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The Kolla project is a member of the OpenStack Big Tent Governance. Kolla's mission statement is: Kolla provides production-ready containers and deployment tools for operating OpenStack clouds. Kolla provides Docker containers and Ansible playbooks to meet Kolla's mission. Kolla is highly opinionated out of the box, but allows for complete customization. This permits operators with little experience to deploy OpenStack quickly and as experience grows modify the OpenStack configuration to suit the operator's exact requirements. Kolla provides images to deploy the following OpenStack projects: Aodh Ceilometer Cinder Designate Glance Gnocchi Heat Horizon Ironic Keystone Magnum Manila Mistral Murano Nova Neutron Swift Tempest Trove Zaqar As well as these infrastructure components: Ceph implementation for Cinder, Glance and Nova Openvswitch and Linuxbridge backends for Neutron MongoDB as a database backend for Ceilometer and Gnocchi RabbitMQ as a messaging backend for communication between services. HAProxy and Keepalived for high availability of services and their endpoints. MariaDB and Galera for highly available MySQL databases Heka A distributed and scalable logging system for openstack services. Docker Images The Docker images are built by the Kolla project maintainers. A detailed process for contributing to the images can be found in the image building guide. The Kolla developers build images in the kollaglue namespace for every tagged release and implement an Ansible deployment for many but not all of them. You can view the available images on Docker Hub or with the Docker CLI: $ sudo docker search kollaglue
OpenStack Shared Filesystem Service (code-name Manila) provides services to manage network filesystems for use by Virtual Machine instances. This package contains the associated Python library.
Client library and command line utility for interacting with Openstack Share API.
murano-dashboard is an extension for OpenStack Dashboard that provides UI for Murano. With murano-dashboard user is able to easily manage and control application catalog, running applications and created environments alongside with all other OpenStack resources.
This is a FWaaS service plugin for Openstack Neutron (Networking) service. This package contains the Neutron FWaaS Python library.
This is a LBaaS service plugin for Openstack Neutron (Networking) service. This package contains the Neutron LBaaS Python library.
OpenStack Neutron library shared by all Neutron sub-projects.
This is a VPNaaS service plugin for Openstack Neutron (Networking) service. This package contains the Neutron VPNaaS Python library.
Client library and command line utility for interacting with Openstack Neutron's API.
Nodepool is a service used by the OpenStack CI team to deploy and manage a pool of devstack images on a cloud server for use in OpenStack project testing. Developer setup If you’re testing a specific patch that is already in gerrit, you will also want to install git-review and apply that patch while in the nodepool directory, ie: git review -x XXXXX Create or adapt a nodepool yaml file. You can adapt an infra/system-config one, or fake.yaml as desired. Note that fake.yaml’s settings won’t Just Work - consult ./modules/openstack_project/templates/nodepool/nodepool.yaml.erb in the infra/system-config tree to see a production config. If the cloud being used has no default_floating_pool defined in nova.conf, you will need to define a pool name using the nodepool yaml file to use floating ips. Export variable for your ssh key so you can log into the created instances: export NODEPOOL_SSH_KEY=`cat ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub | awk '{print $2}'` Start nodepool with a demo config file (copy or edit fake.yaml to contain your data): export STATSD_HOST=127.0.0.1 export STATSD_PORT=8125 nodepoold -d -c tools/fake.yaml All logging ends up in stdout. Use the following tool to check on progress: nodepool image-list