Configuring HAProxy (optional)

HAProxy provides load balancing services and SSL termination when hardware load balancers are not available for high availability architectures deployed by OpenStack-Ansible. The default HAProxy configuration provides highly- available load balancing services via keepalived if there is more than one host in the haproxy_hosts group.

Important

Ensure you review the services exposed by HAProxy and limit access to these services to trusted users and networks only. For more details, refer to the Securing network access to OpenStack services section.

Note

For a successful installation, you require a load balancer. You may prefer to make use of hardware load balancers instead of HAProxy. If hardware load balancers are in use, then implement the load balancing configuration for services prior to executing the deployment.

To deploy HAProxy within your OpenStack-Ansible environment, define target hosts to run HAProxy:

haproxy_hosts:
  infra1:
    ip: 172.29.236.101
  infra2:
    ip: 172.29.236.102
  infra3:
    ip: 172.29.236.103

There is an example configuration file already provided in /etc/openstack_deploy/conf.d/haproxy.yml.example. Rename the file to haproxy.yml and configure it with the correct target hosts to use HAProxy in an OpenStack-Ansible deployment.

Making HAProxy highly-available

If multiple hosts are found in the inventory, deploy HAProxy in a highly-available manner by installing keepalived.

To make keepalived work, edit at least the following variables in user_variables.yml:

haproxy_keepalived_external_vip_cidr: 192.168.0.4/25
haproxy_keepalived_internal_vip_cidr: 172.29.236.54/16
haproxy_keepalived_external_interface: br-flat
haproxy_keepalived_internal_interface: br-mgmt
  • haproxy_keepalived_internal_interface and haproxy_keepalived_external_interface represent the interfaces on the deployed node where the keepalived nodes bind the internal and external vip. By default, use br-mgmt.

  • On the interface listed above, haproxy_keepalived_internal_vip_cidr and haproxy_keepalived_external_vip_cidr represent the internal and external (respectively) vips (with their prefix length).

  • Set additional variables to adapt keepalived in your deployment. Refer to the user_variables.yml for more descriptions.

To always deploy (or upgrade to) the latest stable version of keepalived. Edit the /etc/openstack_deploy/user_variables.yml:

keepalived_use_latest_stable: True

The HAProxy nodes have group vars applied that define the configuration of keepalived. This configuration is stored in group_vars/haproxy_all/keepalived.yml. It contains the variables needed for the keepalived role (master and backup nodes).

Keepalived pings a public and private IP address to check its status. The default address is 193.0.14.129. To change this default, set the keepalived_external_ping_address and keepalived_internal_ping_address variables in the user_variables.yml file.

Note

The keepalived test works with IPv4 addresses only.

You can adapt keepalived to your environment by either using our override mechanisms (per host with userspace host_vars, per group with userspace``group_vars``, or globally using the userspace user_variables.yml file)

If you wish to deploy multiple haproxy hosts without keepalived and provide your own means for failover between them, edit /etc/openstack_deploy/user_variables.yml to skip the deployment of keepalived. To do this, set the following:

haproxy_use_keepalived: False

Configuring keepalived ping checks

OpenStack-Ansible configures keepalived with a check script that pings an external resource and uses that ping to determine if a node has lost network connectivity. If the pings fail, keepalived fails over to another node and HAProxy serves requests there.

The destination address, ping count and ping interval are configurable via Ansible variables in /etc/openstack_deploy/user_variables.yml:

keepalived_external_ping_address:   # Public IP address to ping
keepalived_internal_ping_address:   # Private IP address to ping
keepalived_ping_count:              # ICMP packets to send (per interval)
keepalived_ping_interval:           # How often ICMP packets are sent

By default, OpenStack-Ansible configures keepalived to ping one of the root DNS servers operated by RIPE. You can change this IP address to a different external address or another address on your internal network.

If external connectivity fails, it is important that internal services can still access an HAProxy instance. In a situation, when ping to some external host fails and internal ping is not separated, all keepalived instances enter the fault state despite internal connectivity being still available. Separate ping check for internal and external connectivity ensures that when one instance fails the other VIP remains in operation.

