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.. _quick-install-admin-guide:
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Administrator's Quick Installation Guide
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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This is the Administrator's quick installation guide.
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It describes how to install the whole synnefo stack on two (2) physical nodes,
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with minimum configuration. It installs synnefo from Debian packages, and
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assumes the nodes run Debian Squeeze. After successful installation, you will
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have the following services running:
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 * Identity Management (Astakos)
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 * Object Storage Service (Pithos+)
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 * Compute Service (Cyclades)
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 * Image Registry Service (Plankton)
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and a single unified Web UI to manage them all.
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The Volume Storage Service (Archipelago) and the Billing Service (Aquarium) are
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not released yet.
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If you just want to install the Object Storage Service (Pithos+), follow the guide
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and just stop after the "Testing of Pithos+" section.
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Installation of Synnefo / Introduction
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======================================
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We will install the services with the above list's order. Cyclades and Plankton
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will be installed in a single step (at the end), because at the moment they are
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contained in the same software component. Furthermore, we will install all
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services in the first physical node, except Pithos+ which will be installed in
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the second, due to a conflict between the snf-pithos-app and snf-cyclades-app
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component (scheduled to be fixed in the next version).
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For the rest of the documentation we will refer to the first physical node as
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"node1" and the second as "node2". We will also assume that their domain names
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are "node1.example.com" and "node2.example.com" and their IPs are "4.3.2.1" and
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"4.3.2.2" respectively.
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.. note:: It is import that the two machines are under the same domain name.
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    If they are not, you can do this by editting the file ``/etc/hosts``
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    on both machines, and add the following lines:
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    .. code-block:: console
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        4.3.2.1     node1.example.com
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        4.3.2.2     node2.example.com
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General Prerequisites
53
=====================
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These are the general synnefo prerequisites, that you need on node1 and node2
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and are related to all the services (Astakos, Pithos+, Cyclades, Plankton).
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To be able to download all synnefo components you need to add the following
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lines in your ``/etc/apt/sources.list`` file:
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| ``deb http://apt.dev.grnet.gr squeeze main``
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| ``deb-src http://apt.dev.grnet.gr squeeze main``
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| ``deb http://apt.dev.grnet.gr squeeze-backports main``
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and import the repo's GPG key:
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| ``curl https://dev.grnet.gr/files/apt-grnetdev.pub | apt-key add -``
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Also add the following line to enable the ``squeeze-backports`` repository,
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which may provide more recent versions of certain packages. The repository
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is deactivated by default and must be specified expicitly in ``apt-get``
72
operations:
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| ``deb http://backports.debian.org/debian-backports squeeze-backports main``
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You also need a shared directory visible by both nodes. Pithos+ will save all
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data inside this directory. By 'all data', we mean files, images, and pithos
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specific mapping data. If you plan to upload more than one basic image, this
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directory should have at least 50GB of free space. During this guide, we will
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assume that node1 acts as an NFS server and serves the directory ``/srv/pithos``
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to node2 (be sure to set no_root_squash flag). Node2 has this directory
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mounted under ``/srv/pithos``, too.
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Before starting the synnefo installation, you will need basic third party
85
software to be installed and configured on the physical nodes. We will describe
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each node's general prerequisites separately. Any additional configuration,
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specific to a synnefo service for each node, will be described at the service's
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section.
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Finally, it is required for Cyclades and Ganeti nodes to have synchronized
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system clocks (e.g. by running ntpd).
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Node1
94
-----
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General Synnefo dependencies
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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 * apache (http server)
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 * gunicorn (WSGI http server)
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 * postgresql (database)
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 * rabbitmq (message queue)
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 * ntp (NTP daemon)
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You can install apache2, progresql and ntp by running:
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.. code-block:: console
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   # apt-get install apache2 postgresql ntp
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Make sure to install gunicorn >= v0.12.2. You can do this by installing from
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the official debian backports:
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.. code-block:: console
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   # apt-get -t squeeze-backports install gunicorn
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On node1, we will create our databases, so you will also need the
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python-psycopg2 package:
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.. code-block:: console
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   # apt-get install python-psycopg2
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To install RabbitMQ>=2.8.4, use the RabbitMQ APT repository by adding the
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following line to ``/etc/apt/sources.list``:
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.. code-block:: console
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  deb http://www.rabbitmq.com/debian testing main
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Add RabbitMQ public key, to trusted key list:
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.. code-block:: console
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  # wget http://www.rabbitmq.com/rabbitmq-signing-key-public.asc
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  # apt-key add rabbitmq-signing-key-public.asc
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Finally, to install the package run:
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.. code-block:: console
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  # apt-get update
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  # apt-get install rabbitmq-server
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Database setup
147
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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On node1, we create a database called ``snf_apps``, that will host all django
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apps related tables. We also create the user ``synnefo`` and grant him all
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privileges on the database. We do this by running:
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.. code-block:: console
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   root@node1:~ # su - postgres
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   postgres@node1:~ $ psql
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   postgres=# CREATE DATABASE snf_apps WITH ENCODING 'UTF8' LC_COLLATE='C' LC_CTYPE='C' TEMPLATE=template0;
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   postgres=# CREATE USER synnefo WITH PASSWORD 'example_passw0rd';
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   postgres=# GRANT ALL PRIVILEGES ON DATABASE snf_apps TO synnefo;
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We also create the database ``snf_pithos`` needed by the pithos+ backend and
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grant the ``synnefo`` user all privileges on the database. This database could
163
be created on node2 instead, but we do it on node1 for simplicity. We will
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create all needed databases on node1 and then node2 will connect to them.
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.. code-block:: console
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   postgres=# CREATE DATABASE snf_pithos WITH ENCODING 'UTF8' LC_COLLATE='C' LC_CTYPE='C' TEMPLATE=template0;
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   postgres=# GRANT ALL PRIVILEGES ON DATABASE snf_pithos TO synnefo;
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Configure the database to listen to all network interfaces. You can do this by
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editting the file ``/etc/postgresql/8.4/main/postgresql.conf`` and change
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``listen_addresses`` to ``'*'`` :
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.. code-block:: console
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   listen_addresses = '*'
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Furthermore, edit ``/etc/postgresql/8.4/main/pg_hba.conf`` to allow node1 and
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node2 to connect to the database. Add the following lines under ``#IPv4 local
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connections:`` :
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.. code-block:: console
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185
   host		all	all	4.3.2.1/32	md5
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   host		all	all	4.3.2.2/32	md5
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Make sure to substitute "4.3.2.1" and "4.3.2.2" with node1's and node2's
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actual IPs. Now, restart the server to apply the changes:
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.. code-block:: console
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   # /etc/init.d/postgresql restart
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Gunicorn setup
196
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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198
Create the file ``synnefo`` under ``/etc/gunicorn.d/`` containing the following:
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.. code-block:: console
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   CONFIG = {
203
    'mode': 'django',
204
    'environment': {
205
      'DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE': 'synnefo.settings',
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    },
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    'working_dir': '/etc/synnefo',
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    'user': 'www-data',
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    'group': 'www-data',
210
    'args': (
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      '--bind=127.0.0.1:8080',
212
      '--workers=8',
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      '--log-level=debug',
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    ),
215
   }
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.. warning:: Do NOT start the server yet, because it won't find the
218
    ``synnefo.settings`` module. We will start the server after successful
219
    installation of astakos. If the server is running::
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       # /etc/init.d/gunicorn stop
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223
Apache2 setup
224
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
225

    
226
Create the file ``synnefo`` under ``/etc/apache2/sites-available/`` containing
227
the following:
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.. code-block:: console
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   <VirtualHost *:80>
232
     ServerName node1.example.com
233

    
234
     RewriteEngine On
235
     RewriteCond %{THE_REQUEST} ^.*(\\r|\\n|%0A|%0D).* [NC]
236
     RewriteRule ^(.*)$ - [F,L]
237
     RewriteRule (.*) https://%{HTTP_HOST}%{REQUEST_URI}
238
   </VirtualHost>
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240
Create the file ``synnefo-ssl`` under ``/etc/apache2/sites-available/``
241
containing the following:
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.. code-block:: console
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245
   <IfModule mod_ssl.c>
246
   <VirtualHost _default_:443>
247
     ServerName node1.example.com
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     Alias /static "/usr/share/synnefo/static"
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251
   #  SetEnv no-gzip
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   #  SetEnv dont-vary
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254
     AllowEncodedSlashes On
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256
     RequestHeader set X-Forwarded-Protocol "https"
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258
     <Proxy * >
259
       Order allow,deny
260
       Allow from all
261
     </Proxy>
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     SetEnv                proxy-sendchunked
264
     SSLProxyEngine        off
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     ProxyErrorOverride    off
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267
     ProxyPass        /static !
268
     ProxyPass        / http://localhost:8080/ retry=0
269
     ProxyPassReverse / http://localhost:8080/
270

    
271
     RewriteEngine On
272
     RewriteCond %{THE_REQUEST} ^.*(\\r|\\n|%0A|%0D).* [NC]
273
     RewriteRule ^(.*)$ - [F,L]
274

    
275
     SSLEngine on
276
     SSLCertificateFile    /etc/ssl/certs/ssl-cert-snakeoil.pem
277
     SSLCertificateKeyFile /etc/ssl/private/ssl-cert-snakeoil.key
278
   </VirtualHost>
279
   </IfModule>
280

    
281
Now enable sites and modules by running:
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283
.. code-block:: console
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285
   # a2enmod ssl
286
   # a2enmod rewrite
287
   # a2dissite default
288
   # a2ensite synnefo
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   # a2ensite synnefo-ssl
290
   # a2enmod headers
291
   # a2enmod proxy_http
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293
.. warning:: Do NOT start/restart the server yet. If the server is running::
294

    
295
       # /etc/init.d/apache2 stop
296

    
297
.. _rabbitmq-setup:
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299
Message Queue setup
300
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
301

    
302
The message queue will run on node1, so we need to create the appropriate
303
rabbitmq user. The user is named ``synnefo`` and gets full privileges on all
304
exchanges:
305

    
306
.. code-block:: console
307

    
308
   # rabbitmqctl add_user synnefo "example_rabbitmq_passw0rd"
309
   # rabbitmqctl set_permissions synnefo ".*" ".*" ".*"
310

    
311
We do not need to initialize the exchanges. This will be done automatically,
312
during the Cyclades setup.
313

    
314
Pithos+ data directory setup
315
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
316

    
317
As mentioned in the General Prerequisites section, there is a directory called
318
``/srv/pithos`` visible by both nodes. We create and setup the ``data``
319
directory inside it:
320

    
321
.. code-block:: console
322

    
323
   # cd /srv/pithos
324
   # mkdir data
325
   # chown www-data:www-data data
326
   # chmod g+ws data
327

    
328
You are now ready with all general prerequisites concerning node1. Let's go to
329
node2.
330

    
331
Node2
332
-----
333

    
334
General Synnefo dependencies
335
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
336

    
337
 * apache (http server)
338
 * gunicorn (WSGI http server)
339
 * postgresql (database)
340
 * ntp (NTP daemon)
341

