mail.backends.dummy.EmailBackend'
    
    # Configure these for your outgoing email host
    # EMAIL_HOST = 'smtp.my-company.com'
    # EMAIL_PORT = 25
    # EMAIL_HOST_USER = 'djangomail'
    # EMAIL_HOST_PASSWORD = 'top-secret!'
    
    # For multiple regions uncomment this configuration, and add (endpoint, title).
    # AVAILABLE_REGIONS = [
    #     ('http://cluster1.example.com:5000/v2.0', 'cluster1'),
    #     ('http://cluster2.example.com:5000/v2.0', 'cluster2'),
    # ]
    
    OPENSTACK_HOST = "127.0.0.1"
    OPENSTACK_KEYSTONE_URL = "http://%s:5000/v2.0" % OPENSTACK_HOST
    OPENSTACK_KEYSTONE_DEFAULT_ROLE = "Member"
    
    # The OPENSTACK_KEYSTONE_BACKEND settings can be used to identify the
    # capabilities of the auth backend for Keystone.
    # If Keystone has been configured to use LDAP as the auth backend then set
    # can_edit_user to False and name to 'ldap'.
    #
    # TODO(tres): Remove these once Keystone has an API to identify auth backend.
    OPENSTACK_KEYSTONE_BACKEND = {
        'name': 'native',
        'can_edit_user': True
    }
    
    # OPENSTACK_ENDPOINT_TYPE specifies the endpoint type to use for the endpoints
    # in the Keystone service catalog. Use this setting when Horizon is running
    # external to the OpenStack environment. The default is 'internalURL'.
    #OPENSTACK_ENDPOINT_TYPE = "publicURL"
    
    # The number of Swift containers and objects to display on a single page before
    # providing a paging element (a "more" link) to paginate results.
    API_RESULT_LIMIT = 1000
    
    # If you have external monitoring links, eg:
    # EXTERNAL_MONITORING = [
    #     ['Nagios','http://foo.com'],
    #     ['Ganglia','http://bar.com'],
    # ]
    
    LOGGING = {
            'version': 1,
            # When set to True this will disable all logging except
            # for loggers specified in this configuration dictionary. Note that
            # if nothing is specified here and disable_existing_loggers is True,
            # django.db.backends will still log unless it is disabled explicitly.
            'disable_existing_loggers': False,
            'handlers': {
                'null': {
                    'level': 'DEBUG',
                    'class': 'django.utils.log.NullHandler',
                    },
                'console': {
                    # Set the level to "DEBUG" for verbose output logging.
                    'level': 'INFO',
                    'class': 'logging.StreamHandler',
                    },
                },
            'loggers': {
                # Logging from django.db.backends is VERY verbose, send to null
                # by default.
                'django.db.backends': {
                    'handlers': ['null'],
                    'propagate': False,
                    },
                'horizon': {
                    'handlers': ['console'],
                    'propagate': False,
                },
                'novaclient': {
                    'handlers': ['console'],
                    'propagate': False,
                },
                'keystoneclient': {
                    'handlers': ['console'],
                    'propagate': False,
                },
                'nose.plugins.manager': {
                    'handlers': ['console'],
                    'propagate': False,
                }
            }
    }
    

    The service catalog configuration in the Identity service determines whether a service appears in the dashboard. For the full listing, see Horizon Settings and Configuration.

  2. Restart Apache http server.

 Configure the dashboard for HTTPS

You can configure the dashboard for a secured HTTPS deployment. While the standard installation uses a non-encrypted HTTP channel, you can enable SSL support for the dashboard.

This example uses the http://openstack.example.com domain. Use a domain that fits your current setup.

  1. In the local_settings.py file, update the following options:

    USE_SSL = True
    CSRF_COOKIE_SECURE = True
    SESSION_COOKIE_SECURE = True
    SESSION_COOKIE_HTTPONLY = True

    To enable HTTPS, the USE_SSL = True option is required.

    The other options require that HTTPS is enabled; these options defend against cross-site scripting.

  2. Edit the openstack-dashboard.conf file as shown in Example 5.2, “After”:

     

    Example 5.1. Before

    WSGIScriptAlias / /usr/share/openstack-dashboard/openstack_dashboard/wsgi/django.wsgi
    WSGIDaemonProcess horizon user=www-data group=www-data processes=3 threads=10
    Alias /static /usr/share/openstack-dashboard/openstack_dashboard/static/
    <Directory /usr/share/openstack-dashboard/openstack_dashboard/wsgi>
    # For Apache http server 2.2 and earlier:
    Order allow,deny
    Allow from all
    
    # For Apache http server 2.4 and later:
    # Require all granted
    </Directory>

     

    Example 5.2. After

    <VirtualHost *:80>
    ServerName openstack.example.com
    <IfModule mod_rewrite.c>
    RewriteEngine On
    RewriteCond %{HTTPS} off
    RewriteRule (.*) https://%{HTTP_HOST}%{REQUEST_URI}
    </IfModule>
    <IfModule !mod_rewrite.c>
    RedirectPermanent / https://openstack.example.com
    </IfModule>
    </VirtualHost>
    <VirtualHost *:443>
    ServerName openstack.example.com
    
    SSLEngine On
    # Remember to replace certificates and keys with valid paths in your environment
    SSLCertificateFile /etc/apache2/SSL/openstack.example.com.crt
    SSLCACertificateFile /etc/apache2/SSL/openstack.example.com.crt
    SSLCertificateKeyFile /etc/apache2/SSL/openstack.example.com.key
    SetEnvIf User-Agent ".*MSIE.*" nokeepalive ssl-unclean-shutdown
    
    # HTTP Strict Transport Security (HSTS) enforces that all communications
    # with a server go over SSL. This mitigates the threat from attacks such
    # as SSL-Strip which replaces links on the wire, stripping away https prefixes
    # and potentially allowing an attacker to view confidential information on the
    # wire
    Header add Strict-Transport-Security "max-age=15768000"
    
    WSGIScriptAlias / /usr/share/openstack-dashboard/openstack_dashboard/wsgi/django.wsgi
    WSGIDaemonProcess horizon user=www-data group=www-data processes=3 threads=10
    Alias /static /usr/share/openstack-dashboard/openstack_dashboard/static/
    <Directory /usr/share/openstack-dashboard/openstack_dashboard/wsgi>
    # For Apache http server 2.2 and earlier:
    Order allow,deny
    Allow from all
    
    # For Apache http server 2.4 and later:
    # Require all granted
    </Directory>
    </VirtualHost>

    In this configuration, the Apache HTTP server listens on port 443 and redirects all non-secure requests to the HTTPS protocol. The secured section defines the private key, public key, and certificate to use.

  3. Restart the Apache HTTP server.

  4. Restart memcached.

    If you try to access the dashboard through HTTP, the browser redirects you to the HTTPS page.

[Note]Note

Configuring the dashboard for HTTPS also requires enabling SSL for the noVNC proxy service. On the controller node, add the following additional options to the [DEFAULT] section of the /etc/nova/nova.conf file:

[DEFAULT]
...
ssl_only = true
cert = /etc/apache2/SSL/openstack.example.com.crt
key = /etc/apache2/SSL/openstack.example.com.key

On the compute nodes, ensure the nonvncproxy_base_url option points to a URL with an HTTPS scheme:

[DEFAULT]
...
novncproxy_base_url = https://controller:6080/vnc_auto.html
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