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.. _admin-guide:
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Synnefo Administrator's Guide
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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This is the complete Synnefo Administrator's Guide.
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.. _syn+archip:
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General Synnefo Architecture
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============================
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The following figure shows a detailed view of the whole Synnefo architecture
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and how it interacts with multiple Ganeti clusters. We hope that after reading
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the Administrator's Guide you will be able to understand every component and
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all the interactions between them.
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.. image:: images/synnefo-arch2.png
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   :width: 100%
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   :target: _images/synnefo-arch2.png
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Synnefo also supports RADOS as an alternative storage backend for
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Files/Images/VM disks. You will find the :ref:`corresponding figure
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<syn+archip+rados>` later in this guide.
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Identity Service (Astakos)
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==========================
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Authentication methods
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----------------------
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Astakos supports multiple authentication methods:
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 * local username/password
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 * LDAP / Active Directory
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 * SAML 2.0 (Shibboleth) federated logins
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 * Google
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 * Twitter
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 * LinkedIn
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.. _shibboleth-auth:
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Shibboleth Authentication
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Astakos can delegate user authentication to a Shibboleth federation.
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To setup shibboleth, install package::
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  apt-get install libapache2-mod-shib2
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Change appropriately the configuration files in ``/etc/shibboleth``.
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Add in ``/etc/apache2/sites-available/synnefo-ssl``::
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  ShibConfig /etc/shibboleth/shibboleth2.xml
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  Alias      /shibboleth-sp /usr/share/shibboleth
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  <Location /ui/login/shibboleth>
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    AuthType shibboleth
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    ShibRequireSession On
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    ShibUseHeaders On
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    require valid-user
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  </Location>
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and before the line containing::
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  ProxyPass        / http://localhost:8080/ retry=0
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add::
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  ProxyPass /Shibboleth.sso !
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Then, enable the shibboleth module::
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  a2enmod shib2
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After passing through the apache module, the following tokens should be
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available at the destination::
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  eppn # eduPersonPrincipalName
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  Shib-InetOrgPerson-givenName
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  Shib-Person-surname
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  Shib-Person-commonName
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  Shib-InetOrgPerson-displayName
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  Shib-EP-Affiliation
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  Shib-Session-ID
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Astakos keeps a map of shibboleth users using the value of the ``REMOTE_USER``
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header, passed by the ``mod_shib2`` module. This happens in order to be able to
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identify the astakos account the shibboleth user is associated to, every time
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the user logs in from an affiliate shibboleth IdP. 
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The shibboleth attribute which gets mapped to the ``REMOTE_USER`` header can be
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changed in ``/etc/shibboleth/shibboleth2.xml`` configuration file.
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.. code-block:: xml
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    <!-- The ApplicationDefaults element is where most of Shibboleth's SAML bits are defined. -->
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        <ApplicationDefaults entityID="https://sp.example.org/shibboleth" 
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         REMOTE_USER="eppn persistent-id targeted-id">
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.. warning::
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 Changing ``mod_shib2`` ``REMOTE_USER`` to map to different shibboleth
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 attributes will probably invalidate any existing shibboleth enabled users in
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 astakos database. Those users won't be able to login to their existing accounts.
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Finally, add 'shibboleth' in ``ASTAKOS_IM_MODULES`` list. The variable resides
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inside the file ``/etc/synnefo/20-snf-astakos-app-settings.conf``
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Twitter Authentication
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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To enable twitter authentication while signed in under a Twitter account,
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visit dev.twitter.com/apps.
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Click Create an application.
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Fill the necessary information and for callback URL give::
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    https://node1.example.com/ui/login/twitter/authenticated
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Finally, add 'twitter' in ``ASTAKOS_IM_MODULES`` list. The variable resides
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inside the file ``/etc/synnefo/20-snf-astakos-app-settings.conf``
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Google Authentication
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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To enable google authentication while signed in under a Google account,
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visit https://code.google.com/apis/console/.
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Under API Access select Create another client ID, select Web application,
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expand more options in Your site or hostname section and in Authorized
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Redirect URIs add:
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Fill the necessary information and for callback URL give::
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    https://node1.example.com/ui/login/google/authenticated
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Finally, add 'google' in ``ASTAKOS_IM_MODULES`` list. The variable resides
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inside the file ``/etc/synnefo/20-snf-astakos-app-settings.conf``
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Working with Astakos
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--------------------
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User registration
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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When a new user signs up, he/she is not directly marked as active. You can see
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his/her state by running (on the machine that runs the Astakos app):
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.. code-block:: console
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   $ snf-manage user-list
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More detailed user status is provided in the `status` field of the `user-show`
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command:
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.. code-block:: console
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  $ snf-manage user-show <user-id>
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  id                  : 6
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  uuid                : 78661411-5eed-412f-a9ea-2de24f542c2e
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  status              : Accepted/Active (accepted policy: manual)
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  email               : user@synnefo.org
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  ....
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Based on the `astakos-app` configuration, there are several ways for a user to
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get verified and activated in order to be able to login. We discuss the user
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verification and activation flow in the following section.
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User activation flow
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````````````````````
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A user can register for an account using the astakos signup form. Once the form
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is submited successfully a user entry is created in astakos database. That entry
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is passed through the astakos activation backend which handles whether the user
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should be automatically verified and activated.
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Email verification
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``````````````````
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The verification process takes place in order to ensure that the user owns the
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email provided during the signup process. By default, after each successful
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signup astakos notifies user with an verification url via email.
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At this stage:
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    * subsequent registrations invalidate and delete the previous registrations
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      of the same email address.
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    * in case user misses the initial notification, additional emails can be
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      send either via the url which is prompted to the user if he tries to
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      login, or by the administrator using the ``snf-manage user-activation-send
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      <userid>`` command.
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    * administrator may also enforce a user to get verified using the
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      ``snf-manage user-modify --verify <userid>`` command.
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Account activation
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``````````````````
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Once the user gets verified, it is time for Astakos to decide whether or not to
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proceed through user activation process. If ``ASTAKOS_MODERATION_ENABLED``
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setting is set to ``False`` (default value) user gets activated automatically.
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In case the moderation is enabled Astakos may still automatically activate the
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user in the following cases:
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    * User email matches any of the regular expressions defined in
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      ``ASTAKOS_RE_USER_EMAIL_PATTERNS`` (defaults to ``[]``)
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    * User used a signup method (e.g. ``shibboleth``) for which automatic
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      activation is enabled (see
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      :ref:`authentication methods policies <auth_methods_policies>`).
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If all of the above fail to trigger automatic activation, an email is sent to
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the persons listed in ``HELPDESK``, ``MANAGERS`` and ``ADMINS`` settings,
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notifing that there is a new user pending for moderation and that it's up to
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the administrator to decide if the user should be activated. The UI also shows