    
342
You can install the above by running:
343

    
344
.. code-block:: console
345

    
346
   # apt-get install apache2 postgresql ntp
347

    
348
Make sure to install gunicorn >= v0.12.2. You can do this by installing from
349
the official debian backports:
350

    
351
.. code-block:: console
352

    
353
   # apt-get -t squeeze-backports install gunicorn
354

    
355
Node2 will connect to the databases on node1, so you will also need the
356
python-psycopg2 package:
357

    
358
.. code-block:: console
359

    
360
   # apt-get install python-psycopg2
361

    
362
Database setup
363
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
364

    
365
All databases have been created and setup on node1, so we do not need to take
366
any action here. From node2, we will just connect to them. When you get familiar
367
with the software you may choose to run different databases on different nodes,
368
for performance/scalability/redundancy reasons, but those kind of setups are out
369
of the purpose of this guide.
370

    
371
Gunicorn setup
372
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
373

    
374
Create the file ``synnefo`` under ``/etc/gunicorn.d/`` containing the following
375
(same contents as in node1; you can just copy/paste the file):
376

    
377
.. code-block:: console
378

    
379
   CONFIG = {
380
    'mode': 'django',
381
    'environment': {
382
      'DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE': 'synnefo.settings',
383
    },
384
    'working_dir': '/etc/synnefo',
385
    'user': 'www-data',
386
    'group': 'www-data',
387
    'args': (
388
      '--bind=127.0.0.1:8080',
389
      '--workers=4',
390
      '--log-level=debug',
391
      '--timeout=43200'
392
    ),
393
   }
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395
.. warning:: Do NOT start the server yet, because it won't find the
396
    ``synnefo.settings`` module. We will start the server after successful
397
    installation of astakos. If the server is running::
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399
       # /etc/init.d/gunicorn stop
400

    
401
Apache2 setup
402
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
403

    
404
Create the file ``synnefo`` under ``/etc/apache2/sites-available/`` containing
405
the following:
406

    
407
.. code-block:: console
408

    
409
   <VirtualHost *:80>
410
     ServerName node2.example.com
411

    
412
     RewriteEngine On
413
     RewriteCond %{THE_REQUEST} ^.*(\\r|\\n|%0A|%0D).* [NC]
414
     RewriteRule ^(.*)$ - [F,L]
415
     RewriteRule (.*) https://%{HTTP_HOST}%{REQUEST_URI}
416
   </VirtualHost>
417

    
418
Create the file ``synnefo-ssl`` under ``/etc/apache2/sites-available/``
419
containing the following:
420

    
421
.. code-block:: console
422

    
423
   <IfModule mod_ssl.c>
424
   <VirtualHost _default_:443>
425
     ServerName node2.example.com
426

    
427
     Alias /static "/usr/share/synnefo/static"
428

    
429
     SetEnv no-gzip
430
     SetEnv dont-vary
431
     AllowEncodedSlashes On
432

    
433
     RequestHeader set X-Forwarded-Protocol "https"
434

    
435
     <Proxy * >
436
       Order allow,deny
437
       Allow from all
438
     </Proxy>
439

    
440
     SetEnv                proxy-sendchunked
441
     SSLProxyEngine        off
442
     ProxyErrorOverride    off
443

    
444
     ProxyPass        /static !
445
     ProxyPass        / http://localhost:8080/ retry=0
446
     ProxyPassReverse / http://localhost:8080/
447

    
448
     SSLEngine on
449
     SSLCertificateFile    /etc/ssl/certs/ssl-cert-snakeoil.pem
450
     SSLCertificateKeyFile /etc/ssl/private/ssl-cert-snakeoil.key
451
   </VirtualHost>
452
   </IfModule>
453

    
454
As in node1, enable sites and modules by running:
455

    
456
.. code-block:: console
457

    
458
   # a2enmod ssl
459
   # a2enmod rewrite
460
   # a2dissite default
461
   # a2ensite synnefo
462
   # a2ensite synnefo-ssl
463
   # a2enmod headers
464
   # a2enmod proxy_http
465

    
466
.. warning:: Do NOT start/restart the server yet. If the server is running::
467

    
468
       # /etc/init.d/apache2 stop
469

    
470
We are now ready with all general prerequisites for node2. Now that we have
471
finished with all general prerequisites for both nodes, we can start installing
472
the services. First, let's install Astakos on node1.
473

    
474

    
475
Installation of Astakos on node1
476
================================
477

    
478
To install astakos, grab the package from our repository (make sure  you made
479
the additions needed in your ``/etc/apt/sources.list`` file, as described
480
previously), by running:
481

    
482
.. code-block:: console
483

    
484
   # apt-get install snf-astakos-app
485

    
486
After successful installation of snf-astakos-app, make sure that also
487
snf-webproject has been installed (marked as "Recommended" package). By default
488
Debian installs "Recommended" packages, but if you have changed your
489
configuration and the package didn't install automatically, you should
490
explicitly install it manually running:
491

    
492
.. code-block:: console
493

    
494
   # apt-get install snf-webproject
495

    
496
The reason snf-webproject is "Recommended" and not a hard dependency, is to give
497
the experienced administrator the ability to install synnefo in a custom made
498
django project. This corner case concerns only very advanced users that know
499
what they are doing and want to experiment with synnefo.
500

    
501

    
502
.. _conf-astakos:
503

    
504
Configuration of Astakos
505
========================
506

    
507
Conf Files
508
----------
509

    
510
After astakos is successfully installed, you will find the directory
511
``/etc/synnefo`` and some configuration files inside it. The files contain
512
commented configuration options, which are the default options. While installing
513
new snf-* components, new configuration files will appear inside the directory.
514
In this guide (and for all services), we will edit only the minimum necessary
515
configuration options, to reflect our setup. Everything else will remain as is.
516

    
517
After getting familiar with synnefo, you will be able to customize the software
518
as you wish and fits your needs. Many options are available, to empower the
519
administrator with extensively customizable setups.
520

    
521
For the snf-webproject component (installed as an astakos dependency), we
522
need the following:
523

    
524
Edit ``/etc/synnefo/10-snf-webproject-database.conf``. You will need to
525
uncomment and edit the ``DATABASES`` block to reflect our database:
526

    
527
.. code-block:: console
528

    
529
   DATABASES = {
530
    'default': {
531
        # 'postgresql_psycopg2', 'postgresql','mysql', 'sqlite3' or 'oracle'
532
        'ENGINE': 'postgresql_psycopg2',
533
         # ATTENTION: This *must* be the absolute path if using sqlite3.
534
         # See: http://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/ref/settings/#name
535
        'NAME': 'snf_apps',
536
        'USER': 'synnefo',                      # Not used with sqlite3.
537
        'PASSWORD': 'example_passw0rd',         # Not used with sqlite3.
538
        # Set to empty string for localhost. Not used with sqlite3.
539
        'HOST': '4.3.2.1',
540
        # Set to empty string for default. Not used with sqlite3.
541
        'PORT': '5432',
542
    }
543
   }
544

    
545
Edit ``/etc/synnefo/10-snf-webproject-deploy.conf``. Uncomment and edit
546
``SECRET_KEY``. This is a django specific setting which is used to provide a
547
seed in secret-key hashing algorithms. Set this to a random string of your
548
choise and keep it private:
549

    
550
.. code-block:: console
551

    
552
   SECRET_KEY = 'sy6)mw6a7x%n)-example_secret_key#zzk4jo6f2=uqu!1o%)'
553

    
554
For astakos specific configuration, edit the following options in
555
``/etc/synnefo/20-snf-astakos-app-settings.conf`` :
556

    
557
.. code-block:: console
558

    
559
   ASTAKOS_DEFAULT_ADMIN_EMAIL = None
560

    
561
   ASTAKOS_COOKIE_DOMAIN = '.example.com'
562

    
563
   ASTAKOS_BASEURL = 'https://node1.example.com'
564

    
565
The ``ASTAKOS_COOKIE_DOMAIN`` should be the base url of our domain (for all
566
services). ``ASTAKOS_BASEURL`` is the astakos home page.
567

    
568
``ASTAKOS_DEFAULT_ADMIN_EMAIL`` refers to the administrator's email.
569
Every time a new account is created a notification is sent to this email.
570
For this we need access to a running mail server, so we have disabled
571
it for now by setting its value to None. For more informations on this,
572
read the relative :ref:`section <mail-server>`.
573

    
574
.. note:: For the purpose of this guide, we don't enable recaptcha authentication.
575
    If you would like to enable it, you have to edit the following options:
576

    
577
    .. code-block:: console
578

    
579
        ASTAKOS_RECAPTCHA_PUBLIC_KEY = 'example_recaptcha_public_key!@#$%^&*('
580
        ASTAKOS_RECAPTCHA_PRIVATE_KEY = 'example_recaptcha_private_key!@#$%^&*('
581
        ASTAKOS_RECAPTCHA_USE_SSL = True
582
        ASTAKOS_RECAPTCHA_ENABLED = True
583

    
584
    For the ``ASTAKOS_RECAPTCHA_PUBLIC_KEY`` and ``ASTAKOS_RECAPTCHA_PRIVATE_KEY``
585
    go to https://www.google.com/recaptcha/admin/create and create your own pair.
586

    
587
Then edit ``/etc/synnefo/20-snf-astakos-app-cloudbar.conf`` :
588

    
589
.. code-block:: console
590

    
591
   CLOUDBAR_LOCATION = 'https://node1.example.com/static/im/cloudbar/'
592

    
593
   CLOUDBAR_SERVICES_URL = 'https://node1.example.com/im/get_services'
594

    
595
   CLOUDBAR_MENU_URL = 'https://node1.example.com/im/get_menu'
596

    
597
Those settings have to do with the black cloudbar endpoints and will be described
598
in more detail later on in this guide. For now, just edit the domain to point at
599
node1 which is where we have installed Astakos.
600

    
601
If you are an advanced user and want to use the Shibboleth Authentication method,
602
read the relative :ref:`section <shibboleth-auth>`.
603

    
604
.. note:: Because Cyclades and Astakos are running on the same machine
605
    in our example, we have to deactivate the CSRF verification. We can do so
606
    by adding to
607
    ``/etc/synnefo/99-local.conf``:
608

    
609
    .. code-block:: console
610

    
611
        MIDDLEWARE_CLASSES.remove('django.middleware.csrf.CsrfViewMiddleware')
612
        TEMPLATE_CONTEXT_PROCESSORS.remove('django.core.context_processors.csrf')
613

    
614
Enable Pooling
615
--------------
616

    
617
This section can be bypassed, but we strongly recommend you apply the following,
618
since they result in a significant performance boost.
619

    
620
Synnefo includes a pooling DBAPI driver for PostgreSQL, as a thin wrapper
621
around Psycopg2. This allows independent Django requests to reuse pooled DB
622
connections, with significant performance gains.
623

