To effectively administer compute, you must understand how the different installed nodes interact with each other. Compute can be installed in many different ways using multiple servers, but generally multiple compute nodes control the virtual servers and a cloud controller node contains the remaining Compute services.
The Compute cloud works using a series of daemon processes named nova-*
that exist persistently on the host machine. These binaries can all run on the
same machine or be spread out on multiple boxes in a large deployment. The
responsibilities of services and drivers are:
Services
nova-apinova.conf configuration file is created when Compute is installed.nova-computenova-conductornova-consoleauthManages console authentication.
Deprecated since version 18.0.0: nova-consoleauth is deprecated since 18.0.0 (Rocky) and will be removed
in an upcoming release. See
workarounds.enable_consoleauth for details.
nova-objectstorenova-compute.nova-networkManages floating and fixed IPs, DHCP, bridging and VLANs. Loads a Service
object which exposes the public methods on one of the subclasses of
NetworkManager. Different networking strategies are available by changing the
network_manager configuration option to FlatManager,
FlatDHCPManager, or VLANManager (defaults to VLANManager if
nothing is specified).
Deprecated since version 14.0.0: nova-network was deprecated in the OpenStack Newton release.
nova-schedulernova-novncproxyNote
Some services have drivers that change how the service implements its core
functionality. For example, the nova-compute service supports drivers
that let you choose which hypervisor type it can use. nova-network and
nova-scheduler also have drivers.
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