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a corresponding 'pending moderation' message to the user. The administrator can
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activate a user using the ``snf-manage user-modify`` command:
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.. code-block:: console
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    # command to activate a pending user
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    $ snf-manage user-modify --accept <userid>
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    # command to reject a pending user
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    $ snf-manage user-modify --reject --reject-reason="spammer" <userid>
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Once the activation process finishes, a greeting message is sent to the user
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email address and a notification for the activation to the persons listed in
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``HELPDESK``, ``MANAGERS`` and ``ADMINS`` settings. Once activated the user is
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able to login and access the Synnefo services.
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Additional authentication methods
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`````````````````````````````````
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Astakos supports third party logins from external identity providers. This
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can be usefull since it allows users to use their existing credentials to
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login to astakos service.
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Currently astakos supports the following identity providers:
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    * `Shibboleth <http://www.internet2.edu/shibboleth>`_ (module name
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      ``shibboleth``)
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    * `Google <https://developers.google.com/accounts/docs/OAuth2>`_ (module
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      name ``google``)
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    * `Twitter <https://dev.twitter.com/docs/auth>`_ (module name ``twitter``)
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    * `LinkedIn <http://developer.linkedin.com/documents/authentication>`_
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      (module name ``linkedin``)
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To enable any of the above modules (by default only ``local`` accounts are
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allowed), retrieve and set the required provider settings and append the
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module name in ``ASTAKOS_IM_MODULES``.
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.. code-block:: python
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    # settings from https://code.google.com/apis/console/
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    ASTAKOS_GOOGLE_CLIENT_ID = '1111111111-epi60tvimgha63qqnjo40cljkojcann3.apps.googleusercontent.com'
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    ASTAKOS_GOOGLE_SECRET = 'tNDQqTDKlTf7_LaeUcWTWwZM'
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    # let users signup and login using their google account
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    ASTAKOS_IM_MODULES = ['local', 'google']
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.. _auth_methods_policies:
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Authentication method policies
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``````````````````````````````
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Astakos allows you to override the default policies for each enabled provider
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separately by adding the approriate settings in your ``.conf`` files in the
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following format:
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**ASTAKOS_AUTH_PROVIDER_<module>_<policy>_POLICY**
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Available policies are:
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    * **CREATE** Users can signup using that provider (default: ``True``)
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    * **REMOVE/ADD** Users can remove/add login method from their profile
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      (default: ``True``)
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    * **AUTOMODERATE** Automatically activate users that signup using that
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      provider (default: ``False``)
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    * **LOGIN** Whether or not users can use the provider to login (default:
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      ``True``).
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e.g. to enable automatic activation for your academic users, while keeping
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locally signed up users under moderation you can apply the following settings.
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.. code-block:: python
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    ASTAKOS_AUTH_PROVIDER_SHIBBOLETH_AUTOMODERATE_POLICY = True
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    ASTAKOS_AUTH_PROVIDER_SHIBBOLETH_REMOVE_POLICY = False
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User login
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~~~~~~~~~~
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During the logging procedure, the user is authenticated by the respective
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identity provider.
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If ``ASTAKOS_RECAPTCHA_ENABLED`` is set and the user fails several times
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(``ASTAKOS_RATELIMIT_RETRIES_ALLOWED`` setting) to provide the correct
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credentials for a local account, he/she is then prompted to solve a captcha
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challenge.
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Upon success, the system renews the token (if it has expired), logins the user
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and sets the cookie, before redirecting the user to the ``next`` parameter
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value.
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Setting quota limits
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Set default quota
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`````````````````
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To inspect current default base quota limits, run::
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   # snf-manage resource-list
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You can modify the default base quota limit for all future users with::
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   # snf-manage resource-modify <resource_name> --default-quota <value>
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Set base quota for individual users
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```````````````````````````````````
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For individual users that need different quota than the default
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you can set it for each resource like this::
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    # use this to display quota / uuid
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    # snf-manage user-show 'uuid or email' --quota
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    # snf-manage user-modify <user-uuid> --base-quota 'cyclades.vm' 10
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You can set base quota for all existing users, with possible exceptions, using::
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    # snf-manage user-modify --all --base-quota cyclades.vm 10 --exclude uuid1,uuid2
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All quota for which values different from the default have been set,
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can be listed with::
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    # snf-manage quota-list --with-custom=True
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Enable the Projects feature
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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If you want to enable the projects feature so that users may apply
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on their own for resources by creating and joining projects,
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in ``20-snf-astakos-app-settings.conf`` set::
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    # this will make the 'projects' page visible in the dashboard
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    ASTAKOS_PROJECTS_VISIBLE = True
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You can change the maximum allowed number of pending project applications
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per user with::
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    # snf-manage resource-modify astakos.pending_app --default-quota <number>
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You can also set a user-specific limit with::
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    # snf-manage user-modify <user-uuid> --base-quota 'astakos.pending_app' 5
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When users apply for projects they are not automatically granted
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the resources. They must first be approved by the administrator.
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To list pending project applications in astakos::
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    # snf-manage project-list --pending
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Note the last column, the application id. To approve it::
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    # <app id> from the last column of project-list
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    # snf-manage project-control --approve <app id>
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To deny an application::
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    # snf-manage project-control --deny <app id>
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Users designated as *project admins* can approve, deny, or modify
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an application through the web interface. In
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``20-snf-astakos-app-settings.conf`` set::
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    # UUIDs of users that can approve or deny project applications from the web.
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    ASTAKOS_PROJECT_ADMINS = [<uuid>, ...]
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Astakos advanced operations
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---------------------------
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Adding "Terms of Use"
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Astakos supports versioned terms-of-use. First of all you need to create an
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html file that will contain your terms. For example, create the file
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``/usr/share/synnefo/sample-terms.html``, which contains the following:
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.. code-block:: console
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   <h1>My cloud service terms</h1>
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   These are the example terms for my cloud service
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Then, add those terms-of-use with the snf-manage command:
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.. code-block:: console
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   $ snf-manage term-add /usr/share/synnefo/sample-terms.html
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Your terms have been successfully added and you will see the corresponding link
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appearing in the Astakos web pages' footer.
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During the account registration, if there are approval terms, the user is
422
presented with an "I agree with the Terms" checkbox that needs to get checked
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in order to proceed.
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In case there are new approval terms that the user has not signed yet, the
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``signed_terms_required`` view decorator redirects to the ``approval_terms``
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view, so the user will be presented with the new terms the next time he/she
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logins.
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Enabling reCAPTCHA
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Astakos supports the `reCAPTCHA <http://www.google.com/recaptcha>`_ feature.
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If enabled, it protects the Astakos forms from bots. To enable the feature, go
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to https://www.google.com/recaptcha/admin/create and create your own reCAPTCHA
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key pair. Then edit ``/etc/synnefo/20-snf-astakos-app-settings.conf`` and set
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the corresponding variables to reflect your newly created key pair. Finally, set
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the ``ASTAKOS_RECAPTCHA_ENABLED`` variable to ``True``:
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.. code-block:: console
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   ASTAKOS_RECAPTCHA_PUBLIC_KEY = 'example_recaptcha_public_key!@#$%^&*('
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   ASTAKOS_RECAPTCHA_PRIVATE_KEY = 'example_recaptcha_private_key!@#$%^&*('
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   ASTAKOS_RECAPTCHA_ENABLED = True
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Restart the service on the Astakos node(s) and you are ready:
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.. code-block:: console
450

