With the virtual infrastructure provisioned by tripleo-quickstart, the overcloud hosts are deployed on an isolated network that can only be accessed from the undercloud host. In many cases, simply logging in to the undercloud host as documented in Accessing the Undercloud is sufficient, but there are situations when you may want direct access to overcloud services from your desktop.
The easiest way to reach the overcloud nodes is to login using the ssh config file generated during the quickstart run:
ssh -F $HOME/.quickstart/ssh.config.ansible overcloud-controller-0
It’s a good idea to look into the ssh.config.ansible file to see all the hostnames and to understand how ssh logs in to the overcloud nodes though the undercloud.
An alternative way to reach the overcloud nodes is to log in to the undercloud host and figure out the ctlplane address of the deployed node:
[stack@undercloud ~]$ source stackrc
[stack@undercloud ~]$ nova list
+--------------------------------------+-------------------------+--------+------------+-------------+------------------------+
| ID | Name | Status | Task State | Power State | Networks |
+--------------------------------------+-------------------------+--------+------------+-------------+------------------------+
| 3d4a79d1-53ea-4f32-b496-fbdcbbb6a5a3 | overcloud-controller-0 | ACTIVE | - | Running | ctlplane=192.168.24.16 |
| 4f8acb6d-6394-4193-a6c6-50d8731fad7d | overcloud-novacompute-0 | ACTIVE | - | Running | ctlplane=192.168.24.8 |
+--------------------------------------+-------------------------+--------+------------+-------------+------------------------+
The address is randomly assigned and depends on the deployment environment. In this case the compute node has the address 192.168.24.8. Logging in to any of the nodes is possible with the heat-admin user. This user has full sudo rights on all the overcloud nodes and the undercloud is set up to login with public key authentication:
ssh heat-admin@192.168.24.8
The node can be also accessed by a static hostname of overcloud-novacompute-0.ctlplane in newer versions of OpenStack.
You can forward specific ports from your localhost to addresses on the overcloud network. For example, to access the overcloud Horizon interface, you could run:
ssh -F $HOME/.quickstart/ssh.config.ansible \
-L 8080:overcloud.localdomain:80 undercloud
This uses the ssh -L
command line option to forward port 8080
on
your local host to port 80
on the overcloud.localdomain
host
(which is defined in /etc/hosts
on the undercloud). Once you have
connected to the undercloud like this, you can then point your browser
at http://localhost:8080
to access Horizon.
You can add multiple -L
arguments to the ssh command line to expose
multiple services.
Note
If you are deploying mitaka release, you will need to use the
overcloud-public-vip
host (which will be defined in /etc/hosts
on the undercloud).
You can configure ssh as a
SOCKS5 proxy with the -D
command line option. For example, to start a proxy on port 1080:
ssh -F $HOME/.quickstart/ssh.config.ansible \
-D 1080 undercloud
You can now use this proxy to access any overcloud resources. With curl, that would look something like this:
$ curl --socks5-hostname localhost:1080 http://overcloud.localdomain:5000/
{"versions": {"values": [{"status": "stable", "updated": "2016-04-04T00:00:00Z",...
With baremetal and ovb based deployments you can access horizon via the overclouds’s controller public ip address http://<controller_ip>:80
Deploying TripleO in a libvirt based environment presents an additional challenge of access the isolated ovs networks on the undercloud. By default an ssh-tunnel service has been setup on the virthost with the tripleo-quickstart for libvirt deployments. Access horizon with the following.
From the localhost:
http://<virthost>:8181
Overcloud with SSL enabled
http://<virthost>:8443
You can configure Firefox to use a SOCKS5 proxy. You may want to create create a new profile for this so that you don’t impact your normal browsing.
localhost
in the “SOCKS Host” field, and enter 1080
(or
whatever port you supplied to the ssh -D
option) in the “Port:”
field.Now, if you enter http://overcloud.localdomain/ in your browser, you will be able to access the overcloud Horizon instance. Note that you will probably need to enter the full URL; entering an unqualified hostname into the location bar will redirect to a search engine rather than attempting to contact the website.
It is not possible to configure a proxy connection using the Chrome UI without using an extension. You can set things up from the command line by using these instructions, which boil down to starting Chrome like this:
google-chrome --proxy-server="socks5://localhost:1080" \
--host-resolver-rules="MAP * 0.0.0.0"
The sshuttle tool is something halfway between a VPN and a proxy server, and can be used to give your local host direct access to the overcloud network.
Note the network range used by the overcloud servers; this will be
the value of undercloud_network
in your configuration, which as
of this writing defaults for historical reasons to 192.0.2.0/24
.
Install the sshuttle
package if you don’t already have it
Run sshuttle
:
sshuttle \
-e "ssh -F $HOME/.quickstart/ssh.config.ansible" \
-r undercloud -v 192.0.2.0/24
(Where 192.0.2.0/24
should be replaced by whatever address range
you noted in the first step.)
With this in place, your local host can access any address on the overcloud network. Hostname resolution will not work, but since the generated credentials files use ip addresses this should not present a problem.
If you want to use command line tools like the openstack
integrated
client to access overcloud API services, you can use
tsocks, which uses function
interposition to redirect all network access to a SOCKS proxy.
Install the tsocks
package if you don’t already have it
available.
Create a $HOME/.tsocks
configuration file with the following
content:
server = 127.0.0.1
server_port = 1080
Set the TSOCKS_CONF_FILE
environment variable to point to this
configuration file:
export TSOCKS_CONF_FILE=$HOME/.tsocks
Use the tsocks
command to wrap your command invocations:
$ tsocks openstack flavor list
+----+-----------+-------+------+-----------+-------+-----------+
| ID | Name | RAM | Disk | Ephemeral | VCPUs | Is Public |
+----+-----------+-------+------+-----------+-------+-----------+
| 1 | m1.tiny | 512 | 1 | 0 | 1 | True |
| 2 | m1.small | 2048 | 20 | 0 | 1 | True |
| 3 | m1.medium | 4096 | 40 | 0 | 2 | True |
| 4 | m1.large | 8192 | 80 | 0 | 4 | True |
| 5 | m1.xlarge | 16384 | 160 | 0 | 8 | True |
+----+-----------+-------+------+-----------+-------+-----------+
This solution is known to work with the openstack
integrated client,
and known to fail with many of the legacy clients (such as the
nova
or keystone
commands).
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