    
624
To use, first monkey-patch psycopg2. For Django, run this before the
625
``DATABASES`` setting in ``/etc/synnefo/10-snf-webproject-database.conf``:
626

    
627
.. code-block:: console
628

    
629
   from synnefo.lib.db.pooled_psycopg2 import monkey_patch_psycopg2
630
   monkey_patch_psycopg2()
631

    
632
If running with greenlets, we should modify psycopg2 behavior, so it works
633
properly in a greenlet context:
634

    
635
.. code-block:: console
636

    
637
   from synnefo.lib.db.psyco_gevent import make_psycopg_green
638
   make_psycopg_green()
639

    
640
Use the Psycopg2 driver as usual. For Django, this means using
641
``django.db.backends.postgresql_psycopg2`` without any modifications. To enable
642
connection pooling, pass a nonzero ``synnefo_poolsize`` option to the DBAPI
643
driver, through ``DATABASES.OPTIONS`` in django.
644

    
645
All the above will result in an ``/etc/synnefo/10-snf-webproject-database.conf``
646
file that looks like this:
647

    
648
.. code-block:: console
649

    
650
   # Monkey-patch psycopg2
651
   from synnefo.lib.db.pooled_psycopg2 import monkey_patch_psycopg2
652
   monkey_patch_psycopg2()
653

    
654
   # If running with greenlets
655
   from synnefo.lib.db.psyco_gevent import make_psycopg_green
656
   make_psycopg_green()
657

    
658
   DATABASES = {
659
    'default': {
660
        # 'postgresql_psycopg2', 'postgresql','mysql', 'sqlite3' or 'oracle'
661
        'ENGINE': 'postgresql_psycopg2',
662
        'OPTIONS': {'synnefo_poolsize': 8},
663

    
664
         # ATTENTION: This *must* be the absolute path if using sqlite3.
665
         # See: http://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/ref/settings/#name
666
        'NAME': 'snf_apps',
667
        'USER': 'synnefo',                      # Not used with sqlite3.
668
        'PASSWORD': 'example_passw0rd',         # Not used with sqlite3.
669
        # Set to empty string for localhost. Not used with sqlite3.
670
        'HOST': '4.3.2.1',
671
        # Set to empty string for default. Not used with sqlite3.
672
        'PORT': '5432',
673
    }
674
   }
675

    
676
Database Initialization
677
-----------------------
678

    
679
After configuration is done, we initialize the database by running:
680

    
681
.. code-block:: console
682

    
683
   # snf-manage syncdb
684

    
685
At this example we don't need to create a django superuser, so we select
686
``[no]`` to the question. After a successful sync, we run the migration needed
687
for astakos:
688

    
689
.. code-block:: console
690

    
691
   # snf-manage migrate im
692

    
693
Then, we load the pre-defined user groups
694

    
695
.. code-block:: console
696

    
697
   # snf-manage loaddata groups
698

    
699
.. _services-reg:
700

    
701
Services Registration
702
---------------------
703

    
704
When the database is ready, we configure the elements of the Astakos cloudbar,
705
to point to our future services:
706

    
707
.. code-block:: console
708

    
709
   # snf-manage service-add "~okeanos home" https://node1.example.com/im/ home-icon.png
710
   # snf-manage service-add "cyclades" https://node1.example.com/ui/
711
   # snf-manage service-add "pithos+" https://node2.example.com/ui/
712

    
713
Servers Initialization
714
----------------------
715

    
716
Finally, we initialize the servers on node1:
717

    
718
.. code-block:: console
719

    
720
   root@node1:~ # /etc/init.d/gunicorn restart
721
   root@node1:~ # /etc/init.d/apache2 restart
722

    
723
We have now finished the Astakos setup. Let's test it now.
724

    
725

    
726
Testing of Astakos
727
==================
728

    
729
Open your favorite browser and go to:
730

    
731
``http://node1.example.com/im``
732

    
733
If this redirects you to ``https://node1.example.com/im`` and you can see
734
the "welcome" door of Astakos, then you have successfully setup Astakos.
735

    
736
Let's create our first user. At the homepage click the "CREATE ACCOUNT" button
737
and fill all your data at the sign up form. Then click "SUBMIT". You should now
738
see a green box on the top, which informs you that you made a successful request
739
and the request has been sent to the administrators. So far so good, let's assume
740
that you created the user with username ``user@example.com``.
741

    
742
Now we need to activate that user. Return to a command prompt at node1 and run:
743

    
744
.. code-block:: console
745

    
746
   root@node1:~ # snf-manage user-list
747

    
748
This command should show you a list with only one user; the one we just created.
749
This user should have an id with a value of ``1``. It should also have an
750
"active" status with the value of ``0`` (inactive). Now run:
751

    
752
.. code-block:: console
753

    
754
   root@node1:~ # snf-manage user-update --set-active 1
755

    
756
This modifies the active value to ``1``, and actually activates the user.
757
When running in production, the activation is done automatically with different
758
types of moderation, that Astakos supports. You can see the moderation methods
759
(by invitation, whitelists, matching regexp, etc.) at the Astakos specific
760
documentation. In production, you can also manually activate a user, by sending
761
him/her an activation email. See how to do this at the :ref:`User
762
activation <user_activation>` section.
763

    
764
Now let's go back to the homepage. Open ``http://node1.example.com/im`` with
765
your browser again. Try to sign in using your new credentials. If the astakos
766
menu appears and you can see your profile, then you have successfully setup
767
Astakos.
768

    
769
Let's continue to install Pithos+ now.
770

    
771

    
772
Installation of Pithos+ on node2
773
================================
774

    
775
To install pithos+, grab the packages from our repository (make sure  you made
776
the additions needed in your ``/etc/apt/sources.list`` file, as described
777
previously), by running:
778

    
779
.. code-block:: console
780

    
781
   # apt-get install snf-pithos-app
782

    
783
After successful installation of snf-pithos-app, make sure that also
784
snf-webproject has been installed (marked as "Recommended" package). Refer to
785
the "Installation of Astakos on node1" section, if you don't remember why this
786
should happen. Now, install the pithos web interface:
787

    
788
.. code-block:: console
789

    
790
   # apt-get install snf-pithos-webclient
791

    
792
This package provides the standalone pithos web client. The web client is the
793
web UI for pithos+ and will be accessible by clicking "pithos+" on the Astakos
794
interface's cloudbar, at the top of the Astakos homepage.
795

    
796

    
797
.. _conf-pithos:
798

    
799
Configuration of Pithos+
800
========================
801

    
802
Conf Files
803
----------
804

    
805
After pithos+ is successfully installed, you will find the directory
806
``/etc/synnefo`` and some configuration files inside it, as you did in node1
807
after installation of astakos. Here, you will not have to change anything that
808
has to do with snf-common or snf-webproject. Everything is set at node1. You
809
only need to change settings that have to do with pithos+. Specifically:
810

    
811
Edit ``/etc/synnefo/20-snf-pithos-app-settings.conf``. There you need to set
812
this options:
813

    
814
.. code-block:: console
815

    
816
   PITHOS_BACKEND_DB_CONNECTION = 'postgresql://synnefo:example_passw0rd@node1.example.com:5432/snf_pithos'
817

    
818
   PITHOS_BACKEND_BLOCK_PATH = '/srv/pithos/data'
819

    
820
   PITHOS_AUTHENTICATION_URL = 'https://node1.example.com/im/authenticate'
821
   PITHOS_AUTHENTICATION_USERS = None
822

    
823
   PITHOS_SERVICE_TOKEN = 'pithos_service_token22w=='
824
   PITHOS_USER_CATALOG_URL = 'http://node1.example.com/user_catalogs'
825
   PITHOS_USER_FEEDBACK_URL = 'http://node1.example.com/feedback'
826
   PITHOS_USER_LOGIN_URL = 'http://node1.example.com/login'
827

    
828

    
829
The ``PITHOS_BACKEND_DB_CONNECTION`` option tells to the pithos+ app where to
830
find the pithos+ backend database. Above we tell pithos+ that its database is
831
``snf_pithos`` at node1 and to connect as user ``synnefo`` with password
832
``example_passw0rd``.  All those settings where setup during node1's "Database
833
setup" section.
834

    
835
The ``PITHOS_BACKEND_BLOCK_PATH`` option tells to the pithos+ app where to find
836
the pithos+ backend data. Above we tell pithos+ to store its data under
837
``/srv/pithos/data``, which is visible by both nodes. We have already setup this
838
directory at node1's "Pithos+ data directory setup" section.
839

    
840
The ``PITHOS_AUTHENTICATION_URL`` option tells to the pithos+ app in which URI
841
is available the astakos authentication api. If not set, pithos+ tries to
842
authenticate using the ``PITHOS_AUTHENTICATION_USERS`` user pool.
843

    
844
The ``PITHOS_SERVICE_TOKEN`` should be the Pithos+ token returned by running on
845
the Astakos node (node1 in our case):
846

    
847
.. code-block:: console
848

    
849
   # snf-manage service-list
850

    
851
The token has been generated automatically during the :ref:`Pithos+ service
852
registration <services-reg>`.
853

    
854
Then we need to setup the web UI and connect it to astakos. To do so, edit
855
``/etc/synnefo/20-snf-pithos-webclient-settings.conf``:
856

    
857
.. code-block:: console
858

    
859
   PITHOS_UI_LOGIN_URL = "https://node1.example.com/im/login?next="
860
   PITHOS_UI_FEEDBACK_URL = "https://node2.example.com/feedback"
861

    
862
The ``PITHOS_UI_LOGIN_URL`` option tells the client where to redirect you, if
863
you are not logged in. The ``PITHOS_UI_FEEDBACK_URL`` option points at the
864
pithos+ feedback form. Astakos already provides a generic feedback form for all
865
services, so we use this one.
866

    
867
Then edit ``/etc/synnefo/20-snf-pithos-webclient-cloudbar.conf``, to connect the
868
pithos+ web UI with the astakos web UI (through the top cloudbar):
869

    
870
.. code-block:: console
871

    
872
   CLOUDBAR_LOCATION = 'https://node1.example.com/static/im/cloudbar/'
873
   PITHOS_UI_CLOUDBAR_ACTIVE_SERVICE = '3'
874
   CLOUDBAR_SERVICES_URL = 'https://node1.example.com/im/get_services'
875
   CLOUDBAR_MENU_URL = 'https://node1.example.com/im/get_menu'
876

    
877
The ``CLOUDBAR_LOCATION`` tells the client where to find the astakos common
878
cloudbar.
879

    
880
The ``PITHOS_UI_CLOUDBAR_ACTIVE_SERVICE`` points to an already registered
881
Astakos service. You can see all :ref:`registered services <services-reg>` by
882
running on the Astakos node (node1):
883