    
451
   # /etc/init.d/gunicorn restart
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453
Checkout your new Sign up page. If you see the reCAPTCHA box, you have setup
454
everything correctly.
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Astakos internals
458
-----------------
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460
X-Auth-Token
461
~~~~~~~~~~~~
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463
Alice requests a specific resource from a cloud service e.g.: Pithos. In the
464
request she supplies the `X-Auth-Token` to identify whether she is eligible to
465
perform the specific task. The service contacts Astakos through its
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``/account/v1.0/authenticate`` api call (see :ref:`authenticate-api-label`)
467
providing the specific ``X-Auth-Token``. Astakos checkes whether the token
468
belongs to an active user and it has not expired and returns a dictionary
469
containing user related information. Finally the service uses the ``uniq``
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field included in the dictionary as the account string to identify the user
471
accessible resources.
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473
.. _authentication-label:
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475
Django Auth methods and Backends
476
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
477

    
478
Astakos incorporates Django user authentication system and extends its User model.
479

    
480
Since username field of django User model has a limitation of 30 characters,
481
AstakosUser is **uniquely** identified by the ``email`` instead. Therefore,
482
``astakos.im.authentication_backends.EmailBackend`` is served to authenticate a
483
user using email if the first argument is actually an email, otherwise tries
484
the username.
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486
A new AstakosUser instance is assigned with a uui as username and also with a
487
``auth_token`` used by the cloud services to authenticate the user.
488
``astakos.im.authentication_backends.TokenBackend`` is also specified in order
489
to authenticate the user using the email and the token fields.
490

    
491
Logged on users can perform a number of actions:
492

    
493
 * access and edit their profile via: ``/im/profile``.
494
 * change their password via: ``/im/password``
495
 * send feedback for grnet services via: ``/im/send_feedback``
496
 * logout (and delete cookie) via: ``/im/logout``
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498
Internal Astakos requests are handled using cookie-based Django user sessions.
499

    
500
External systems should forward to the ``/login`` URI. The server,
501
depending on its configuration will redirect to the appropriate login page.
502
When done with logging in, the service's login URI should redirect to the URI
503
provided with next, adding user and token parameters, which contain the email
504
and token fields respectively.
505

    
506
The login URI accepts the following parameters:
507

    
508
======================  =========================
509
Request Parameter Name  Value
510
======================  =========================
511
next                    The URI to redirect to when the process is finished
512
renew                   Force token renewal (no value parameter)
513
force                   Force logout current user (no value parameter)
514
======================  =========================
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516
External systems inside the ``ASTAKOS_COOKIE_DOMAIN`` scope can acquire the
517
user information by the cookie identified by ``ASTAKOS_COOKIE_NAME`` setting
518
(set during the login procedure).
519

    
520
Finally, backend systems having acquired a token can use the
521
:ref:`authenticate-api-label` API call from a private network or through HTTPS.
522

    
523

    
524
File/Object Storage Service (Pithos+)
525
====================================
526

    
527
Pithos+ is the Synnefo component that implements a storage service and exposes
528
the associated OpenStack REST APIs with custom extensions.
529

    
530
Pithos+ advanced operations
531
---------------------------
532

    
533
Enable separate domain for serving user content
534
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
535

    
536
Since Synnefo v0.15, there is a possibility to serve untrusted user content
537
in an isolated domain.
538

    
539
Enabling this feature consists of the following steps:
540

    
541
#. **Declare new domain in apache server**
542

    
543
   In order to enable the apache server to serve several domains it is required
544
   to setup several virtual hosts.
545
   Therefore, for adding the new domain e.g. "user-content.example.com", append
546
   the following in ``/etc/apache2/sites-available/synnefo-ssl``:
547

    
548
    .. code-block:: console
549

    
550
        <VirtualHost _default_:443>
551
            ServerName user-content.example.com
552

    
553
            Alias /static "/usr/share/synnefo/static"
554

    
555
            #  SetEnv no-gzip
556
            #  SetEnv dont-vary
557

    
558
           AllowEncodedSlashes On
559

    
560
           RequestHeader set X-Forwarded-Protocol "https"
561

    
562
        <Proxy * >
563
            Order allow,deny
564
            Allow from all
565
        </Proxy>
566

    
567
            SetEnv                proxy-sendchunked
568
            SSLProxyEngine        off
569
            ProxyErrorOverride    off
570

    
571
            ProxyPass        /static !
572
            ProxyPass        / http://localhost:8080/ retry=0
573
            ProxyPassReverse / http://localhost:8080/
574

    
575
            RewriteEngine On
576
            RewriteCond %{THE_REQUEST} ^.*(\\r|\\n|%0A|%0D).* [NC]
577
            RewriteRule ^(.*)$ - [F,L]
578

    
579
            SSLEngine on
580
            SSLCertificateFile    /etc/ssl/certs/ssl-cert-snakeoil.pem
581
            SSLCertificateKeyFile /etc/ssl/private/ssl-cert-snakeoil.key
582
        </VirtualHost>
583

    
584
    .. note:: Consider also to purchase and install a certificate for the new
585
              domain.
586

    
587

    
588
    Finally, restart the apache server::
589

    
590
        pithos-host$ /etc/init.d/apache2 restart
591

    
592
#. **Register Pithos+ as an OAuth2 client in Astakos**
593

    
594
   Starting from synnefo version 0.15, in order to view the content of a
595
   protected resource, Pithos+ (on behalf of the user) has to be granted
596
   authorization for the specific resource by Astakos.
597

    
598
   During the authorization grant procedure, Pithos+ has to authenticate
599
   itself with Astakos since the latter has to prevent serving requests by
600
   unknown/unauthorized clients.
601

    
602
   Therefore, in the installation guide you were guided to register Pithos+
603
   as an OAuth2 client in Astakos.
604

    
605
   .. note:: You can see the registered clients by running::
606
    astakos-host$ snf-manage oauth2-client-list -o identifier,redirect_urls,is_trusted
607

    
608
   However, requests originated from the new domain will be rejected since
609
   Astakos is ignorant about the new domain.
610

    
611
   Therefore, you need to register a new client pointing to the unsafe domain.
612
   To do so, use the following command::
613

    
614
        astakos-host$ snf-manage oauth2-client-add pithos-unsafe-domain --secret=<secret> --is-trusted --url https://user-content.example.com/pithos/ui/view
615

    
616

    
617
   .. note:: You can also unregister the client pointing to the safe domain,
618
       since it will no longer be useful.
619
       To do so, run the following::
620

    
621
        astakos-host$ snf-manage oauth2-client-remove pithos-view
622

    
623
#. **Update Pithos+ configuration**
624

    
625
   Respectively, the ``PITHOS_OAUTH2_CLIENT_CREDENTIALS`` setting should be
626
   updated to contain the credentials of the client registered in the previous
627
   step.
628

    
629
   Furthermore, you need to restrict all the requests for user content
630
   to be served exclusively by the unsafe domain.
631

    
632
   To enable this, set the ``PITHOS_UNSAFE_DOMAIN`` setting to the value
633
   of the new domain e.g. "user-content.example.com"
634

    
635
   Finally, restart the gunicorn server::
636

    
637
        pithos-host$ /etc/init.d/gunicorn restart
638

    
639

    
640
Compute/Network/Image Service (Cyclades)
641
========================================
642

    
643
Introduction
644
------------
645

    
646
Cyclades is the Synnefo component that implements Compute, Network and Image
647
services and exposes the associated OpenStack REST APIs. By running Cyclades
648
you can provide a cloud that can handle thousands of virtual servers and
649
networks.
650

    
651
Cyclades does not include any virtualization software and knows nothing about
652
the low-level VM management operations, e.g. handling of VM creation or
653
migrations among physical nodes. Instead, Cyclades is the component that
654
handles multiple Ganeti backends and exposes the REST APIs. The administrator
655
can expand the infrastructure dynamically either by adding more Ganeti nodes
656
or by adding new Ganeti clusters. Cyclades issue VM control commands to Ganeti
657
via Ganeti's remote API and receive asynchronous notifications from Ganeti
658
backends whenever the state of a VM changes, due to Synnefo- or
659
administrator-initiated commands.
660

    
661
Cyclades is the action orchestrator and the API layer on top of multiple Ganeti
662
clusters. By this decoupled design, Ganeti cluster are self-contained and
663
the administrator has complete control on them without Cyclades knowing about
664
it. For example a VM migration to a different physical node is transparent
665
to Cyclades.
666

    
667
Working with Cyclades
668
---------------------
669

    
670
Flavors
671
~~~~~~~
672

