This RHCS version is now generally available. Default to using it.
Signed-off-by: Alfredo Deza <adeza@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Ken Dreyer <kdreyer@redhat.com>
Related: rhbz#1357631
By overriding the openstack_pools variable introduced by this commit, the
deployer may choose not to create some of the openstack pools, or to add
new pools which were not foreseen by ceph-ansible, e.g. for a gnocchi
storage backend.
For backwards compatibility, we keep the openstack_glance_pool,
openstack_cinder_pool, openstack_nova_pool and
openstack_cinder_backup_pool variables, although the user may now choose
to specify the pools directly as dictionary literals inside the
openstack_pools list.
Other things of note:
o You can now set the ceph branch to test against in
vagrant_variables.yml.
o You can now set the ceph_conf_overrides in vagrant_variables.yml.
This commit depends on an open PR:
https://github.com/displague/vagrant-linode/pull/66
Until that is merged, you must copy the changed file to your copy
of the vagrant-linode plugin, e.g.:
cp lib/vagrant-linode/actions/create.rb ~/.vagrant.d/gems/gems/vagrant-linode-0.2.7/lib/vagrant-linode/actions/create.rb
Signed-off-by: Patrick Donnelly <pdonnell@redhat.com>
This allows us to test devices set with persistent naming such as
/dev/disk/by-*
When registering devices we can use persisent (/dev/disk/by-*) or
non-persistent (/dev/sd*). Both declarations are supported by
ceph-ansible. There was just two tasks that were not compatible with
this. Since we support using partitions directly we need to test that
because the device activation will be different. To test if the device
is a partition we use a regular expression which wasn't compatible with
the persistent device naming format (/dev/disk/by-*).
This commit solves this issue by reading the path of the symlink since
devices like /dev/disk/by-* are symlinks to devices like /dev/sd*
Signed-off-by: Sébastien Han <seb@redhat.com>
For some providers (such as upcoming Linode support), some NICs may have
multiple IP addresses. (In the case of Linode, the only NIC has a public
and private IP address.) This is normally okay as we can use the
ceph.conf cluster_network and public_network variables to force the
monitor to listen on the addresses we want. However, we also need
ansible to set the correct monitor IP addresses in "mon hosts" (i.e. the
addresses the monitors will listen on!). This new monitor_address_block
setting tells ansible which IP address to use for each monitor.
Signed-off-by: Patrick Donnelly <pdonnell@redhat.com>
Users have reported this task to hang. Since this command is not
required to perform the upgrade, we remove it.
Signed-off-by: Sébastien Han <seb@redhat.com>
- Move mon_containerized_default_ceph_conf_with_kv config from ceph-mon
to ceph-common defaults as it's used in ceph-nfs
- Update conditional to generate ganesha config when not
mon_containerized_default_ceph_conf_with_kv
- Revert change to store radosgw keyring using ansible_hostname on
ansible server so that ceph-nfs can find it
- Update ceph-ceph-nfs0-rgw-user container to use ansible_hostname
variable
Signed-off-by: Ivan Font <ivan.font@redhat.com>