    
884
.. code-block:: console
885

    
886
   # snf-manage service-list
887

    
888
The value of ``PITHOS_UI_CLOUDBAR_ACTIVE_SERVICE`` should be the pithos service's
889
``id`` as shown by the above command, in our case ``3``.
890

    
891
The ``CLOUDBAR_SERVICES_URL`` and ``CLOUDBAR_MENU_URL`` options are used by the
892
pithos+ web client to get from astakos all the information needed to fill its
893
own cloudbar. So we put our astakos deployment urls there.
894

    
895
Pooling and Greenlets
896
---------------------
897

    
898
Pithos is pooling-ready without the need of further configuration, because it
899
doesn't use a Django DB. It pools HTTP connections to Astakos and pithos
900
backend objects for access to the Pithos DB.
901

    
902
However, as in Astakos, if running with Greenlets, it is also recommended to
903
modify psycopg2 behavior so it works properly in a greenlet context. This means
904
adding the following lines at the top of your
905
``/etc/synnefo/10-snf-webproject-database.conf`` file:
906

    
907
.. code-block:: console
908

    
909
   from synnefo.lib.db.psyco_gevent import make_psycopg_green
910
   make_psycopg_green()
911

    
912
Furthermore, add the ``--worker-class=gevent`` argument on your
913
``/etc/gunicorn.d/synnefo`` configuration file. The file should look something like
914
this:
915

    
916
.. code-block:: console
917

    
918
   CONFIG = {
919
    'mode': 'django',
920
    'environment': {
921
      'DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE': 'synnefo.settings',
922
    },
923
    'working_dir': '/etc/synnefo',
924
    'user': 'www-data',
925
    'group': 'www-data',
926
    'args': (
927
      '--bind=127.0.0.1:8080',
928
      '--workers=4',
929
      '--worker-class=gevent',
930
      '--log-level=debug',
931
      '--timeout=43200'
932
    ),
933
   }
934

    
935
Servers Initialization
936
----------------------
937

    
938
After configuration is done, we initialize the servers on node2:
939

    
940
.. code-block:: console
941

    
942
   root@node2:~ # /etc/init.d/gunicorn restart
943
   root@node2:~ # /etc/init.d/apache2 restart
944

    
945
You have now finished the Pithos+ setup. Let's test it now.
946

    
947

    
948
Testing of Pithos+
949
==================
950

    
951
Open your browser and go to the Astakos homepage:
952

    
953
``http://node1.example.com/im``
954

    
955
Login, and you will see your profile page. Now, click the "pithos+" link on the
956
top black cloudbar. If everything was setup correctly, this will redirect you
957
to:
958

    
959
``https://node2.example.com/ui``
960

    
961
and you will see the blue interface of the Pithos+ application.  Click the
962
orange "Upload" button and upload your first file. If the file gets uploaded
963
successfully, then this is your first sign of a successful Pithos+ installation.
964
Go ahead and experiment with the interface to make sure everything works
965
correctly.
966

    
967
You can also use the Pithos+ clients to sync data from your Windows PC or MAC.
968

    
969
If you don't stumble on any problems, then you have successfully installed
970
Pithos+, which you can use as a standalone File Storage Service.
971

    
972
If you would like to do more, such as:
973

    
974
 * Spawning VMs
975
 * Spawning VMs from Images stored on Pithos+
976
 * Uploading your custom Images to Pithos+
977
 * Spawning VMs from those custom Images
978
 * Registering existing Pithos+ files as Images
979
 * Connect VMs to the Internet
980
 * Create Private Networks
981
 * Add VMs to Private Networks
982

    
983
please continue with the rest of the guide.
984

    
985

    
986
Cyclades (and Plankton) Prerequisites
987
=====================================
988

    
989
Before proceeding with the Cyclades (and Plankton) installation, make sure you
990
have successfully set up Astakos and Pithos+ first, because Cyclades depends
991
on them. If you don't have a working Astakos and Pithos+ installation yet,
992
please return to the :ref:`top <quick-install-admin-guide>` of this guide.
993

    
994
Besides Astakos and Pithos+, you will also need a number of additional working
995
prerequisites, before you start the Cyclades installation.
996

    
997
Ganeti
998
------
999

    
1000
`Ganeti <http://code.google.com/p/ganeti/>`_ handles the low level VM management
1001
for Cyclades, so Cyclades requires a working Ganeti installation at the backend.
1002
Please refer to the
1003
`ganeti documentation <http://docs.ganeti.org/ganeti/2.5/html>`_ for all the
1004
gory details. A successful Ganeti installation concludes with a working
1005
:ref:`GANETI-MASTER <GANETI_NODES>` and a number of :ref:`GANETI-NODEs
1006
<GANETI_NODES>`.
1007

    
1008
The above Ganeti cluster can run on different physical machines than node1 and
1009
node2 and can scale independently, according to your needs.
1010

    
1011
For the purpose of this guide, we will assume that the :ref:`GANETI-MASTER
1012
<GANETI_NODES>` runs on node1 and is VM-capable. Also, node2 is a
1013
:ref:`GANETI-NODE <GANETI_NODES>` and is Master-capable and VM-capable too.
1014

    
1015
We highly recommend that you read the official Ganeti documentation, if you are
1016
not familiar with Ganeti. If you are extremely impatient, you can result with
1017
the above assumed setup by running on both nodes:
1018

    
1019
.. code-block:: console
1020

    
1021
   # apt-get install -t squeeze-backports ganeti2 ganeti-htools
1022
   # modprobe drbd minor_count=255 usermode_helper=/bin/true
1023

    
1024
Unfortunatelly, stock Ganeti doesn't support IP pool management yet (we are
1025
working hard to merge it upstream for Ganeti 2.7). Synnefo depends on the IP
1026
pool functionality of Ganeti, so you have to use GRNET's patches for now. To
1027
do so you have to build your own package from source. Please clone our local
1028
repo:
1029

    
1030
.. code-block:: console
1031

    
1032
   # git clone https://code.grnet.gr/git/ganeti-local
1033
   # cd ganeti-local
1034
   # git checkout stable-2.6-ippool-hotplug-esi
1035
   # git checkout debian-2.6
1036

    
1037
Then please check if you can complile ganeti:
1038

    
1039
.. code-block:: console
1040

    
1041
   # cd ganeti-local
1042
   # ./automake.sh
1043
   # ./configure
1044
   # make
1045

    
1046
To do so you must have a correct build environment. Please refer to INSTALL
1047
file in the source tree. Most of the packages needed are refered here:
1048

    
1049
.. code-block:: console
1050

    
1051
   #  apt-get install graphviz automake lvm2 ssh bridge-utils iproute iputils-arping \
1052
                      ndisc6 python python-pyopenssl openssl \
1053
                      python-pyparsing python-simplejson \
1054
                      python-pyinotify python-pycurl socat \
1055
                      python-elementtree kvm qemu-kvm \
1056
                      ghc6 libghc6-json-dev libghc6-network-dev \
1057
                      libghc6-parallel-dev libghc6-curl-dev \
1058
                      libghc-quickcheck2-dev hscolour hlint
1059
                      python-support python-paramiko \
1060
                      python-fdsend python-ipaddr python-bitarray libjs-jquery fping
1061

    
1062
Now let try to build the package:
1063

    
1064
.. code-block:: console
1065

    
1066
   # apt-get install git-buildpackage
1067
   # mkdir ../build-area
1068
   # git-buildpackage --git-upstream-branch=stable-2.6-ippool-hotplug-esi \
1069
                   --git-debian-branch=debian-2.6 \
1070
                   --git-export=INDEX \
1071
                   --git-ignore-new
1072

    
1073
This will create two deb packages in build-area. You should then run in both
1074
nodes:
1075

    
1076
.. code-block:: console
1077

    
1078
   # dpkg -i ../build-area/snf-ganeti.*deb
1079
   # dpkg -i ../build-area/ganeti-htools.*deb
1080
   # apt-get install -f
1081

    
1082
We assume that Ganeti will use the KVM hypervisor. After installing Ganeti on
1083
both nodes, choose a domain name that resolves to a valid floating IP (let's say
1084
it's ``ganeti.node1.example.com``). Make sure node1 and node2 have root access
1085
between each other using ssh keys and not passwords. Also, make sure there is an
1086
lvm volume group named ``ganeti`` that will host your VMs' disks. Finally, setup
1087
a bridge interface on the host machines (e.g: br0). Then run on node1:
1088

    
1089
.. code-block:: console
1090

    
1091
   root@node1:~ # gnt-cluster init --enabled-hypervisors=kvm --no-ssh-init \
1092
                                   --no-etc-hosts --vg-name=ganeti \
1093
                                   --nic-parameters link=br0 --master-netdev eth0 \
1094
                                   ganeti.node1.example.com
1095
   root@node1:~ # gnt-cluster modify --default-iallocator hail
1096
   root@node1:~ # gnt-cluster modify --hypervisor-parameters kvm:kernel_path=
1097
   root@node1:~ # gnt-cluster modify --hypervisor-parameters kvm:vnc_bind_address=0.0.0.0
1098

    
1099
   root@node1:~ # gnt-node add --no-node-setup --master-capable=yes \
1100
                               --vm-capable=yes node2.example.com
1101
   root@node1:~ # gnt-cluster modify --disk-parameters=drbd:metavg=ganeti
1102
   root@node1:~ # gnt-group modify --disk-parameters=drbd:metavg=ganeti default
1103

    
1104
For any problems you may stumble upon installing Ganeti, please refer to the
1105
`official documentation <http://docs.ganeti.org/ganeti/2.5/html>`_. Installation
1106
of Ganeti is out of the scope of this guide.
1107

    
1108
.. _cyclades-install-snfimage:
1109

    
1110
snf-image
1111
---------
1112

    
1113
Installation
1114
~~~~~~~~~~~~
1115
For :ref:`Cyclades <cyclades>` to be able to launch VMs from specified Images,
1116
you need the :ref:`snf-image <snf-image>` OS Definition installed on *all*
1117
VM-capable Ganeti nodes. This means we need :ref:`snf-image <snf-image>` on
1118
node1 and node2. You can do this by running on *both* nodes:
1119

    
1120
.. code-block:: console
1121

    
1122
   # apt-get install snf-image-host snf-pithos-backend python-psycopg2
1123

    
1124
snf-image also needs the `snf-pithos-backend <snf-pithos-backend>`, to be able to
1125
handle image files stored on Pithos+. It also needs `python-psycopg2` to be able
1126
to access the Pithos+ database. This is why, we also install them on *all*
1127
VM-capable Ganeti nodes.
1128

    
1129
After `snf-image-host` has been installed successfully, create the helper VM by
1130
running on *both* nodes:
1131

    
1132
.. code-block:: console
1133

    
1134
   # snf-image-update-helper
1135

    
1136
This will create all the needed files under ``/var/lib/snf-image/helper/`` for
1137
snf-image-host to run successfully, and it may take a few minutes depending on
1138
your Internet connection.
1139

    
1140
Configuration
1141
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1142
snf-image supports native access to Images stored on Pithos+. This means that
1143
snf-image can talk directly to the Pithos+ backend, without the need of providing
1144
a public URL. More details, are described in the next section. For now, the only
1145
thing we need to do, is configure snf-image to access our Pithos+ backend.
1146

    
1147
To do this, we need to set the corresponding variables in
1148
``/etc/default/snf-image``, to reflect our Pithos+ setup:
1149

    
1150
.. code-block:: console
1151

    
1152
   PITHOS_DB="postgresql://synnefo:example_passw0rd@node1.example.com:5432/snf_pithos"
1153

    
1154
   PITHOS_DATA="/srv/pithos/data"
1155

    
1156
If you have installed your Ganeti cluster on different nodes than node1 and node2 make
1157
sure that ``/srv/pithos/data`` is visible by all of them.
1158

    
1159
If you would like to use Images that are also/only stored locally, you need to
1160
save them under ``IMAGE_DIR``, however this guide targets Images stored only on
1161
Pithos+.
1162

    
1163
Testing
1164
~~~~~~~
1165
You can test that snf-image is successfully installed by running on the
1166
:ref:`GANETI-MASTER <GANETI_NODES>` (in our case node1):
1167