    
673
When creating a VM, the user must specify the `flavor` of the virtual server.
674
Flavors are the virtual hardware templates, and provide a description about
675
the number of CPUs, the amount of RAM, and the size of the disk of the VM.
676
Besides the size of the disk, Cyclades flavors describe the storage backend
677
that will be used for the virtual server.
678

    
679
Flavors are created by the administrator and the user can select one of the
680
available flavors. After VM creation, the user can resize his VM, by
681
adding/removing CPU and RAM.
682

    
683
Cyclades support different storage backends that are described by the disk
684
template of the flavor, which is mapped to Ganeti's instance `disk template`.
685
Currently the available disk templates are the following:
686

    
687
* `file`: regulars file
688
* `sharedfile`: regular files on a shared directory, e.g. NFS
689
* `plain`: logical volumes
690
* `drbd`: drbd on top of lvm volumes
691
* `rbd`: rbd volumes residing inside a RADOS cluster
692
* `ext`: disks provided by an external shared storage.
693

    
694
  - `ext_archipelago`: External shared storage provided by
695
    `Archipelago <http://www.synnefo.org/docs/archipelago/latest/index.html>`_.
696

    
697
Flavors are created by the administrator using `snf-manage flavor-create`
698
command. The command takes as argument number of CPUs, amount of RAM, the size
699
of the disks and the disk templates and create the flavors that belong to the
700
cartesian product of the specified arguments. For example, the following
701
command will create two flavors of `40G` disk size with `drbd` disk template,
702
`4G` RAM and `2` or `4` CPUs.
703

    
704
.. code-block:: console
705

    
706
  $ snf-manage flavor-create 2,4 4096 40 drbd
707

    
708
To see the available flavors, run `snf-manage flavor-list` command. Finally,
709
the administrator can delete a flavor by using `flavor-modify` command:
710

    
711
.. code-block:: console
712

    
713
  $ snf-manage flavor-modify --deleted=True <flavor_id>
714

    
715
Images
716
~~~~~~
717

    
718
When creating a VM the user must also specify the `image` of the virtual
719
server. Images are the static templates from which VM instances are
720
initiated. Cyclades uses Pithos to store system and user-provided images,
721
taking advantage of all Pithos features, like deduplication and syncing
722
protocol. An image is a file stored to Pithos with additional metadata that
723
are describing the image, e.g. the OS family or the root partition. To create
724
a new image, the administrator or the user has to upload it a file to Pithos,
725
and then register it as an Image with Cyclades. Then the user can use this
726
image to spawn new VMs from it.
727

    
728
Images can be private, public or shared between users, exactly like Pithos
729
files. Since user-provided public images can be untrusted, the administrator
730
can denote which users are trusted by adding them to the
731
``UI_SYSTEM_IMAGES_OWNERS`` setting in the
732
`/etc/synnefo/20-snf-cyclades-app-ui.conf` file. Images of those users are
733
properly displayed in the UI.
734

    
735
When creating a new VM, Cyclades pass the location of the image and it's
736
metadata to Ganeti. After Ganeti creates the instance's disk, `snf-image`
737
will copy the image to the new disk and perform the image customization
738
phase. During the phase, `snf-image` sends notifications to Cyclades about
739
the progress of the image deployment and customization. Customization includes
740
resizing the root file system, file injection (e.g. SSH keys) and setting
741
a custom hostname. For better understanding of `snf-image` read the
742
corresponding `documentation
743
<http://www.synnefo.org/docs/snf-image/latest/index.html>`_.
744

    
745
For passing sensitive data about the image to Ganeti, like the VMs password,
746
Cyclades keeps all sensitive data in memory caches (memcache) and never allows
747
them to hit the disk. The data are exposed to `snf-image` via an one-time URL
748
that is exposed from the `vmapi` application. So, instead of passing sensitive
749
data to `snf-image` via Ganeti, Cyclades pass an one-time configuration URL
750
that contains a random UUID. After `snf-image` gets the sensitive data, the
751
URL is invalidated so no one else can access them.
752

    
753
The administrator can register images, exactly like users, using a system user
754
(a user that is defined in the ``UI_SYSTEM_IMAGES_OWNERS`` setting). For
755
example, the following command will register the
756
`pithos://u53r-un1qu3-1d/images/debian_base-6.0-7-x86_64.diskdump` as an
757
image to Cyclades:
758

    
759
.. code-block:: console
760

    
761
 $ kamaki image register --name="Debian Base" \
762
        --location=pithos://u53r-un1qu3-1d/images/debian_base-6.0-7-x86_64.diskdump \
763
        --public \
764
        --disk-format=diskdump \
765
        --property OSFAMILY=linux --property ROOT_PARTITION=1 \
766
        --property description="Debian Squeeze Base System" \
767
        --property size=451 --property kernel=2.6.32 --property GUI="No GUI" \
768
        --property sortorder=1 --property USERS=root --property OS=debian
769

    
770
Deletion of an image is done via `kamaki image unregister` command, which will
771
delete the Cyclades Images but will leave the Pithos file as is (unregister).
772

    
773
Apart from using `kamaki` to see and hangle the available images, the
774
administrator can use `snf-manage image-list` and `snf-manage image-show`
775
commands to list and inspect the available public images. Also, the `--user-id`
776
option can be used the see the images of a specific user.
777

    
778
Virtual Servers
779
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
780

    
781
As mentioned, Cyclades uses Ganeti for management of VMs. The administrator can
782
handle Cyclades VMs just like any other Ganeti instance, via `gnt-instance`
783
commands. All Ganeti instances that belong to Synnefo, are separated from
784
others, by a prefix in their names. This prefix is defined in
785
``BACKEND_PREFIX_ID`` setting in
786
``/etc/synnefo/20-snf-cyclades-app-backend.conf``.
787

    
788
Apart from handling Cyclades VM at the Ganeti level, the administrator can
789
also use the `snf-manage server-*` commands. These command cover the most
790
common tasks that are relative with VM handling. Below we describe come
791
of them, but for more information you can use the `--help` option of all
792
`snf-manage server-* commands`. These command cover the most
793

    
794
The `snf-manage server-create` command can be used to create a new VM for some
795
user. This command can be useful when the administrator wants to test Cyclades
796
functionality without starting the API service, e.g. after an upgrade. Also, by
797
using `--backend-id` option, the VM will be created in the specified backend,
798
bypassing automatic VM allocation.
799

    
800
.. code-block:: console
801

    
802
 $ snf-manage server-create --flavor-id=1 --image-id=fc0f6858-f962-42ce-bf9a-1345f89b3d5e \
803
    --user-id=7cf4d078-67bf-424d-8ff2-8669eb4841ea --backend-id=2 \
804
    --password='example_passw0rd' --name='test_vm'
805

    
806
The above commnd will create a new VM for user
807
`7cf4d078-67bf-424d-8ff2-8669eb4841ea` in the Ganeti backend with ID 2. By
808
default this command will issue a Ganeti job to create the VM
809
(`OP_INSTANCE_CREATE`) and return. As in other commands, the `--wait=True`
810
option can be used in order to wait for the successful completion of the job.
811

    
812
`snf-manage server-list` command can be used to list all the available servers.
813
The command supports some useful options, like listing servers of a user,
814
listing servers that exist in a Ganeti backend and listing deleted servers.
815
Also, as in most of `*-list` commands, the `--filter-by` option can be used to
816
filter the results. For example, the following command will only display the
817
started servers of a specific flavor:
818

    
819
.. code-block:: console
820

    
821
 $ snf-manage server-list --filter-by="operstate=STARTED,flavor=<flavor_id>"
822

    
823
Another very useful command is the `server-inspect` command which will display
824
all available information about the state of the server in DB and the state
825
of the server in the Ganeti backend. The output will give you an easy overview
826
about the state of the VM which can be useful for debugging.
827

    
828
Also the administrator can `suspend` a user's VM, using the `server-modify`
829
command:
830

    
831
.. code-block:: console
832

    
833
 $ snf-manage server-modify --suspended=True <server_id>
834

    
835
The user is forbidden to do any action on an administratively suspended VM,
836
which is useful for abuse cases.
837

    
838
Ganeti backends
839
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
840

    
841
Since v0.11, Synnefo is able to manage multiple Ganeti clusters (backends)
842
making it capable to scale linearly to tens of thousands of VMs. Backends
843
can be dynamically added or removed via `snf-manage` commands.
844

    
845
Each newly created VM is allocated to a Ganeti backend by the Cyclades backend
846
allocator. The VM is "pinned" to this backend, and can not change through its
847
lifetime. The backend allocator decides in which backend to spawn the VM based
848
on the available resources of each backend, trying to balance the load between
849
them. Also, Networks are created to all Ganeti backends, in order to ensure
850
that VMs residing on different backends can be connected to the same networks.
851

    
852
A backend can be marked as `drained` in order to be excluded from automatic
853
servers allocation and not receive new servers. Also, a backend can be marked
854
as `offline` to denote that the backend is not healthy (e.g. broken master)
855
and avoid the penalty of connection timeouts.
856

    
857
Finally, Cyclades is able to manage Ganeti backends with different enabled
858
hypervisors (`kvm`, `xen`), and different enabled disk templates.
859

    
860
Listing existing backends
861
`````````````````````````
862
To list all the Ganeti backends known to Synnefo, we run:
863

