Heat is the main project in the OpenStack Orchestration program. It implements an orchestration engine to launch multiple composite cloud applications based on templates in the form of text files that can be treated like code.
This charm deploys the Heat infrastructure.
Heat requires the existence of the other core OpenStack services deployed via Juju charms, specifically: mysql, rabbitmq-server, keystone and nova-cloud-controller. The following assumes these services have already been deployed.
After deployment of the cloud, the domain-setup action must be run to configure required domains, roles and users in the cloud for Heat stacks.
For juju 2.x deployments use:
juju run-action heat/0 domain-setup
If using juju 1.x run:
juju action do heat/0 domain-setup
This is only required for >= OpenStack Kilo.
When more than one unit is deployed with the hacluster application the charm will bring up an HA active/active cluster.
There are two mutually exclusive high availability options: using virtual IP(s) or DNS. In both cases the hacluster subordinate charm is used to provide the Corosync and Pacemaker backend HA functionality.
See OpenStack high availability in the OpenStack Charms Deployment Guide for details.
This charm supports the use of Juju Network Spaces, allowing the charm to be bound to network space configurations managed directly by Juju. This is only supported with Juju 2.0 and above.
API endpoints can be bound to distinct network spaces supporting the network separation of public, internal and admin endpoints.
Access to the underlying MySQL instance can also be bound to a specific space using the shared-db relation.
To use this feature, use the --bind option when deploying the charm:
juju deploy heat --bind \
"public=public-space \
internal=internal-space \
admin=admin-space \
shared-db=internal-space"
Alternatively, these can also be provided as part of a juju native bundle configuration:
heat:
charm: cs:xenial/heat
num_units: 1
bindings:
public: public-space
admin: admin-space
internal: internal-space
shared-db: internal-space
NOTE: Spaces must be configured in the underlying provider prior to attempting to use them.
NOTE: Existing deployments using os-*-network configuration options will continue to function; these options are preferred over any network space binding provided if set.
Policy overrides is an advanced feature that allows an operator to override the default policy of an OpenStack service. The policies that the service supports, the defaults it implements in its code, and the defaults that a charm may include should all be clearly understood before proceeding.
Caution: It is possible to break the system (for tenants and other services) if policies are incorrectly applied to the service.
Policy statements are placed in a YAML file. This file (or files) is then (ZIP) compressed into a single file and used as an application resource. The override is then enabled via a Boolean charm option.
Here are the essential commands (filenames are arbitrary):
zip overrides.zip override-file.yaml
juju attach-resource heat policyd-override=overrides.zip
juju config heat use-policyd-override=true
See appendix Policy Overrides in the OpenStack Charms Deployment Guide for a thorough treatment of this feature.
Please report bugs on Launchpad.
For general charm questions refer to the OpenStack Charm Guide.