    
1168
.. code-block:: console
1169

    
1170
   # gnt-os diagnose
1171

    
1172
This should return ``valid`` for snf-image.
1173

    
1174
If you are interested to learn more about snf-image's internals (and even use
1175
it alongside Ganeti without Synnefo), please see
1176
`here <https://code.grnet.gr/projects/snf-image/wiki>`_ for information concerning
1177
installation instructions, documentation on the design and implementation, and
1178
supported Image formats.
1179

    
1180
.. _snf-image-images:
1181

    
1182
Actual Images for snf-image
1183
---------------------------
1184

    
1185
Now that snf-image is installed successfully we need to provide it with some
1186
Images. :ref:`snf-image <snf-image>` supports Images stored in ``extdump``,
1187
``ntfsdump`` or ``diskdump`` format. We recommend the use of the ``diskdump``
1188
format. For more information about snf-image Image formats see `here
1189
<https://code.grnet.gr/projects/snf-image/wiki/Image_Format>`_.
1190

    
1191
:ref:`snf-image <snf-image>` also supports three (3) different locations for the
1192
above Images to be stored:
1193

    
1194
 * Under a local folder (usually an NFS mount, configurable as ``IMAGE_DIR`` in
1195
   :file:`/etc/default/snf-image`)
1196
 * On a remote host (accessible via a public URL e.g: http://... or ftp://...)
1197
 * On Pithos+ (accessible natively, not only by its public URL)
1198

    
1199
For the purpose of this guide, we will use the `Debian Squeeze Base Image
1200
<https://pithos.okeanos.grnet.gr/public/9epgb>`_ found on the official
1201
`snf-image page
1202
<https://code.grnet.gr/projects/snf-image/wiki#Sample-Images>`_. The image is
1203
of type ``diskdump``. We will store it in our new Pithos+ installation.
1204

    
1205
To do so, do the following:
1206

    
1207
a) Download the Image from the official snf-image page (`image link
1208
   <https://pithos.okeanos.grnet.gr/public/9epgb>`_).
1209

    
1210
b) Upload the Image to your Pithos+ installation, either using the Pithos+ Web UI
1211
   or the command line client `kamaki
1212
   <http://docs.dev.grnet.gr/kamaki/latest/index.html>`_.
1213

    
1214
Once the Image is uploaded successfully, download the Image's metadata file
1215
from the official snf-image page (`image_metadata link
1216
<https://pithos.okeanos.grnet.gr/public/gwqcv>`_). You will need it, for
1217
spawning a VM from Ganeti, in the next section.
1218

    
1219
Of course, you can repeat the procedure to upload more Images, available from the
1220
`official snf-image page
1221
<https://code.grnet.gr/projects/snf-image/wiki#Sample-Images>`_.
1222

    
1223
.. _ganeti-with-pithos-images:
1224

    
1225
Spawning a VM from a Pithos+ Image, using Ganeti
1226
------------------------------------------------
1227

    
1228
Now, it is time to test our installation so far. So, we have Astakos and
1229
Pithos+ installed, we have a working Ganeti installation, the snf-image
1230
definition installed on all VM-capable nodes and a Debian Squeeze Image on
1231
Pithos+. Make sure you also have the `metadata file
1232
<https://pithos.okeanos.grnet.gr/public/gwqcv>`_ for this image.
1233

    
1234
Run on the :ref:`GANETI-MASTER's <GANETI_NODES>` (node1) command line:
1235

    
1236
.. code-block:: console
1237

    
1238
   # gnt-instance add -o snf-image+default --os-parameters \
1239
                      img_passwd=my_vm_example_passw0rd,img_format=diskdump,img_id="pithos://user@example.com/pithos/debian_base-6.0-7-x86_64.diskdump",img_properties='{"OSFAMILY":"linux"\,"ROOT_PARTITION":"1"}' \
1240
                      -t plain --disk 0:size=2G --no-name-check --no-ip-check \
1241
                      testvm1
1242

    
1243
In the above command:
1244

    
1245
 * ``img_passwd``: the arbitrary root password of your new instance
1246
 * ``img_format``: set to ``diskdump`` to reflect the type of the uploaded Image
1247
 * ``img_id``: If you want to deploy an Image stored on Pithos+ (our case), this
1248
               should have the format ``pithos://<username>/<container>/<filename>``:
1249
               * ``username``: ``user@example.com`` (defined during Astakos sign up)
1250
               * ``container``: ``pithos`` (default, if the Web UI was used)
1251
               * ``filename``: the name of file (visible also from the Web UI)
1252
 * ``img_properties``: taken from the metadata file. Used only the two mandatory
1253
                       properties ``OSFAMILY`` and ``ROOT_PARTITION``. `Learn more
1254
                       <https://code.grnet.gr/projects/snf-image/wiki/Image_Format#Image-Properties>`_
1255

    
1256
If the ``gnt-instance add`` command returns successfully, then run:
1257

    
1258
.. code-block:: console
1259

    
1260
   # gnt-instance info testvm1 | grep "console connection"
1261

    
1262
to find out where to connect using VNC. If you can connect successfully and can
1263
login to your new instance using the root password ``my_vm_example_passw0rd``,
1264
then everything works as expected and you have your new Debian Base VM up and
1265
running.
1266

    
1267
If ``gnt-instance add`` fails, make sure that snf-image is correctly configured
1268
to access the Pithos+ database and the Pithos+ backend data. Also, make sure
1269
you gave the correct ``img_id`` and ``img_properties``. If ``gnt-instance add``
1270
succeeds but you cannot connect, again find out what went wrong. Do *NOT*
1271
proceed to the next steps unless you are sure everything works till this point.
1272

    
1273
If everything works, you have successfully connected Ganeti with Pithos+. Let's
1274
move on to networking now.
1275

    
1276
.. warning::
1277

    
1278
    You can bypass the networking sections and go straight to
1279
    :ref:`Cyclades Ganeti tools <cyclades-gtools>`, if you do not want to setup
1280
    the Cyclades Network Service, but only the Cyclades Compute Service
1281
    (recommended for now).
1282

    
1283
Networking Setup Overview
1284
-------------------------
1285

    
1286
This part is deployment-specific and must be customized based on the specific
1287
needs of the system administrator. However, to do so, the administrator needs
1288
to understand how each level handles Virtual Networks, to be able to setup the
1289
backend appropriately, before installing Cyclades. To do so, please read the
1290
:ref:`Network <networks>` section before proceeding.
1291

    
1292
Since synnefo 0.11 all network actions are managed with the snf-manage
1293
network-* commands. This needs the underlying setup (Ganeti, nfdhcpd,
1294
snf-network, bridges, vlans) to be already configured correctly. The only
1295
actions needed in this point are:
1296

    
1297
a) Have Ganeti with IP pool management support installed.
1298

    
1299
b) Install :ref:`snf-network <snf-network>`, which provides a synnefo specific kvm-ifup script, etc.
1300

    
1301
c) Install :ref:`nfdhcpd <nfdhcpd>`, which serves DHCP requests of the VMs.
1302

    
1303
In order to test that everything is setup correctly before installing Cyclades,
1304
we will make some testing actions in this section, and the actual setup will be
1305
done afterwards with snf-manage commands.
1306

    
1307
.. _snf-network:
1308

    
1309
snf-network
1310
~~~~~~~~~~~
1311

    
1312
snf-network includes `kvm-vif-bridge` script that is invoked every time
1313
a tap (a VM's NIC) is created. Based on environment variables passed by
1314
Ganeti it issues various commands depending on the network type the NIC is
1315
connected to and sets up a corresponding dhcp lease.
1316

    
1317
Install snf-network on all Ganeti nodes:
1318

    
1319
.. code-block:: console
1320

    
1321
   # apt-get install snf-network
1322

    
1323
Then, in :file:`/etc/default/snf-network` set:
1324

    
1325
.. code-block:: console
1326

    
1327
   MAC_MASK=ff:ff:f0:00:00:00
1328

    
1329
.. _nfdhcpd:
1330

    
1331
nfdhcpd
1332
~~~~~~~
1333

    
1334
Each NIC's IP is chosen by Ganeti (with IP pool management support).
1335
`kvm-vif-bridge` script sets up dhcp leases and when the VM boots and
1336
makes a dhcp request, iptables will mangle the packet and `nfdhcpd` will
1337
create a dhcp response.
1338

    
1339
.. code-block:: console
1340

    
1341
   # apt-get install nfqueue-bindings-python=0.3+physindev-1
1342
   # apt-get install nfdhcpd
1343

    
1344
Edit ``/etc/nfdhcpd/nfdhcpd.conf`` to reflect your network configuration. At
1345
least, set the ``dhcp_queue`` variable to ``42`` and the ``nameservers``
1346
variable to your DNS IP/s. Those IPs will be passed as the DNS IP/s of your new
1347
VMs. Once you are finished, restart the server on all nodes:
1348

    
1349
.. code-block:: console
1350

    
1351
   # /etc/init.d/nfdhcpd restart
1352

    
1353
If you are using ``ferm``, then you need to run the following:
1354

    
1355
.. code-block:: console
1356

    
1357
   # echo "@include 'nfdhcpd.ferm';" >> /etc/ferm/ferm.conf
1358
   # /etc/init.d/ferm restart
1359

    
1360
or make sure to run after boot:
1361

    
1362
.. code-block:: console
1363

    
1364
   # iptables -t mangle -A PREROUTING -p udp -m udp --dport 67 -j NFQUEUE --queue-num 42
1365

    
1366
and if you have IPv6 enabled:
1367

    
1368
.. code-block:: console
1369

    
1370
   # ip6tables -t mangle -A PREROUTING -p ipv6-icmp -m icmp6 --icmpv6-type 133 -j NFQUEUE --queue-num 43
1371
   # ip6tables -t mangle -A PREROUTING -p ipv6-icmp -m icmp6 --icmpv6-type 135 -j NFQUEUE --queue-num 44
1372