    
864
.. code-block:: console
865

    
866
   $ snf-manage backend-list
867

    
868
Adding a new Ganeti backend
869
```````````````````````````
870
Backends are dynamically added under the control of Synnefo with `snf-manage
871
backend-add` command. In this section it is assumed that a Ganeti cluster,
872
named ``cluster.example.com`` is already up and running and configured to be
873
able to host Synnefo VMs.
874

    
875
To add this Ganeti cluster, we run:
876

    
877
.. code-block:: console
878

    
879
   $ snf-manage backend-add --clustername=cluster.example.com --user="synnefo_user" --pass="synnefo_pass"
880

    
881
where ``clustername`` is the Cluster hostname of the Ganeti cluster, and
882
``user`` and ``pass`` are the credentials for the `Ganeti RAPI user
883
<http://docs.ganeti.org/ganeti/2.8/html/rapi.html#users-and-passwords>`_.  All
884
backend attributes can be also changed dynamically using the `snf-manage
885
backend-modify` command.
886

    
887
``snf-manage backend-add`` will also create all existing public networks to
888
the new backend. You can verify that the backend is added, by running
889
`snf-manage backend-list`.
890

    
891
Note that no VMs will be spawned to this backend, since by default it is in a
892
``drained`` state after addition in order to manually verify the state of the
893
backend.
894

    
895
So, after making sure everything works as expected, make the new backend active
896
by un-setting the ``drained`` flag. You can do this by running:
897

    
898
.. code-block:: console
899

    
900
   $ snf-manage backend-modify --drained=False <backend_id>
901

    
902
Allocation of VMs in Ganeti backends
903
````````````````````````````````````
904
As already mentioned, the Cyclades backend allocator is responsible for
905
allocating new VMs to backends. This allocator does not choose the exact Ganeti
906
node that will host the VM but just the Ganeti backend. The exact node is
907
chosen by the Ganeti cluster's allocator (hail).
908

    
909
The decision about which backend will host a VM is based on the available
910
resources. The allocator computes a score for each backend, that shows its load
911
factor, and the one with the minimum score is chosen. The admin can exclude
912
backends from the allocation phase by marking them as ``drained`` by running:
913

    
914
.. code-block:: console
915

    
916
   $ snf-manage backend-modify --drained=True <backend_id>
917

    
918
The backend resources are periodically updated, at a period defined by
919
the ``BACKEND_REFRESH_MIN`` setting, or by running `snf-manage
920
backend-update-status` command. It is advised to have a cron job running this
921
command at a smaller interval than ``BACKEND_REFRESH_MIN`` in order to remove
922
the load of refreshing the backends stats from the VM creation phase.
923

    
924
Finally, the admin can decide to have a user's VMs being allocated to a
925
specific backend, with the ``BACKEND_PER_USER`` setting. This is a mapping
926
between users and backends. If the user is found in ``BACKEND_PER_USER``, then
927
Synnefo allocates all his/hers VMs to the specific backend in the variable,
928
even if is marked as drained (useful for testing).
929

    
930
.. _alloc_disk_templates:
931

    
932
Allocation based on disk-templates
933
**********************************
934

    
935
Besides the available resources of each Ganeti backend, the allocator takes
936
into consideration the disk template of the instance when trying to allocate it
937
to a Ganeti backend. Specifically, the allocator checks if the flavor of the
938
instance belongs to the available disk templates of each Ganeti backend.
939

    
940
A Ganeti cluster has a list of enabled disk templates
941
(`--enabled-disk-templates`) and a list of allowed disk templates for new
942
instances (`--ipolicy-disk-templates`). See the `gnt-cluster` manpage for more
943
details about these options.
944

    
945
When Synnefo allocates an instance, it checks whether the disk template of the
946
new instance belongs both in the enabled and ipolicy disk templates. You can
947
see the list of the available disk-templates by running `snf-manage
948
backend-list`. This list should be updated automatically after changing
949
these options in Ganeti and it can also be updated by running `snf-manage
950
backend-update-status`.
951

    
952
So the administrator, can route instances on different backends based on their
953
flavor disk template, by modifying the enabled or ipolicy disk templates of
954
each backend.  Also, the administrator can route instances between different
955
nodes of the same Ganeti backend, by modifying the same options at the
956
nodegroup level (see `gnt-group` manpage for mor details).
957

