Ovn Dedicated Chassis

  • By OpenStack Charmers
  • Cloud
Channel Revision Published Runs on
latest/edge 130 11 Oct 2023
Ubuntu 23.10
22.03/stable 147 08 Dec 2023
Ubuntu 22.04 Ubuntu 20.04
openstack-21.09/edge 21 22 Feb 2022
Ubuntu 20.04
openstack-20.12/edge 20 22 Feb 2022
Ubuntu 20.04
openstack-20.03/edge 19 22 Feb 2022
Ubuntu 20.04 Ubuntu 18.04
23.09/stable 138 01 Dec 2023
Ubuntu 22.04
23.03/stable 151 08 Dec 2023
Ubuntu 23.04 Ubuntu 22.10 Ubuntu 22.04
22.09/stable 155 15 Dec 2023
Ubuntu 22.10 Ubuntu 22.04
21.09/stable 45 05 Aug 2022
Ubuntu 20.04
20.12/stable 31 23 Jan 2023
Ubuntu 20.04
20.03/stable 32 23 Jan 2023
Ubuntu 20.04 Ubuntu 18.04
juju deploy ovn-dedicated-chassis --channel 22.03/stable
Show information

Platform:

Ubuntu
22.04 20.04

Overview

The ovn-dedicated-chassis charm provides the Open Virtual Network (OVN) local controller, Open vSwitch Database and Switch. It is used in conjunction with the ovn-central charm.

Open vSwitch bridges for integration, external Layer2 and Layer3 connectivity is managed by the charm.

On successful deployment the unit will be enlisted as a Chassis in the OVN network.

The ovn-dedicated-chassis charm is a principle charm that sets up a software gateway on a dedicated host. Alternatively, the subordinate ovn-chassis charm can be used.

Note: The OVN charms are supported starting with OpenStack Train.

Usage

The OpenStack Base bundle gives an example of how you can deploy OpenStack and OVN with Vault to automate certificate lifecycle management.

OVN makes use of Public Key Infrastructure (PKI) to authenticate and authorize control plane communication. The charm therefore requires a Certificate Authority to be present in the model as represented by the certificates relation.

Refer to Open Virtual Network (OVN) in the OpenStack Charms Deployment Guide for details, including deployment steps.

This charm provides the Open Virtual Network (OVN) local controller, Open vSwitch Database and Switch.

On successful deployment the unit will be enlisted as a Chassis in the OVN network.

Open vSwitch bridges for integration, external Layer2 and Layer3 connectivity is managed by the charm.

Network spaces

This charm supports the use of Juju network spaces.

By binding the ovsdb endpoint you can influence which interface will be used for communication with the OVN Southbound DB as well as overlay traffic.

juju deploy ovn-dedicated-chassis --bind "ovsdb=internal-space"

By binding the data extra-binding you can influence which interface will be used for overlay traffic.

juju deploy ovn-dedicated-chassis --bind "data=overlay-space"

Port configuration

Chassis port configuration is composed of a mapping between physical network names to bridge names (ovn-bridge-mappings) and individual interface to bridge names (bridge-interface-mappings). There must be a match in both configuration options before the charm will configure bridge and interfaces on a unit.

The physical network name can be referenced when the administrator programs the OVN logical flows, either by talking directly to the Northbound database, or by interfacing with a Cloud Management System (CMS).

Networks for use with external Layer3 connectivity should have mappings on chassis located in the vicinity of the datacenter border gateways. Having two or more chassis with mappings for a Layer3 network will have OVN automatically configure highly available routers with liveness detection provided by the Bidirectional Forwarding Detection (BFD) protocol.

Chassis without direct external mapping to a external Layer3 network will forward traffic through a tunnel to one of the chassis acting as a gateway for that network.

Note: It is not necessary, nor recommended, to add mapping for external Layer3 networks to all chassis. Doing so will create a scaling problem at the physical network layer that needs to be resolved with globally shared Layer2 (does not scale) or tunneling at the top-of-rack switch layer (adds complexity) and is generally not a recommended configuration.

Networks for use with external Layer2 connectivity should have mappings present on all chassis with potential to host the consuming payload.

Deferred service events

Operational or maintenance procedures applied to a cloud often lead to the restarting of various OpenStack services and/or the calling of certain charm hooks. Although normal, such events can be undesirable due to the service interruptions they can cause.

The deferred service events feature provides the operator the choice of preventing these service restarts and hook calls from occurring, which can then be resolved at a more opportune time.

See the Deferred service events page in the OpenStack Charms Deployment Guide for an in-depth treatment of this feature.

Bugs

Please report bugs on Launchpad.

For general questions please refer to the OpenStack Charm Guide.


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