This charm provides Keystone, the Openstack identity service. It's target platform is (ideally) Ubuntu LTS + Openstack.
The following interfaces are provided:
- nrpe-external-master: Used to generate Nagios checks.
- identity-service: Openstack API endpoints request an entry in the
Keystone service catalog + endpoint template catalog. When a relation
is established, Keystone receives: service name, region, public_url,
admin_url and internal_url. It first checks that the requested service
is listed as a supported service. This list should stay updated to
support current Openstack core services. If the service is supported,
an entry in the service catalog is created, an endpoint template is
created and a admin token is generated. The other end of the relation
receives the token as well as info on which ports Keystone is listening
on.
- keystone-service: This is currently only used by Horizon/dashboard
as its interaction with Keystone is different from other Openstack API
services. That is, Horizon requests a Keystone role and token exists.
During a relation, Horizon requests its configured default role and
Keystone responds with a token and the auth + admin ports on which
Keystone is listening.
- identity-admin: Charms use this relation to obtain the credentials
for the admin user. This is intended for charms that automatically
provision users, tenants, etc. or that otherwise automate using the
Openstack cluster deployment.
- identity-notifications: Used to broadcast messages to any services
listening on the interface.
- identity-credentials: Charms use this relation to obtain keystone
credentials without creating a service catalog entry.
Keystone requires a database. By default, a local sqlite database is used. The charm supports relations to a shared-db via mysql-shared interface. When a new data store is configured, the charm ensures the minimum administrator credentials exist (as configured via charm configuration)
VIP is only required if you plan on multi-unit clustering (requires relating with hacluster charm). The VIP becomes a highly-available API endpoint.
This charm also supports SSL and HTTPS endpoints. In order to ensure SSL certificates are only created once and distributed to all units, one unit gets elected as an ssl-cert-master. One side-effect of this is that as units are scaled-out the currently elected leader needs to be running in order for nodes to sync certificates. This 'feature' is to work around the lack of native leadership election via Juju itself, a feature that is due for release some time soon but until then we have to rely on this. Also, if a keystone unit does go down, it must be removed from Juju i.e.
juju destroy-unit keystone/<unit-num>
Otherwise it will be assumed that this unit may come back at some point and therefore must be know to be in-sync with the rest before continuing.
The minimum openstack-origin-git config required to deploy from source is:
openstack-origin-git: include-file://keystone-juno.yaml
keystone-juno.yaml
repositories:
- {name: requirements,
repository: 'git://github.com/openstack/requirements',
branch: stable/juno}
- {name: keystone,
repository: 'git://github.com/openstack/keystone',
branch: stable/juno}
Note that there are only two 'name' values the charm knows about: 'requirements' and 'keystone'. These repositories must correspond to these 'name' values. Additionally, the requirements repository must be specified first and the keystone repository must be specified last. All other repostories are installed in the order in which they are specified.
The following is a full list of current tip repos (may not be up-to-date):
openstack-origin-git: include-file://keystone-master.yaml
keystone-master.yaml
repositories:
- {name: requirements,
repository: 'git://github.com/openstack/requirements',
branch: master}
- {name: oslo-concurrency,
repository: 'git://github.com/openstack/oslo.concurrency',
branch: master}
- {name: oslo-config,
repository: 'git://github.com/openstack/oslo.config',
branch: master}
- {name: oslo-db,
repository: 'git://github.com/openstack/oslo.db',
branch: master}
- {name: oslo-i18n,
repository: 'git://github.com/openstack/oslo.i18n',
branch: master}
- {name: oslo-serialization,
repository: 'git://github.com/openstack/oslo.serialization',
branch: master}
- {name: oslo-utils,
repository: 'git://github.com/openstack/oslo.utils',
branch: master}
- {name: pbr,
repository: 'git://github.com/openstack-dev/pbr',
branch: master}
- {name: python-keystoneclient,
repository: 'git://github.com/openstack/python-keystoneclient',
branch: master}
- {name: sqlalchemy-migrate,
repository: 'git://github.com/stackforge/sqlalchemy-migrate',
branch: master}
- {name: keystonemiddleware,
repository: 'git://github.com/openstack/keystonemiddleware',
branch: master}
- {name: keystone,
repository: 'git://github.com/openstack/keystone',
branch: master}
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 keystone --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:
keystone:
charm: cs:xenial/keystone
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.