    
958
Removing an existing Ganeti backend
959
```````````````````````````````````
960
In order to remove an existing backend from Synnefo, you must first make
961
sure that there are not active servers in the backend, and then run:
962

    
963
.. code-block:: console
964

    
965
   $ snf-manage backend-remove <backend_id>
966

    
967

    
968
Virtual Networks
969
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
970

    
971
Cyclades also implements the Network service and exposes the Quantum Openstack
972
API. Cyclades supports full IPv4 and IPv6 connectivity to the public internet
973
for it's VMs. Also, Cyclades provides L2 and L3 virtual private networks,
974
giving the user freedom to create arbitraty network topologies of
975
interconnected VMs.
976

    
977
Public networking is desployment specific and must be customized based on the
978
specific needs of the system administrator. Private virtual networks can be
979
provided by different network technologies which are exposed as different
980
network flavors. For better understanding of networking please refer to the
981
:ref:`Network <networks>` section.
982

    
983
A Cyclades virtual network is an isolated Layer-2 broadcast domain. A network
984
can also have an associated IPv4 and IPv6 subnet representing the Layer-3
985
characteristics of the network. Each subnet represents an IP address block
986
that is used in order to assign addresses to VMs.
987

    
988
To connect a VM to a network, a port must be created, which represent a virtual
989
port on a network switch. VMs are connected to networks by attaching a virtual
990
interface to a port.
991

    
992
Cyclades also supports `floating IPs`, which are public IPv4 addresses that
993
can dynamically(hotplug-able) be added and removed to VMs. Floating IPs are
994
a quotable resource that is allocated to each user. Unlike other cloud
995
platforms, floating IPs are not implemented using 1-1 NAT to a ports private
996
IP. Instead, floating IPs are directly assigned to virtual interfaces of VMs.
997

    
998
Exactly like VMS, networks can be handled as Ganeti networks via `gnt-network`
999
commands. All Ganeti networks that belong to Synnefo are named with the prefix
1000
`${BACKEND_PREFIX_ID}-net-`. Also, there are a number of `snf-manage` commands
1001
for handling of `networks`, `subnets`, `ports` and `floating IPs`. Below
1002
we will present a use case scenario using some of these commands. For better
1003
understanding of these commands, refer to their help messages.
1004

    
1005
Create a virtual private network for user
1006
`7cf4d078-67bf-424d-8ff2-8669eb4841ea` using the `PHYSICAL_VLAN` flavor, which
1007
means that the network will be uniquely assigned a phsyical VLAN. The network
1008
is assigned an IPv4 subnet, described by it's CIDR and gateway. Also,
1009
the `--dhcp=True` option is used, to make `nfdhcpd` response to DHCP queries
1010
from VMs.
1011

    
1012
.. code-block:: console
1013

    
1014
 $ snf-manage network-create --owner=7cf4d078-67bf-424d-8ff2-8669eb4841ea --name=prv_net-1 \
1015
    --subnet=192.168.2.0/24 --gateway=192.168.2.1 --dhcp=True --flavor=PHYSICAL_VLAN
1016

    
1017
Inspect the state of the network in Cyclades DB and in all the Ganeti backends:
1018

    
1019
.. code-block:: console
1020

    
1021
  $ snf-manage network-inspect <network_id>
1022

    
1023
Inspect the state of the network's subnet, containg an overview of the
1024
subnet's IPv4 address allocation pool:
1025

    
1026
.. code-block:: console
1027

    
1028
  $ snf-manage subnet-inspect <subnet_id>
1029

    
1030
Connect a VM to the created private network. The port will be automatically
1031
be assigned an IPv4 address from one of the network's available IPs. This
1032
command will result in sending an `OP_INSTANCE_MODIFY` Ganeti command and
1033
attaching a NIC to the specified Ganeti instance.
1034

    
1035
.. code-block:: console
1036

    
1037
 $ snf-manage port-create --network=<network_id> --server=<server_id>
1038

    
1039
Inspect the state of the the port in Cyclades DB and in the Ganeti backend:
1040

    
1041
.. code-block:: console
1042

    
1043
 $ snf-manage port-inspect <port_id>
1044

    
1045
Disconnect the VM from the network and delete the network:
1046

    
1047
.. code-block:: console
1048

    
1049
 $ snf-manage port-remove <port_id>
1050
 $ snf-manage network-remove <network_id>
1051

    
1052

    
1053
Enabling DHCP
1054
`````````````
1055

    
1056
When connecting a VM to a network, Cyclades will automatically assign an IPv4
1057
address from the IPv4 or/and IPv6 subnets of the network. If the network has
1058
no subnets, then it will not be assigned any IP address.
1059

    
1060
If the network has DHCP enabled, then `nfdhcpd` daemon, which must be running
1061
on all Ganeti nodes, will respond to DHCP queries from VMs and assign to them
1062
the IP address that was allocated by Cyclades. DCHP can be enabled/disabled
1063
using the `--dhcp` option of `network-create` command.
1064

    
1065

    
1066
Public network connectivity
1067
```````````````````````````
1068

    
1069
Since v0.14, users are able to dynamically connect and disconnect their VMs
1070
from public networks. In order to do that, they have to use a `floating IP`.
1071
Floating IPs are basically public IPv4 addresses that can be dynamically
1072
attached and detached from VMs. The user creates a floating IP address from a
1073
network that has set the `floating_ip_pool` attribute. The floating IP is
1074
accounted to the user, who can then connect his VMs to public networks by
1075
creating ports that they are using this floating IP. Performing this work-flow
1076
from `snf-manage` would look like this:
1077

    
1078
.. code-block:: console
1079

    
1080
 $ snf-manage network-list --filter-by="floating_ip_pool=True"
1081
 id      name  user.uuid   state  public  subnet.ipv4  gateway.ipv4  drained  floating_ip_pool
1082
 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1083
  1  Internet       None  ACTIVE    True  10.2.1.0/24      10.2.1.1    False              True
1084

    
1085
 $ snf-manage floating-ip-create --owner=7cf4d078-67bf-424d-8ff2-8669eb4841ea --network=1
1086

    
1087
 $ snf-manage floating-ip-list --user=7cf4d078-67bf-424d-8ff2-8669eb4841ea
1088
 id   address       network                             user.uuid  server
1089
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------
1090
 38  10.2.1.2             1  7cf4d078-67bf-424d-8ff2-8669eb4841ea      42
1091

    
1092
 $ snf-manage port-create --owner=7cf4d078-67bf-424d-8ff2-8669eb4841ea --network=1 \
1093
                          --ipv4-address=10.2.1.2 --floating-ip=38
1094

    
1095
 $ snf-manage port-list --user=7cf4d078-67bf-424d-8ff2-8669eb4841ea
1096
 id                            user.uuid        mac_address  network  server_id  fixed_ips   state
1097
 --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1098
 163 7cf4d078-67bf-424d-8ff2-8669eb4841ea  aa:00:00:45:13:98       1         77   10.2.1.2  ACTIVE
1099

    
1100
 $ snf-manage port-remove 163
1101
 $ snf-manage floating-ip-remove 38
1102

    
1103
Users do not have permission to connect and disconnect VMs from public
1104
networks without using a floating IP address. However, the administrator
1105
have the ability to perform this tasks, using `port-create` and `port-remove`
1106
commands.
1107

    
1108
Network connectivity for newly created servers
1109
``````````````````````````````````````````````
1110

    
1111
When creating a virtual server, the user can specify the networks that the
1112
newly created server will be connected to. Beyond this, the administrator can
1113
define a list of networks that every new server will be forced to connect to.
1114
For example, you can enforce all VMs to be connected to a public network
1115
containing a metadata server. The networks must be specified in the
1116
``CYCLADES_FORCED_SERVER_NETWORKS`` that exists in the
1117
``/etc/synnefo/20-snf-cyclades-app-api.conf``. For the networks in this
1118
setting, no access control or quota policy are enforced!
1119

    
1120
Finally, the administrator can define a list of networks that new servers will
1121
be connected, *if the user has not* specified networks in the request to create
1122
the server. Access control and quota policy are enforced, just as if the user
1123
had specified these networks. The list of these networks is defined in the
1124
``CYCLADES_DEFAULT_SERVER_NETWORKS`` that exists in the
1125
``/etc/synnefo/20-snf-cyclades-app-api.conf``. This setting should only
1126
be used if Cyclades are being accessed by external clients that are
1127
unaware of the `Neutron API extensions` in the `Compute API`.
1128

    
1129
Each member of the above mentioned settings can be:
1130

    
1131
* a network UUID
1132
* a tuple of network UUIDs: the server will be connected to only one of these
1133
  networks, e.g. one that has a free IPv4 address
1134
* `SNF:ANY_PUBLIC_IPV4`: the server will be connected to any network with
1135
  an IPv4 subnet defined
1136
* `SNF:ANY_PUBLIC_IPV6`: the server will be connected to any network with
1137
  only an IPv6 subnet defined.
1138
* `SNF:ANY_PUBLIC`: the server will be connected to any public network.
1139

    
1140
Public IP accounting
1141
````````````````````
1142

    
1143
There are many use cases, e.g. abuse ports, where you need to find which user
1144
or which server had a public IP address. For this reason, Cyclades keeps track
1145
usage of public IPv4/IPv6 addresses. Specifically, it keeps the date and time
1146
that each public IP address was allocated and released from a virtual server.
1147
This information can be found using `ip-list` command:
1148

    
1149
.. code-block:: console
1150

    
1151
 $ snf-manage ip-list
1152

    
1153
 Show usage of a specific address:
1154
 $ snf-manage ip-list --address=192.168.2.1
1155

    
1156
 Show public IPs of a specific server:
1157
 $ snf-manage ip-list --server=<server_id>
1158

    
1159

    
1160
Managing Network Resources
1161
``````````````````````````
1162