Securing HAProxy communication with SSL certificates

The OpenStack-Ansible project provides the ability to secure HAProxy communications with self-signed or user-provided SSL certificates. By default, self-signed certificates are used with HAProxy. However, you can provide your own certificates by using the following Ansible variables:

haproxy_user_ssl_cert:          # Path to certificate
haproxy_user_ssl_key:           # Path to private key
haproxy_user_ssl_ca_cert:       # Path to CA certificate

Refer to Securing services with SSL certificates for more information on these configuration options and how you can provide your own certificates and keys to use with HAProxy. User provided certificates should be folded and formatted at 64 characters long. Single line certificates will not be accepted by HAProxy and will result in SSL validation failures. Please have a look here for information on converting your certificate to various formats.

Using Certificates from LetsEncrypt

If you want to use LetsEncrypt SSL Service you can activate the feature by providing the following configuration in /etc/openstack_deploy/user_variables.yml. Note that this requires that external_lb_vip_address in /etc/openstack_deploy/openstack_user_config.yml is set to the external DNS address.

The following variables must be set for the haproxy hosts.

haproxy_ssl_letsencrypt_enable: True
haproxy_ssl_letsencrypt_install_method: "distro"
haproxy_ssl_letsencrypt_email: example@example.com
haproxy_interval: 2000

The following variables serve as an example for how to configure a single HAProxy providing SSL termination for a service on the same host, served from 127.0.0.1:80. An additional HAProxy backend is configured which will receive the acme-challenge requests when certificates are renewed.

haproxy_service_configs:
  # the external facing service which serves the apache test site, with a acl for LE requests
  - service:
      haproxy_service_name: test
      haproxy_redirect_http_port: 80                         #redirect port 80 to port ssl
      haproxy_redirect_scheme: "https if !{ ssl_fc } !{ path_beg /.well-known/acme-challenge/ }"   #redirect all non-ssl traffic to ssl except acme-challenge
      haproxy_port: 443
      haproxy_frontend_acls:                                 #use a frontend ACL specify the backend to use for acme-challenge
        letsencrypt-acl:
            rule: "path_beg /.well-known/acme-challenge/"
            backend_name: letsencrypt
      haproxy_ssl: True
      haproxy_backend_nodes:                                 #apache is running on locally on 127.0.0.1:80 serving a dummy site
        - name: local-test-service
          ip_addr: 127.0.0.1
      haproxy_balance_type: http
      haproxy_backend_port: 80
      haproxy_backend_options:
        - "httpchk HEAD /"                                   # request to use for health check for the example service

  # an internal only service for acme-challenge whose backend is certbot on the haproxy host
  - service:
      haproxy_service_name: letsencrypt
      haproxy_backend_nodes:
        - name: localhost
          ip_addr: {{ ansible_host }}                        #certbot binds to the internal IP
      backend_rise: 1                                        #quick rise and fall time for multinode deployment to succeed
      backend_fall: 2
      haproxy_bind:
        - 127.0.0.1                                          #bind to 127.0.0.1 as the local internal address  will be used by certbot
      haproxy_port: 8888                                     #certbot is configured with http-01-port to be 8888
      haproxy_balance_type: http

It is possible to use an HA configuration of HAProxy with certificates initialised and renewed using certbot by setting haproxy_backend_nodes for the LetsEncrypt service to include all HAProxy internal addresses. Each HAProxy instance will be checking for certbot running on its own node plus each of the others, and direct any incoming acme-challenge requests to the HAProxy instance which is performing a renewal.

It is necessary to configure certbot to bind to the HAproxy node local internal IP address via the haproxy_ssl_letsencrypt_certbot_bind_address variable in a H/A setup.

Using Certificates from LetsEncrypt (legacy method)

If you want to use LetsEncrypt SSL Service you can activate the feature by providing the following configuration in /etc/openstack_deploy/user_variables.yml. Note that this requires that external_lb_vip_address in /etc/openstack_deploy/openstack_user_config.yml is set to the external DNS address.

haproxy_ssl_letsencrypt_enable: true
haproxy_ssl_letsencrypt_email: example@example.com

Warning

There is no certificate distribution implementation at this time, so this will only work for a single haproxy-server environment. The renewal is automatically handled via CRON and currently will shut down haproxy briefly during the certificate renewal. The haproxy shutdown/restart will result in a brief service interruption.