    
1373
You can check which clients are currently served by nfdhcpd by running:
1374

    
1375
.. code-block:: console
1376

    
1377
   # kill -SIGUSR1 `cat /var/run/nfdhcpd/nfdhcpd.pid`
1378

    
1379
When you run the above, then check ``/var/log/nfdhcpd/nfdhcpd.log``.
1380

    
1381
Public Network Setup
1382
--------------------
1383

    
1384
To achieve basic networking the simplest way is to have a common bridge (e.g.
1385
``br0``, on the same collision domain with the router) where all VMs will connect
1386
to. Packets will be "forwarded" to the router and then to the Internet. If
1387
you want a more advanced setup (ip-less routing and proxy-arp plese refer to
1388
:ref:`Network <networks>` section).
1389

    
1390
Physical Host Setup
1391
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1392

    
1393
Assuming ``eth0`` on both hosts is the public interface (directly connected
1394
to the router), run on every node:
1395

    
1396
.. code-block:: console
1397

    
1398
   # brctl addbr br0
1399
   # ip link set br0 up
1400
   # vconfig add eth0 100
1401
   # ip link set eth0.100 up
1402
   # brctl addif br0 eth0.100
1403

    
1404

    
1405
Testing a Public Network
1406
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1407

    
1408
Let's assume, that you want to assign IPs from the ``5.6.7.0/27`` range to you
1409
new VMs, with ``5.6.7.1`` as the router's gateway. In Ganeti you can add the
1410
network by running:
1411

    
1412
.. code-block:: console
1413

    
1414
   # gnt-network add --network=5.6.7.0/27 --gateway=5.6.7.1 --network-type=public --tags=nfdhcpd test-net-public
1415

    
1416
Then, connect the network to all your nodegroups. We assume that we only have
1417
one nodegroup (``default``) in our Ganeti cluster:
1418

    
1419
.. code-block:: console
1420

    
1421
   # gnt-network connect test-net-public default bridged br0
1422

    
1423
Now, it is time to test that the backend infrastracture is correctly setup for
1424
the Public Network. We will add a new VM, the same way we did it on the
1425
previous testing section. However, now will also add one NIC, configured to be
1426
managed from our previously defined network. Run on the GANETI-MASTER (node1):
1427

    
1428
.. code-block:: console
1429

    
1430
   # gnt-instance add -o snf-image+default --os-parameters \
1431
                      img_passwd=my_vm_example_passw0rd,img_format=diskdump,img_id="pithos://user@example.com/pithos/debian_base-6.0-7-x86_64.diskdump",img_properties='{"OSFAMILY":"linux"\,"ROOT_PARTITION":"1"}' \
1432
                      -t plain --disk 0:size=2G --no-name-check --no-ip-check \
1433
                      --net 0:ip=pool,network=test-net-public \
1434
                      testvm2
1435

    
1436
If the above returns successfully, connect to the new VM and run:
1437

    
1438
.. code-block:: console
1439

    
1440
   root@testvm2:~ # ip addr
1441
   root@testvm2:~ # ip route
1442
   root@testvm2:~ # cat /etc/resolv.conf
1443

    
1444
to check IP address (5.6.7.2), IP routes (default via 5.6.7.1) and DNS config
1445
(nameserver option in nfdhcpd.conf). This shows correct configuration of
1446
ganeti, snf-network and nfdhcpd.
1447

    
1448
Now ping the outside world. If this works too, then you have also configured
1449
correctly your physical host and router.
1450

    
1451
Make sure everything works as expected, before proceeding with the Private
1452
Networks setup.
1453

    
1454
.. _private-networks-setup:
1455

    
1456
Private Networks Setup
1457
----------------------
1458

    
1459
Synnefo supports two types of private networks:
1460

    
1461
 - based on MAC filtering
1462
 - based on physical VLANs
1463

    
1464
Both types provide Layer 2 isolation to the end-user.
1465

    
1466
For the first type a common bridge (e.g. ``prv0``) is needed while for the second a
1467
range of bridges (e.g. ``prv1..prv100``) each bridged on a different physical
1468
VLAN. To this end to assure isolation among end-users' private networks each
1469
has to have different MAC prefix (for the filtering to take place) or to be
1470
"connected" to a different bridge (VLAN actually).
1471

    
1472
Physical Host Setup
1473
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1474

    
1475
In order to create the necessary VLAN/bridges, one for MAC filtered private
1476
networks and various (e.g. 20) for private networks based on physical VLANs,
1477
run on every node:
1478

    
1479
Assuming ``eth0`` of both hosts are somehow (via cable/switch with VLANs
1480
configured correctly) connected together, run on every node:
1481

    
1482
.. code-block:: console
1483

    
1484
   # apt-get install vlan
1485
   # modprobe 8021q
1486
   # $iface=eth0
1487
   # for prv in $(seq 0 20); do
1488
	vlan=$prv
1489
	bridge=prv$prv
1490
	vconfig add $iface $vlan
1491
	ifconfig $iface.$vlan up
1492
	brctl addbr $bridge
1493
	brctl setfd $bridge 0
1494
	brctl addif $bridge $iface.$vlan
1495
	ifconfig $bridge up
1496
      done
1497

    
1498
The above will do the following :
1499

    
1500
 * provision 21 new bridges: ``prv0`` - ``prv20``
1501
 * provision 21 new vlans: ``eth0.0`` - ``eth0.20``
1502
 * add the corresponding vlan to the equivalent bridge
1503

    
1504
You can run ``brctl show`` on both nodes to see if everything was setup
1505
correctly.
1506

    
1507
Testing the Private Networks
1508
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1509

    
1510
To test the Private Networks, we will create two instances and put them in the
1511
same Private Networks (one MAC Filtered and one Physical VLAN). This means
1512
that the instances will have a second NIC connected to the ``prv0``
1513
pre-provisioned bridge and a third to ``prv1``.
1514

    
1515
We run the same command as in the Public Network testing section, but with one
1516
more argument for the second NIC:
1517

    
1518
.. code-block:: console
1519

    
1520
   # gnt-network add --network=192.168.1.0/24 --mac-prefix=aa:00:55 --network-type=private --tags=nfdhcpd,private-filtered test-net-prv-mac
1521
   # gnt-network connect test-net-prv-mac default bridged prv0
1522

    
1523
   # gnt-network add --network=10.0.0.0/24 --tags=nfdhcpd --network-type=private test-net-prv-vlan
1524
   # gnt-network connect test-net-prv-vlan default bridged prv1
1525

    
1526
   # gnt-instance add -o snf-image+default --os-parameters \
1527
                      img_passwd=my_vm_example_passw0rd,img_format=diskdump,img_id="pithos://user@example.com/pithos/debian_base-6.0-7-x86_64.diskdump",img_properties='{"OSFAMILY":"linux"\,"ROOT_PARTITION":"1"}' \
1528
                      -t plain --disk 0:size=2G --no-name-check --no-ip-check \
1529
                      --net 0:ip=pool,network=test-net-public \
1530
                      --net 1:ip=pool,network=test-net-prv-mac \
1531
                      --net 2:ip=none,network=test-net-prv-vlan \
1532
                      testvm3
1533

    
1534
   # gnt-instance add -o snf-image+default --os-parameters \
1535
                      img_passwd=my_vm_example_passw0rd,img_format=diskdump,img_id="pithos://user@example.com/pithos/debian_base-6.0-7-x86_64.diskdump",img_properties='{"OSFAMILY":"linux"\,"ROOT_PARTITION":"1"}' \
1536
                      -t plain --disk 0:size=2G --no-name-check --no-ip-check \
1537
                      --net 0:ip=pool,network=test-net-public \
1538
                      --net 1:ip=pool,network=test-net-prv-mac \
1539
                      --net 2:ip=none,network=test-net-prv-vlan \
1540
                      testvm4
1541

    
1542
Above, we create two instances with first NIC connected to the internet, their
1543
second NIC connected to a MAC filtered private Network and their third NIC
1544
connected to the first Physical VLAN Private Network. Now, connect to the
1545
instances using VNC and make sure everything works as expected:
1546

    
1547
 a) The instances have access to the public internet through their first eth
1548
    interface (``eth0``), which has been automatically assigned a public IP.
1549

    
1550
 b) ``eth1`` will have mac prefix ``aa:00:55``, while ``eth2`` default one (``aa:00:00``)
1551

    
1552
 c) ip link set ``eth1``/``eth2`` up
1553

    
1554
 d) dhclient ``eth1``/``eth2``
1555

    
1556
 e) On testvm3  ping 192.168.1.2/10.0.0.2
1557

    
1558
If everything works as expected, then you have finished the Network Setup at the
1559
backend for both types of Networks (Public & Private).
1560

    
1561
.. _cyclades-gtools:
1562

    
1563
Cyclades Ganeti tools
1564
---------------------
1565

    
1566
In order for Ganeti to be connected with Cyclades later on, we need the
1567
`Cyclades Ganeti tools` available on all Ganeti nodes (node1 & node2 in our
1568
case). You can install them by running in both nodes:
1569

    
1570
.. code-block:: console
1571

    
1572
   # apt-get install snf-cyclades-gtools
1573

    
1574
This will install the following:
1575

    
1576
 * ``snf-ganeti-eventd`` (daemon to publish Ganeti related messages on RabbitMQ)
1577
 * ``snf-ganeti-hook`` (all necessary hooks under ``/etc/ganeti/hooks``)
1578
 * ``snf-progress-monitor`` (used by ``snf-image`` to publish progress messages)
1579

    
1580
Configure ``snf-cyclades-gtools``
1581
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1582

    
1583
The package will install the ``/etc/synnefo/10-snf-cyclades-gtools-backend.conf``
1584
configuration file. At least we need to set the RabbitMQ endpoint for all tools
1585
that need it:
1586

    
1587
.. code-block:: console
1588

    
1589
   AMQP_HOSTS=["amqp://synnefo:example_rabbitmq_passw0rd@node1.example.com:5672"]
1590

    
1591
The above variables should reflect your :ref:`Message Queue setup
1592
<rabbitmq-setup>`. This file should be editted in all Ganeti nodes.
1593

    
1594
Connect ``snf-image`` with ``snf-progress-monitor``
1595
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1596

    
1597
Finally, we need to configure ``snf-image`` to publish progress messages during
1598
the deployment of each Image. To do this, we edit ``/etc/default/snf-image`` and
1599
set the corresponding variable to ``snf-progress-monitor``:
1600