    
1163
Proper operation of the Cyclades Network Service depends on the unique
1164
assignment of specific resources to each type of virtual network. Specifically,
1165
these resources are:
1166

    
1167
* IP addresses. Cyclades creates a Pool of IPs for each Network, and assigns a
1168
  unique IP address to each VM, thus connecting it to this Network. You can see
1169
  the IP pool of each network by running `snf-manage subnet-inspect
1170
  <subnet_ID>`. IP pools are automatically created and managed by Cyclades,
1171
  depending on the subnet of the Network.
1172
* Bridges corresponding to physical VLANs, which are required for networks of
1173
  type `PRIVATE_PHYSICAL_VLAN`.
1174
* One Bridge corresponding to one physical VLAN which is required for networks of
1175
  type `PRIVATE_MAC_PREFIX`.
1176

    
1177
IPv4 addresses
1178
**************
1179

    
1180
An allocation pool of IPv4 addresses is automatically created for every network
1181
with an IPv4 subnet. By default, the allocation pool contains the range of IP
1182
addresses that are included in the subnet, except from the gateway and the
1183
broadcast address of the network. The range of IP addresses can be restricted
1184
using the `--allocation-pool` option of `snf-manage network-create` command.
1185
The admin can externally reserve IP addresses to exclude them from automatic
1186
allocation with the `--add-reserved-ips` option of `snf-manage network-modify`
1187
command. For example the following command will reserve two IP addresses from
1188
network with ID `42`:
1189

    
1190
.. code-block:: console
1191

    
1192
 snf-manage network-modify --add-reserved-ips=10.0.0.21,10.0.0.22 42
1193

    
1194
.. warning:: Externally reserving IP addresses is also available at the Ganeti.
1195
 However, when using Cyclades with multiple Ganeti backends, the handling of
1196
 IP pools must be performed from Cyclades!
1197

    
1198
Bridges
1199
*******
1200

    
1201
As already mentioned Cyclades use a pool of Bridges that must correspond
1202
to Physical VLAN at the Ganeti level. A bridge from the pool is assigned to
1203
each network of flavor `PHYSICAL_VLAN`. Creation of this pool is done
1204
using `snf-manage pool-create` command. For example the following command
1205
will create a pool containing the brdiges from `prv1` to `prv21`.
1206

    
1207
.. code-block:: console
1208

    
1209
   # snf-manage pool-create --type=bridge --base=prv --size=20
1210

    
1211
You can verify the creation of the pool, and check its contents by running:
1212

    
1213
.. code-block:: console
1214

    
1215
   # snf-manage pool-list
1216
   # snf-manage pool-show --type=bridge 1
1217

    
1218
Finally you can use the `pool-modify` management command in order to externally
1219
reserve the values from pool, extend or shrink the pool if possible.
1220

    
1221
MAC Prefixes
1222
************
1223

    
1224
Cyclades also use a pool of MAC prefixes to assign to networks of flavor
1225
`MAC_FILTERED`. Handling of this pool is done exactly as with pool of bridges,
1226
except that the type option must be set to mac-prefix:
1227

    
1228
.. code-block:: console
1229

    
1230
   # snf-manage pool-create --type=mac-prefix --base=aa:00:0 --size=65536
1231

    
1232
The above command will create a pool of MAC prefixes from ``aa:00:1`` to
1233
``b9:ff:f``. The MAC prefix pool is responsible for providing only unicast and
1234
locally administered MAC addresses, so many of these prefixes will be
1235
externally reserved, to exclude from allocation.
1236

    
1237
Quotas
1238
~~~~~~
1239

    
1240
Handling of quotas for Cyclades resources is powered by Astakos quota
1241
mechanism. During registration of Cyclades service to Astakos, the Cyclades
1242
resources are also imported to Astakos for accounting and presentation.
1243

    
1244
Upon a request that will result in a resource creation or removal, Cyclades
1245
will communicate with Astakos to ensure that user quotas are within limits and
1246
update the corresponding usage. If a limit is reached, the request will be
1247
denied with an `overLimit(413)` fault.
1248

    
1249
The resources that are exported by Cyclades are the following:
1250

    
1251
* `cyclades.vm`: Number of virtual machines
1252
* `cyclades.total_cpu`: Number of virtual machine processors
1253
* `cyclades.cpu`: Number of virtual machine processors of running VMs
1254
* `cyclades.total_ram`: Virtual machine memory size
1255
* `cyclades.ram`: Virtual machine memory size of running VMs
1256
* `cyclades.disk`: Virtual machine disk size
1257
* `cyclades.floating_ip`: Number of floating IP addresses
1258
* `cyclades.network.private`: Number of private virtual networks
1259

    
1260
Enforcing quotas
1261
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1262

    
1263
User quota can get overlimit, for example when a user is removed from a
1264
project granting Cyclades resources. However, no action is automatically
1265
taken to restrict users to their new limits. There is a special tool for
1266
quota enforcement:
1267

    
1268
.. code-block:: console
1269

    
1270
  # snf-manage enforce-resources-cyclades
1271

    
1272
This command will check and report which users are overlimit on their
1273
Cyclades quota; it will also suggest actions to be taken in order to enforce
1274
quota limits, dependent on the overlimit resource:
1275

    
1276
* `cyclades.vm`: Delete VMs
1277
* `cyclades.total_cpu`: Delete VMs
1278
* `cyclades.cpu`: Shutdown VMs
1279
* `cyclades.total_ram`: Delete VMs
1280
* `cyclades.ram`: Shutdown VMs
1281
* `cyclades.disk`: Delete VMs
1282
* `cyclades.floating_ip`: Detach and remove IPs
1283

    
1284
VMs to be deleted/shutdown are chosen first by state in the following order:
1285
ERROR, BUILD, STOPPED, STARTED or RESIZE and then by decreasing ID. When
1286
needing to remove IPs, we first choose IPs that are free, then those
1287
attached to VMs, using the same VM ordering.
1288

    
1289
By default, the command checks only the following resources: `cyclades.cpu`,
1290
`cyclades.ram`, and `cyclades.floating_ip`; that is, the less dangerous
1291
ones, those that do not result in *deleting* any VM. One can change the
1292
default behavior by specifying the desired resources with option
1293
``--resources``. It is also possible to specify users to be checked or
1294
excluded.
1295

    
1296
Actual enforcement is done with option ``--fix``. In order to control the
1297
load that quota enforcement may cause on Cyclades, one can limit the number
1298
of operations per backend. For example,
1299

    
1300
.. code-block:: console
1301

    
1302
  # snf-manage enforce-resources-cyclades --fix --max-operations 10
1303

    
1304
will apply only the first 10 listed actions per backend. One can repeat the
1305
operation, until nothing is left to be done.
1306

    
1307
Cyclades advanced operations
1308
----------------------------
1309

    
1310
Reconciliation mechanism
1311
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1312

    
1313
Cyclades - Ganeti reconciliation
1314
````````````````````````````````
1315

    
1316
On certain occasions, such as a Ganeti or RabbitMQ failure, the state of
1317
Cyclades database may differ from the real state of VMs and networks in the
1318
Ganeti backends. The reconciliation process is designed to synchronize the
1319
state of the Cyclades DB with Ganeti. There are two management commands for
1320
reconciling VMs and Networks that will detect stale, orphans and out-of-sync
1321
VMs and networks. To fix detected inconsistencies, use the `--fix-all`.
1322