Configuring additional services

Additional haproxy service entries can be configured by setting haproxy_extra_services in /etc/openstack_deploy/user_variables.yml

For more information on the service dict syntax, please reference playbooks/vars/configs/haproxy_config.yml

An example HTTP service could look like:

haproxy_extra_services:
  - service:
      haproxy_service_name: extra-web-service
      haproxy_backend_nodes: "{{ groups['service_group'] | default([]) }}"
      haproxy_ssl: "{{ haproxy_ssl }}"
      haproxy_port: 10000
      haproxy_balance_type: http
      # If backend connections should be secured with SSL (default False)
      haproxy_backend_ssl: True
      haproxy_backend_ca: /path/to/ca/cert.pem
      # Or if certificate validation should be disabled
      # haproxy_backend_ca: False

Additionally, you can specify haproxy services that are not managed in the Ansible inventory by manually specifying their hostnames/IP Addresses:

haproxy_extra_services:
  - service:
      haproxy_service_name: extra-non-inventory-service
      haproxy_backend_nodes:
        - name: nonInvHost01
          ip_addr: 172.0.1.1
        - name: nonInvHost02
          ip_addr: 172.0.1.2
        - name: nonInvHost03
          ip_addr: 172.0.1.3
      haproxy_ssl: "{{ haproxy_ssl }}"
      haproxy_port: 10001
      haproxy_balance_type: http

Adding additional global VIP addresses

In some cases, you might need to add additional internal VIP addresses to the load balancer front end. You can use the HAProxy role to add additional VIPs to all front ends by setting them in the extra_lb_vip_addresses or extra_lb_tls_vip_addresses variables.

The following example shows extra VIP addresses defined in the user_variables.yml file:

extra_lb_vip_addresses:
  - 10.0.0.10
  - 192.168.0.10

The following example shows extra VIP addresses with TLS enabled defined in the user_variables.yml file:

extra_lb_tls_vip_addresses:
  - 10.0.0.10
  - 192.168.0.10

Overriding the address haproxy will bind to

In some cases you may want to override the default of having haproxy bind to the addresses specified in external_lb_vip_address and internal_lb_vip_address. For example if those are hostnames and you want haproxy to bind to IP addresses while preserving the names for TLS- certificates and endpoint URIs.

This can be set in the user_variables.yml file:

haproxy_bind_external_lb_vip_address: 10.0.0.10
haproxy_bind_internal_lb_vip_address: 192.168.0.10

Adding Access Control Lists to HAProxy front end

Adding ACL rules in HAProxy is easy. You just need to define haproxy_acls and add the rules in the variable

Here is an example that shows how to achieve the goal

- service:
       haproxy_service_name: influxdb-relay
       haproxy_acls:
           write_queries:
              rule: "path_sub -i write"
           read_queries:
              rule: "path_sub -i query"
              backend_name: "influxdb"

This will add two acl rules path_sub -i write and path_sub -i query to the front end and use the backend specified in the rule. If no backend is specified it will use a default haproxy_service_name backend.

If a frontend service directs to multiple backend services using ACLs, and a backend service does not require its own corresponding front-end, the haproxy_backend_only option can be specified:

- service:
      haproxy_service_name: influxdb
      haproxy_backend_only: true # Directed by the 'influxdb-relay' service above
      haproxy_backend_nodes:
        - name: influxdb-service
          ip_addr: 10.100.10.10

Adding prometheus metrics to haproxy

Since haproxy 2.0 it’s possible to exposes prometheus metrics. https://www.haproxy.com/blog/haproxy-exposes-a-prometheus-metrics-endpoint/ if you need to create a frontend for it you can use the haproxy_frontend_only option:

- service:
    haproxy_service_name: prometheus-metrics
    haproxy_port: 8404
    haproxy_bind:
      - '127.0.0.1'
    haproxy_whitelist_networks: "{{ haproxy_whitelist_networks }}"
    haproxy_frontend_only: True
    haproxy_frontend_raw:
      - 'http-request use-service prometheus-exporter if { path /metrics }'
    haproxy_service_enabled: True
    haproxy_balance_type: 'http'