Install and configure a compute node

Install and configure a compute node

This section describes how to install and configure the Compute service on a compute node. The service supports several hypervisors to deploy instances or VMs. For simplicity, this configuration uses the QEMU hypervisor with the KVM extension on compute nodes that support hardware acceleration for virtual machines. On legacy hardware, this configuration uses the generic QEMU hypervisor. You can follow these instructions with minor modifications to horizontally scale your environment with additional compute nodes.

Note

This section assumes that you are following the instructions in this guide step-by-step to configure the first compute node. If you want to configure additional compute nodes, prepare them in a similar fashion to the first compute node in the example architectures section. Each additional compute node requires a unique IP address.

Install and configure components

Note

Default configuration files vary by distribution. You might need to add these sections and options rather than modifying existing sections and options. Also, an ellipsis (...) in the configuration snippets indicates potential default configuration options that you should retain.

  1. Install the packages:

    # zypper install openstack-nova-compute genisoimage kvm libvirt
    
  1. Edit the /etc/nova/nova.conf file and complete the following actions:

    • In the [DEFAULT] and [oslo_messaging_rabbit] sections, configure RabbitMQ message queue access:

      [DEFAULT]
      ...
      rpc_backend = rabbit
      
      [oslo_messaging_rabbit]
      ...
      rabbit_host = controller
      rabbit_userid = openstack
      rabbit_password = RABBIT_PASS
      

      Replace RABBIT_PASS with the password you chose for the openstack account in RabbitMQ.

    • In the [DEFAULT] and [keystone_authtoken] sections, configure Identity service access:

      [DEFAULT]
      ...
      auth_strategy = keystone
      
      [keystone_authtoken]
      ...
      auth_uri = http://controller:5000
      auth_url = http://controller:35357
      auth_plugin = password
      project_domain_id = default
      user_domain_id = default
      project_name = service
      username = nova
      password = NOVA_PASS
      

      Replace NOVA_PASS with the password you chose for the nova user in the Identity service.

      Note

      Comment out or remove any other options in the [keystone_authtoken] section.

    • In the [DEFAULT] section, configure the my_ip option:

      [DEFAULT]
      ...
      my_ip = MANAGEMENT_INTERFACE_IP_ADDRESS
      

      Replace MANAGEMENT_INTERFACE_IP_ADDRESS with the IP address of the management network interface on your compute node, typically 10.0.0.31 for the first node in the example architecture.

    • In the [DEFAULT] section, enable support for the Networking service:

      [DEFAULT]
      ...
      network_api_class = nova.network.neutronv2.api.API
      security_group_api = neutron
      linuxnet_interface_driver = nova.network.linux_net.NeutronLinuxBridgeInterfaceDriver
      firewall_driver = nova.virt.firewall.NoopFirewallDriver
      

      Note

      By default, Compute uses an internal firewall service. Since Networking includes a firewall service, you must disable the Compute firewall service by using the nova.virt.firewall.NoopFirewallDriver firewall driver.

    • In the [vnc] section, enable and configure remote console access:

      [vnc]
      ...
      enabled = True
      vncserver_listen = 0.0.0.0
      vncserver_proxyclient_address = $my_ip
      novncproxy_base_url = http://controller:6080/vnc_auto.html
      

      The server component listens on all IP addresses and the proxy component only listens on the management interface IP address of the compute node. The base URL indicates the location where you can use a web browser to access remote consoles of instances on this compute node.

      Note

      If the web browser to access remote consoles resides on a host that cannot resolve the controller hostname, you must replace controller with the management interface IP address of the controller node.

    • In the [glance] section, configure the location of the Image service:

      [glance]
      ...
      host = controller
      
    • In the [oslo_concurrency] section, configure the lock path:

      [oslo_concurrency]
      ...
      lock_path = /var/run/nova
      
    • (Optional) To assist with troubleshooting, enable verbose logging in the [DEFAULT] section:

      [DEFAULT]
      ...
      verbose = True
      
  1. Ensure the kernel module nbd is loaded.

    # modprobe nbd
    
  2. Ensure the module will be loaded on every boot by adding nbd in the /etc/modules-load.d/nbd.conf file.

Finalize installation

  1. Determine whether your compute node supports hardware acceleration for virtual machines:

    $ egrep -c '(vmx|svm)' /proc/cpuinfo
    

    If this command returns a value of one or greater, your compute node supports hardware acceleration which typically requires no additional configuration.

    If this command returns a value of zero, your compute node does not support hardware acceleration and you must configure libvirt to use QEMU instead of KVM.

    • Edit the [libvirt] section in the /etc/nova/nova.conf file as follows:

      [libvirt]
      ...
      virt_type = qemu
      
  1. Start the Compute service including its dependencies and configure them to start automatically when the system boots:

    # systemctl enable libvirtd.service openstack-nova-compute.service
    # systemctl start libvirtd.service openstack-nova-compute.service
    
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