Grizzly, 2013.1
Copyright © 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013 OpenStack Foundation
Licensed 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.
![]() | Except where otherwise noted, this document is licensed under Creative Commons Attribution ShareAlike 3.0 License |
2013-05-20
Abstract
OpenStack™ Compute offers open source software for cloud administration and management for any organization. This manual provides guidance for installing, managing, and understanding the software that runs OpenStack Compute.
List of Figures
- 2.1. Base image state with no running instances
- 2.2. Instance creation from image and run time state
- 2.3. End state of image and volume after instance exits
- 4.1. KVM, Flat, MySQL, and Glance, OpenStack or EC2 API
- 4.2. KVM, Flat, MySQL, and Glance, OpenStack or EC2 API
- 4.3. MooseFS deployment for OpenStack
- 10.1. Flat network, all-in-one server installation
- 10.2. Flat network, single interface, multiple servers
- 10.3. Flat network, multiple interfaces, multiple servers
- 10.4. Flat DHCP network, multiple interfaces, multiple servers with libvirt driver
- 10.5. Flat DHCP network, multiple interfaces, multiple servers, network HA with XenAPI driver
- 10.6. Single adaptor hosts, first route
- 10.7. Single adaptor hosts, second route
- 10.8. VLAN network, multiple interfaces, multiple servers, network HA with XenAPI driver
- 10.9. Configuring Viscosity
- 10.10. multinic flat manager
- 10.11. multinic flatdhcp manager
- 10.12. multinic VLAN manager
- 10.13. High Availability Networking Option
- 12.1. Filtering
- 12.2. Computing weighted costs
- 15.1. NoVNC Process
List of Tables
- 1.1. Types of Storage
- 3.1. Hardware Recommendations
- 4.1. Description of nova.conf log file configuration options
- 4.2. Description of nova.conf file configuration options for hypervisors
- 4.3. Description of nova.conf configuration options for authentication
- 4.4. Description of nova.conf file configuration options for credentials (crypto)
- 4.5. Description of nova.conf file configuration options for LDAP
- 4.6. Description of nova.conf configuration options for IPv6
- 4.7. Description of nova.conf file configuration options for S3 access to image storage
- 4.8. Description of nova.conf file configuration options for live migration
- 4.9. Description of nova.conf configuration options for databases
- 4.10. Description of
nova.confconfiguration options for Remote Procedure Calls and RabbitMQ Messaging - 4.11. Description of
nova.confconfiguration options for Tuning RabbitMQ Messaging - 4.12. Remaining
nova.confconfiguration options for Qpid support - 4.13. Description of
nova.confconfiguration options for Customizing Exchange or Topic Names - 4.14. Description of nova.conf API related configuration options
- 4.15. Default API Rate Limits
- 4.16. Description of nova.conf file configuration options for EC2 API
- 5.1. Description of common
nova.confconfiguration options for the Compute API, RabbitMQ, EC2 API, S3 API, instance types - 5.2. Description of nova.conf configuration options for databases
- 5.3. Description of nova.conf configuration options for IPv6
- 5.4. Description of nova.conf log file configuration options
- 5.5. Description of nova.conf file configuration options for nova- services
- 5.6. Description of nova.conf file configuration options for credentials (crypto)
- 5.7. Description of nova.conf file configuration options for policies (policy.json)
- 5.8. Description of nova.conf file configuration options for quotas
- 5.9. Description of nova.conf file configuration options for testing purposes
- 5.10. Description of nova.conf configuration options for authentication
- 5.11. Description of nova.conf file configuration options for LDAP
- 5.12. Description of nova.conf file configuration options for roles and authentication
- 5.13. Description of nova.conf file configuration options for EC2 API
- 5.14. Description of nova.conf file configuration options for VNC access to guest instances
- 5.15. Description of nova.conf [spice] section configuration options for SPICE HTML5 access to guest instances
- 5.16. Description of nova.conf file configuration options for networking options
- 5.17. Description of nova.conf file configuration options for live migration
- 5.18. Description of nova.conf file configuration options for compute nodes
- 5.19. Description of nova.conf file configuration options for bare metal deployment
- 5.20. Description of nova.conf file configuration options for hypervisors
- 5.21. Description of nova.conf file configuration options for console access to VMs on VMWare VMRC or XenAPI
- 5.22. Description of nova.conf file configuration options for S3 access to image storage
- 5.23. Description of nova.conf file configuration options for schedulers that use algorithms to assign VM launch on particular compute hosts
- 5.24. Description of nova.conf file configuration options for config drive features
- 5.25. Description of nova.conf file configuration options for volumes attached to VMs
- 6.1. Description of keystone.conf file configuration options for LDAP
- 8.1. List of configuration flags for NFS
- 9.1. Description of nova.conf file configuration options for hypervisors
- 14.1. Description of rootwrap.conf configuration options
- 14.2. Description of rootwrap.conf configuration options
- 15.1. Description of nova.conf file configuration options for VNC access to guest instances
- 15.2. Description of nova.conf [spice] section configuration options for SPICE HTML5 access to guest instances
- 17.1. OSes supported


