- Overview - What is the neutron module?
- Module Description - What does the module do?
- Setup - Tha basics of getting started with neutron.
- Implementation - An under-the-hood peek at what the module is doing.
- Limitations - OS compatibility, etc.
- Development - Guide for contributing to the module
- Contributors - Those with commits
The neutron module is a part of OpenStack, an effort by the OpenStack infrastructure team to provide continuous integration testing and code review for OpenStack and OpenStack community projects as part of the core software. The module itself is used to flexibly configure and manage the network service for OpenStack.
The neutron module is an attempt to make Puppet capable of managing the entirety of neutron. This includes manifests to provision such things as keystone endpoints, RPC configurations specific to neutron, database connections, and network driver plugins. Types are shipped as part of the neutron module to assist in manipulation of the OpenStack configuration files.
This module is tested in combination with other modules needed to build and leverage an entire OpenStack installation.
What the neutron module affects:
- Neutron, the network service for OpenStack.
puppet module install openstack/neutron
To utilize the neutron module's functionality you will need to declare multiple resources. The following example displays the setting up of an Open vSwitch neutron installation. This is not an exhaustive list of all the components needed. We recommend that you consult and understand the core openstack documentation to assist you in understanding the available deployment options.
# enable the neutron service
class { '::neutron':
enabled => true,
bind_host => '127.0.0.1',
rabbit_host => '127.0.0.1',
rabbit_user => 'neutron',
rabbit_password => 'rabbit_secret',
debug => false,
}
# configure authentication
class { 'neutron::server':
auth_password => 'keystone_neutron_secret',
sql_connection => 'mysql://neutron:[email protected]/neutron?charset=utf8',
}
# ml2 plugin with vxlan as ml2 driver and ovs as mechanism driver
class { '::neutron::plugins::ml2':
type_drivers => ['vxlan'],
tenant_network_types => ['vxlan'],
vxlan_group => '239.1.1.1',
mechanism_drivers => ['openvswitch'],
vni_ranges => ['1:300']
}
Other neutron network drivers include:
- dhcp,
- metadata,
- and l3.
Nova will also need to be configured to connect to the neutron service. Setting up the nova::network::neutron
class sets
the network_api_class
parameter in nova to use neutron instead of nova-network.
class { 'nova::network::neutron':
neutron_password => 'neutron_admin_secret',
}
The examples
directory also provides a quick tutorial on how to use this module.
neutron is a combination of Puppet manifest and ruby code to deliver configuration and extra functionality through types and providers.
The neutron_config
provider is a children of the ini_setting provider. It allows one to write an entry in the /etc/neutron/neutron.conf
file.
neutron_config { 'DEFAULT/core_plugin' :
value => ml2,
}
This will write core_plugin=ml2
in the [DEFAULT]
section.
Section/setting name to manage from neutron.conf
The value of the setting to be defined.
Whether to hide the value from Puppet logs. Defaults to false
.
If value is equal to ensure_absent_val then the resource will behave as if ensure => absent
was specified. Defaults to <SERVICE DEFAULT>
This module supports the following neutron plugins:
- Open vSwitch with ML2
- linuxbridge with ML2
- Arista with ML2
- cisco-neutron with and without ML2
- NVP
- PLUMgrid
The following platforms are supported:
- Ubuntu 12.04 (Precise)
- Debian (Wheezy)
- RHEL 6
- Fedora 18
This module has beaker-rspec tests
To run:
bundle install
bundle exec rspec spec/acceptance
The puppet-openstack modules follow the OpenStack development model. Developer documentation for the entire puppet-openstack project is at:
The github contributor graph.