    
1601
.. code-block:: console
1602

    
1603
   PROGRESS_MONITOR="snf-progress-monitor"
1604

    
1605
This file should be editted in all Ganeti nodes.
1606

    
1607
.. _rapi-user:
1608

    
1609
Synnefo RAPI user
1610
-----------------
1611

    
1612
As a last step before installing Cyclades, create a new RAPI user that will
1613
have ``write`` access. Cyclades will use this user to issue commands to Ganeti,
1614
so we will call the user ``cyclades`` with password ``example_rapi_passw0rd``.
1615
You can do this, by first running:
1616

    
1617
.. code-block:: console
1618

    
1619
   # echo -n 'cyclades:Ganeti Remote API:example_rapi_passw0rd' | openssl md5
1620

    
1621
and then putting the output in ``/var/lib/ganeti/rapi/users`` as follows:
1622

    
1623
.. code-block:: console
1624

    
1625
   cyclades {HA1}55aec7050aa4e4b111ca43cb505a61a0 write
1626

    
1627
More about Ganeti's RAPI users `here.
1628
<http://docs.ganeti.org/ganeti/2.5/html/rapi.html#introduction>`_
1629

    
1630
You have now finished with all needed Prerequisites for Cyclades (and
1631
Plankton). Let's move on to the actual Cyclades installation.
1632

    
1633

    
1634
Installation of Cyclades (and Plankton) on node1
1635
================================================
1636

    
1637
This section describes the installation of Cyclades. Cyclades is Synnefo's
1638
Compute service. Plankton (the Image Registry service) will get installed
1639
automatically along with Cyclades, because it is contained in the same Synnefo
1640
component right now.
1641

    
1642
We will install Cyclades (and Plankton) on node1. To do so, we install the
1643
corresponding package by running on node1:
1644

    
1645
.. code-block:: console
1646

    
1647
   # apt-get install snf-cyclades-app
1648

    
1649
.. warning:: Make sure you have installed ``python-gevent`` version >= 0.13.6.
1650
    This version is available at squeeze-backports and can be installed by
1651
    running: ``apt-get install -t squeeze-backports python-gevent``
1652

    
1653
If all packages install successfully, then Cyclades and Plankton are installed
1654
and we proceed with their configuration.
1655

    
1656

    
1657
Configuration of Cyclades (and Plankton)
1658
========================================
1659

    
1660
Conf files
1661
----------
1662

    
1663
After installing Cyclades, a number of new configuration files will appear under
1664
``/etc/synnefo/`` prefixed with ``20-snf-cyclades-app-``. We will descibe here
1665
only the minimal needed changes to result with a working system. In general, sane
1666
defaults have been chosen for the most of the options, to cover most of the
1667
common scenarios. However, if you want to tweak Cyclades feel free to do so,
1668
once you get familiar with the different options.
1669

    
1670
Edit ``/etc/synnefo/20-snf-cyclades-app-api.conf``:
1671

    
1672
.. code-block:: console
1673

    
1674
   ASTAKOS_URL = 'https://node1.example.com/im/authenticate'
1675

    
1676
The ``ASTAKOS_URL`` denotes the authentication endpoint for Cyclades and is set
1677
to point to Astakos (this should have the same value with Pithos+'s
1678
``PITHOS_AUTHENTICATION_URL``, setup :ref:`previously <conf-pithos>`).
1679

    
1680
TODO: Document the Network Options here
1681

    
1682
Edit ``/etc/synnefo/20-snf-cyclades-app-cloudbar.conf``:
1683

    
1684
.. code-block:: console
1685

    
1686
   CLOUDBAR_LOCATION = 'https://node1.example.com/static/im/cloudbar/'
1687
   CLOUDBAR_ACTIVE_SERVICE = '2'
1688
   CLOUDBAR_SERVICES_URL = 'https://node1.example.com/im/get_services'
1689
   CLOUDBAR_MENU_URL = 'https://account.node1.example.com/im/get_menu'
1690

    
1691
``CLOUDBAR_LOCATION`` tells the client where to find the Astakos common
1692
cloudbar. The ``CLOUDBAR_SERVICES_URL`` and ``CLOUDBAR_MENU_URL`` options are
1693
used by the Cyclades Web UI to get from Astakos all the information needed to
1694
fill its own cloudbar. So, we put our Astakos deployment urls there. All the
1695
above should have the same values we put in the corresponding variables in
1696
``/etc/synnefo/20-snf-pithos-webclient-cloudbar.conf`` on the previous
1697
:ref:`Pithos configuration <conf-pithos>` section.
1698

    
1699
The ``CLOUDBAR_ACTIVE_SERVICE`` points to an already registered Astakos
1700
service. You can see all :ref:`registered services <services-reg>` by running
1701
on the Astakos node (node1):
1702

    
1703
.. code-block:: console
1704

    
1705
   # snf-manage service-list
1706

    
1707
The value of ``CLOUDBAR_ACTIVE_SERVICE`` should be the cyclades service's
1708
``id`` as shown by the above command, in our case ``2``.
1709

    
1710
Edit ``/etc/synnefo/20-snf-cyclades-app-plankton.conf``:
1711

    
1712
.. code-block:: console
1713

    
1714
   BACKEND_DB_CONNECTION = 'postgresql://synnefo:example_passw0rd@node1.example.com:5432/snf_pithos'
1715
   BACKEND_BLOCK_PATH = '/srv/pithos/data/'
1716

    
1717
In this file we configure the Plankton Service. ``BACKEND_DB_CONNECTION``
1718
denotes the Pithos+ database (where the Image files are stored). So we set that
1719
to point to our Pithos+ database. ``BACKEND_BLOCK_PATH`` denotes the actual
1720
Pithos+ data location.
1721

    
1722
Edit ``/etc/synnefo/20-snf-cyclades-app-queues.conf``:
1723

    
1724
.. code-block:: console
1725

    
1726
   AMQP_HOSTS=["amqp://synnefo:example_rabbitmq_passw0rd@node1.example.com:5672"]
1727

    
1728
The above settings denote the Message Queue. Those settings should have the same
1729
values as in ``/etc/synnefo/10-snf-cyclades-gtools-backend.conf`` file, and
1730
reflect our :ref:`Message Queue setup <rabbitmq-setup>`.
1731

    
1732
Edit ``/etc/synnefo/20-snf-cyclades-app-ui.conf``:
1733

    
1734
.. code-block:: console
1735

    
1736
   UI_LOGIN_URL = "https://node1.example.com/im/login"
1737
   UI_LOGOUT_URL = "https://node1.example.com/im/logout"
1738

    
1739
The ``UI_LOGIN_URL`` option tells the Cyclades Web UI where to redirect users,
1740
if they are not logged in. We point that to Astakos.
1741

    
1742
The ``UI_LOGOUT_URL`` option tells the Cyclades Web UI where to redirect the
1743
user when he/she logs out. We point that to Astakos, too.
1744

    
1745
Edit ``/etc/default/vncauthproxy``:
1746

    
1747
.. code-block:: console
1748

    
1749
   CHUID="www-data:nogroup"
1750

    
1751
We have now finished with the basic Cyclades and Plankton configuration.
1752

    
1753
Database Initialization
1754
-----------------------
1755

    
1756
Once Cyclades is configured, we sync the database:
1757

    
1758
.. code-block:: console
1759

    
1760
   $ snf-manage syncdb
1761
   $ snf-manage migrate
1762

    
1763
and load the initial server flavors:
1764

    
1765
.. code-block:: console
1766

    
1767
   $ snf-manage loaddata flavors
1768

    
1769
If everything returns successfully, our database is ready.
1770

    
1771
Add the Ganeti backend
1772
----------------------
1773

    
1774
In our installation we assume that we only have one Ganeti cluster, the one we
1775
setup earlier.  At this point you have to add this backend (Ganeti cluster) to
1776
cyclades assuming that you have setup the :ref:`Rapi User <rapi-user>`
1777
correctly.
1778

    
1779
.. code-block:: console
1780

    
1781
   $ snf-manage backend-add --clustername=ganeti.node1.example.com --user=cyclades --pass=example_rapi_passw0rd
1782

    
1783
You can see everything has been setup correctly by running:
1784

    
1785
.. code-block:: console
1786

    
1787
   $ snf-manage backend-list
1788

    
1789
If something is not set correctly, you can modify the backend with the
1790
``snf-manage backend-modify`` command. If something has gone wrong, you could
1791
modify the backend to reflect the Ganeti installation by running:
1792

    
1793
.. code-block:: console
1794

    
1795
   $ snf-manage backend-modify --clustername "ganeti.node1.example.com"
1796
                               --user=cyclades
1797
                               --pass=example_rapi_passw0rd
1798
                               1
1799

    
1800
``clustername`` denotes the Ganeti-cluster's name. We provide the corresponding
1801
domain that resolves to the master IP, than the IP itself, to ensure Cyclades
1802
can talk to Ganeti even after a Ganeti master-failover.
1803

    
1804
``user`` and ``pass`` denote the RAPI user's username and the RAPI user's
1805
password.  Once we setup the first backend to point at our Ganeti cluster, we
1806
update the Cyclades backends status by running:
1807

    
1808
.. code-block:: console
1809

    
1810
   $ snf-manage backend-update-status
1811

    
1812
Cyclades can manage multiple Ganeti backends, but for the purpose of this
1813
guide,we won't get into more detail regarding mulitple backends. If you want to
1814
learn more please see /*TODO*/.
1815

    
1816
Add a Public Network
1817
----------------------
1818

    
1819
Cyclades supports different Public Networks on different Ganeti backends.
1820
After connecting Cyclades with our Ganeti cluster, we need to setup a Public
1821
Network for this Ganeti backend (`id = 1`). The basic setup is to bridge every
1822
created NIC on a bridge. After having a bridge (e.g. br0) created in every
1823
backend node edit Synnefo setting CUSTOM_BRIDGED_BRIDGE to 'br0':
1824

    
1825
.. code-block:: console
1826

    
1827
   $ snf-manage network-create --subnet=5.6.7.0/27 \
1828
                               --gateway=5.6.7.1 \
1829
                               --subnet6=2001:648:2FFC:1322::/64 \
1830
                               --gateway6=2001:648:2FFC:1322::1 \
1831
                               --public --dhcp --flavor=CUSTOM \
1832
                               --name=public_network \
1833
                               --backend-id=1
1834

    
1835
This will create the Public Network on both Cyclades and the Ganeti backend. To
1836
make sure everything was setup correctly, also run:
1837

    
1838
.. code-block:: console
1839

    
1840
   $ snf-manage reconcile-networks
1841

    
1842
You can see all available networks by running:
1843

    
1844
.. code-block:: console
1845

    
1846
   $ snf-manage network-list
1847

    
1848
and inspect each network's state by running:
1849

    
1850
.. code-block:: console
1851

    
1852
   $ snf-manage network-inspect <net_id>
1853

    
1854
Finally, you can see the networks from the Ganeti perspective by running on the
1855
Ganeti MASTER:
1856

    
1857
.. code-block:: console
1858

    
1859
   $ gnt-network list
1860
   $ gnt-network info <network_name>
1861

    
1862

    
1863
Create pools for Private Networks
1864
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1865

    
1866
To prevent duplicate assignment of resources to different private networks,
1867
Cyclades supports two types of pools:
1868

    
1869
 - MAC prefix Pool
1870
 - Bridge Pool
1871

    
1872
As long as those resourses have been provisioned, admin has to define two
1873
these pools in Synnefo:
1874

    
1875

    
1876
.. code-block:: console
1877

    
1878
   root@testvm1:~ # snf-manage pool-create --type=mac-prefix --base=aa:00:0 --size=65536
1879

    
1880
   root@testvm1:~ # snf-manage pool-create --type=bridge --base=prv --size=20
1881

    
1882
Also, change the Synnefo setting in :file:`20-snf-cyclades-app-api.conf`:
1883

    
1884
.. code-block:: console
1885

    
1886
   DEFAULT_MAC_FILTERED_BRIDGE = 'prv0'
1887

    
1888
Servers restart
1889
---------------
1890

    
1891
Restart gunicorn on node1:
1892

    
1893
.. code-block:: console
1894

    
1895
   # /etc/init.d/gunicorn restart
1896

    
1897
Now let's do the final connections of Cyclades with Ganeti.
1898

    
1899
``snf-dispatcher`` initialization
1900
---------------------------------
1901

    
1902
``snf-dispatcher`` dispatches all messages published to the Message Queue and
1903
manages the Cyclades database accordingly. It also initializes all exchanges. By
1904
default it is not enabled during installation of Cyclades, so let's enable it in
1905
its configuration file ``/etc/default/snf-dispatcher``:
1906

    
1907
.. code-block:: console
1908

    
1909
   SNF_DSPTCH_ENABLE=true
1910

    
1911
and start the daemon:
1912

    
1913
.. code-block:: console
1914

    
1915
   # /etc/init.d/snf-dispatcher start
1916

    
1917
You can see that everything works correctly by tailing its log file
1918
``/var/log/synnefo/dispatcher.log``.
1919

    
1920
``snf-ganeti-eventd`` on GANETI MASTER
1921
--------------------------------------
1922

    
1923
The last step of the Cyclades setup is enabling the ``snf-ganeti-eventd``
1924
daemon (part of the :ref:`Cyclades Ganeti tools <cyclades-gtools>` package).
1925
The daemon is already installed on the GANETI MASTER (node1 in our case).
1926
``snf-ganeti-eventd`` is disabled by default during the ``snf-cyclades-gtools``
1927
installation, so we enable it in its configuration file
1928
``/etc/default/snf-ganeti-eventd``:
1929

    
1930
.. code-block:: console
1931

    
1932
   SNF_EVENTD_ENABLE=true
1933

    
1934
and start the daemon:
1935

    
1936
.. code-block:: console
1937

    
1938
   # /etc/init.d/snf-ganeti-eventd start
1939

    
1940
.. warning:: Make sure you start ``snf-ganeti-eventd`` *ONLY* on GANETI MASTER
1941

    
1942
If all the above return successfully, then you have finished with the Cyclades
1943
and Plankton installation and setup. Let's test our installation now.
1944

    
1945

    
1946
Testing of Cyclades (and Plankton)
1947
==================================
1948

    
1949
Cyclades Web UI
1950
---------------
1951

    
1952
First of all we need to test that our Cyclades Web UI works correctly. Open your
1953
browser and go to the Astakos home page. Login and then click 'cyclades' on the
1954
top cloud bar. This should redirect you to:
1955

    
1956
 `http://node1.example.com/ui/`
1957

    
1958
and the Cyclades home page should appear. If not, please go back and find what
1959
went wrong. Do not proceed if you don't see the Cyclades home page.
1960

    
1961
If the Cyclades home page appears, click on the orange button 'New machine'. The
1962
first step of the 'New machine wizard' will appear. This step shows all the
1963
available Images from which you can spawn new VMs. The list should be currently
1964
empty, as we haven't registered any Images yet. Close the wizard and browse the
1965
interface (not many things to see yet). If everything seems to work, let's
1966
register our first Image file.
1967

    
1968
Cyclades Images
1969
---------------
1970

    
1971
To test our Cyclades (and Plankton) installation, we will use an Image stored on
1972
Pithos+ to spawn a new VM from the Cyclades interface. We will describe all
1973
steps, even though you may already have uploaded an Image on Pithos+ from a
1974
:ref:`previous <snf-image-images>` section:
1975

    
1976
 * Upload an Image file to Pithos+
1977
 * Register that Image file to Plankton
1978
 * Spawn a new VM from that Image from the Cyclades Web UI
1979

    
1980
We will use the `kamaki <http://docs.dev.grnet.gr/kamaki/latest/index.html>`_
1981
command line client to do the uploading and registering of the Image.
1982

    
1983
Installation of `kamaki`
1984
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1985

    
1986
You can install `kamaki` anywhere you like, since it is a standalone client of
1987
the APIs and talks to the installation over `http`. For the purpose of this
1988
guide we will assume that we have downloaded the `Debian Squeeze Base Image
1989
<https://pithos.okeanos.grnet.gr/public/9epgb>`_ and stored it under node1's
1990
``/srv/images`` directory. For that reason we will install `kamaki` on node1,
1991
too. We do this by running:
1992

    
1993
.. code-block:: console
1994

    
1995
   # apt-get install kamaki
1996

    
1997
Configuration of kamaki
1998
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1999

    
2000
Now we need to setup kamaki, by adding the appropriate URLs and tokens of our
2001
installation. We do this by running:
2002

    
2003
.. code-block:: console
2004

    
2005
   $ kamaki config set astakos.url "https://node1.example.com"
2006
   $ kamaki config set compute.url "https://node1.example.com/api/v1.1"
2007
   $ kamaki config set image.url "https://node1.example.com/plankton"
2008
   $ kamaki config set store.url "https://node2.example.com/v1"
2009
   $ kamaki config set global.account "user@example.com"
2010
   $ kamaki config set global.token "bdY_example_user_tokenYUff=="
2011

    
2012
The token at the last kamaki command is our user's (``user@example.com``) token,
2013
as it appears on the user's `Profile` web page on the Astakos Web UI.
2014

    
2015
You can see that the new configuration options have been applied correctly, by
2016
running:
2017

    
2018
.. code-block:: console
2019

    
2020
   $ kamaki config list
2021

    
2022
Upload an Image file to Pithos+
2023
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2024

    
2025
Now, that we have set up `kamaki` we will upload the Image that we have
2026
downloaded and stored under ``/srv/images/``. Although we can upload the Image
2027
under the root ``Pithos`` container (as you may have done when uploading the
2028
Image from the Pithos+ Web UI), we will create a new container called ``images``
2029
and store the Image under that container. We do this for two reasons:
2030

    
2031
a) To demonstrate how to create containers other than the default ``Pithos``.
2032
   This can be done only with the `kamaki` client and not through the Web UI.
2033

    
2034
b) As a best organization practise, so that you won't have your Image files
2035
   tangled along with all your other Pithos+ files and directory structures.
2036

    
2037
We create the new ``images`` container by running:
2038

    
2039
.. code-block:: console
2040

    
2041
   $ kamaki store create images
2042

    
2043
Then, we upload the Image file to that container:
2044

    
2045
.. code-block:: console
2046

    
2047
   $ kamaki store upload --container images \
2048
                         /srv/images/debian_base-6.0-7-x86_64.diskdump \
2049
                         debian_base-6.0-7-x86_64.diskdump
2050

    
2051
The first is the local path and the second is the remote path on Pithos+. If
2052
the new container and the file appears on the Pithos+ Web UI, then you have
2053
successfully created the container and uploaded the Image file.
2054

    
2055
Register an existing Image file to Plankton
2056
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2057

    
2058
Once the Image file has been successfully uploaded on Pithos+, then we register
2059
it to Plankton (so that it becomes visible to Cyclades), by running:
2060

    
2061
.. code-block:: console
2062

    
2063
   $ kamaki image register "Debian Base" \
2064
                           pithos://user@example.com/images/debian_base-6.0-7-x86_64.diskdump \
2065
                           --public \
2066
                           --disk-format=diskdump \
2067
                           --property OSFAMILY=linux --property ROOT_PARTITION=1 \
2068
                           --property description="Debian Squeeze Base System" \
2069
                           --property size=451 --property kernel=2.6.32 --property GUI="No GUI" \
2070
                           --property sortorder=1 --property USERS=root --property OS=debian
2071

    
2072
This command registers the Pithos+ file
2073
``pithos://user@example.com/images/debian_base-6.0-7-x86_64.diskdump`` as an
2074
Image in Plankton. This Image will be public (``--public``), so all users will
2075
be able to spawn VMs from it and is of type ``diskdump``. The first two
2076
properties (``OSFAMILY`` and ``ROOT_PARTITION``) are mandatory. All the rest
2077
properties are optional, but recommended, so that the Images appear nicely on
2078
the Cyclades Web UI. ``Debian Base`` will appear as the name of this Image. The
2079
``OS`` property's valid values may be found in the ``IMAGE_ICONS`` variable
2080
inside the ``20-snf-cyclades-app-ui.conf`` configuration file.
2081

    
2082
``OSFAMILY`` and ``ROOT_PARTITION`` are mandatory because they will be passed
2083
from Plankton to Cyclades and then to Ganeti and `snf-image` (also see
2084
:ref:`previous section <ganeti-with-pithos-images>`). All other properties are
2085
used to show information on the Cyclades UI.
2086

    
2087
Spawn a VM from the Cyclades Web UI
2088
-----------------------------------
2089

    
2090
If the registration completes successfully, then go to the Cyclades Web UI from
2091
your browser at:
2092

    
2093
 `https://node1.example.com/ui/`
2094

    
2095
Click on the 'New Machine' button and the first step of the wizard will appear.
2096
Click on 'My Images' (right after 'System' Images) on the left pane of the
2097
wizard. Your previously registered Image "Debian Base" should appear under
2098
'Available Images'. If not, something has gone wrong with the registration. Make
2099
sure you can see your Image file on the Pithos+ Web UI and ``kamaki image
2100
register`` returns successfully with all options and properties as shown above.
2101

    
2102
If the Image appears on the list, select it and complete the wizard by selecting
2103
a flavor and a name for your VM. Then finish by clicking 'Create'. Make sure you
2104
write down your password, because you *WON'T* be able to retrieve it later.
2105

    
2106
If everything was setup correctly, after a few minutes your new machine will go
2107
to state 'Running' and you will be able to use it. Click 'Console' to connect
2108
through VNC out of band, or click on the machine's icon to connect directly via
2109
SSH or RDP (for windows machines).
2110

    
2111
Congratulations. You have successfully installed the whole Synnefo stack and
2112
connected all components. Go ahead in the next section to test the Network
2113
functionality from inside Cyclades and discover even more features.
2114

    
2115

    
2116
General Testing
2117
===============
2118

    
2119

    
2120
Notes
2121
=====