    
1323
.. code-block:: console
1324

    
1325
  $ snf-manage reconcile-servers
1326
  $ snf-manage reconcile-servers --fix-all
1327

    
1328
  $ snf-manage reconcile-networks
1329
  $ snf-manage reconcile-networks --fix-all
1330

    
1331
Please see ``snf-manage reconcile-servers --help`` and ``snf-manage
1332
reconcile--networks --help`` for all the details.
1333

    
1334

    
1335
Cyclades - Astakos reconciliation
1336
`````````````````````````````````
1337

    
1338
As already mentioned, Cyclades communicates with Astakos for resource
1339
accounting and quota enforcement. In rare cases, e.g. unexpected
1340
failures, the two services may get unsynchronized. For this reason there
1341
are the `reconcile-commissions-cyclades` and `reconcile-resources-cyclades`
1342
command that will synchronize the state of the two services. The first
1343
command will detect any pending commissions, while the second command will
1344
detect that the usage that is reported by Astakos is correct.
1345
To fix detected inconsistencies, use the `--fix` option.
1346

    
1347
.. code-block:: console
1348

    
1349
  $ snf-manage reconcile-commissions-cyclades
1350
  $ snf-manage reconcile-commissions-cyclades --fix
1351

    
1352
  $ snf-manage reconcile-resources-cyclades
1353
  $ snf-manage reconcile-resources-cyclades --fix
1354

    
1355

    
1356
Cyclades resources reconciliation
1357
`````````````````````````````````
1358

    
1359
Reconciliation of pools will check the consistency of available pools by
1360
checking that the values from each pool are not used more than once, and also
1361
that the only reserved values in a pool are the ones used. Pool reconciliation
1362
will check pools of bridges, MAC prefixes, and IPv4 addresses for all networks.
1363
To fix detected inconsistencies, use the `--fix` option.
1364

    
1365

    
1366
.. code-block:: console
1367

    
1368
  $ snf-manage reconcile-pools
1369
  $ snf-manage reconcile-pools --fix
1370

    
1371
.. _admin-guide-stats:
1372

    
1373
VM stats collecting
1374
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1375

    
1376
snf-cyclades-gtools comes with a collectd plugin to collect CPU and network
1377
stats for Ganeti VMs and an example collectd configuration. snf-stats-app is a
1378
Django (snf-webproject) app that serves the VM stats graphs by reading the VM
1379
stats (from RRD files) and serves graphs.
1380

    
1381
The snf-stats-app was originally written by `GRNET NOC <http://noc.grnet.gr>`_
1382
as a WSGI Python app and was ported to a Synnefo (snf-webproject) app.
1383

    
1384
snf-stats-app configuration
1385
```````````````````````````
1386

    
1387
The snf-stats-app node should have collectd installed. The collectd
1388
configuration should enable the network plugin, assuming the server role, and
1389
the RRD plugin / backend, to store the incoming stats. Your
1390
``/etc/collectd/collectd.conf`` should look like:
1391

    
1392
.. code-block:: console
1393

    
1394
    FQDNLookup true
1395
    LoadPlugin syslog
1396
    <Plugin syslog>
1397
        LogLevel info
1398
    </Plugin>
1399

    
1400
    LoadPlugin network
1401
    LoadPlugin rrdtool
1402
    <Plugin network>
1403
        TimeToLive 128
1404
        <Listen "okeanos.io" "25826">
1405
            SecurityLevel "Sign"
1406
            AuthFile "/etc/collectd/passwd"
1407
        </Listen>
1408

    
1409
        ReportStats false
1410
        MaxPacketSize 65535
1411
    </Plugin>
1412

    
1413

    
1414
    <Plugin rrdtool>
1415
        DataDir "/var/lib/collectd/rrd"
1416
        CacheTimeout 120
1417
        CacheFlush 900
1418
        WritesPerSecond 30
1419
        RandomTimeout 0
1420
    </Plugin>
1421

    
1422
    Include "/etc/collectd/filters.conf"
1423
    Include "/etc/collectd/thresholds.conf"
1424

    
1425

    
1426
An example collectd config file is provided in
1427
``/usr/share/doc/snf-stats-app/examples/stats-colletcd.conf``.
1428

    
1429
The recommended deployment is to run snf-stats-app using gunicorn with an
1430
Apache2 or nginx reverse proxy (using the same configuration as the other
1431
Synnefo services / apps). An example gunicorn config file is provided in
1432
``/usr/share/doc/snf-stats-app/examples/stats.gunicorn``.
1433

    
1434
Make sure to edit the settings under
1435
``/etc/synnefo/20-snf-stats-app-settings.conf`` to match your deployment.
1436
More specifically, you should change the ``STATS_BASE_URL`` setting (refer
1437
to previous documentation on the BASE_URL settings used by the other Synnefo
1438
services / apps) and the ``RRD_PREFIX`` and ``GRAPH_PREFIX`` settings.
1439

    
1440
You should also set the ``STATS_SECRET_KEY`` to a random string and make sure
1441
it's the same at the ``CYCLADES_STATS_SECRET_KEY`` on the Cyclades host (see
1442
below).
1443

    
1444
``RRD_PREFIX`` is the directory where collectd stores the RRD files. The
1445
default setting matches the default RRD directory for the collectd RRDtool
1446
plugin. In a more complex setup, the collectd daemon could run on a separate
1447
host and export the RRD directory to the snf-stats-app node via e.g. NFS.
1448

    
1449
``GRAPH_PREFIX`` is the directory where collectd stores the resulting
1450
stats graphs. You should create it manually, in case it doesn't exist.
1451

    
1452
.. code-block::
1453

    
1454
    # mkdir /var/cache/snf-stats-app/
1455
    # chown www-data:wwwdata /var/cache/snf-stats-app/
1456

    
1457
The snf-stats-app will typically run as the ``www-data`` user. In that case,
1458
make sure that the ``www-data`` user should have read access to the
1459
``RRD_PREFIX`` directory and read / write access to the ``GRAPH_PREFIX``
1460
directory.
1461

    
1462
snf-stats-app, based on the ``STATS_BASE_URL`` setting will export the
1463
following URL 'endpoints`:
1464
 * CPU stats bar: ``STATS_BASE_URL``/v1.0/cpu-bar/<encrypted VM hostname>
1465
 * Network stats bar: ``STATS_BASE_URL``/v1.0/net-bar/<encrypted VM hostname>
1466
 * CPU stats daily graph: ``STATS_BASE_URL``/v1.0/cpu-ts/<encrypted VM hostname>
1467
 * Network stats daily graph: ``STATS_BASE_URL``/v1.0/net-ts/<encrypted VM hostname>
1468
 * CPU stats weekly graph: ``STATS_BASE_URL``/v1.0/cpu-ts-w/<encrypted VM hostname>
1469
 * Network stats weekly graph: ``STATS_BASE_URL``/v1.0/net-ts-w/<encrypted VM hostname>
1470

    
1471
You can verify that these endpoints are exported by issuing:
1472

    
1473
.. code-block::
1474

    
1475
    # snf-manage show_urls
1476

    
1477
snf-cyclades-gtools configuration
1478
`````````````````````````````````
1479

    
1480
To enable VM stats collecting, you will need to:
1481
 * Install collectd on the every Ganeti (VM-capable) node.
1482
 * Enable the Ganeti stats plugin in your collectd configuration. This can be
1483
   achived by either copying the example collectd conf file that comes with
1484
   snf-cyclades-gtools
1485
   (``/usr/share/doc/snf-cyclades-gtools/examples/ganeti-stats-collectd.conf``)
1486
   or by adding the following line to your existing (or default) collectd
1487
   conf file:
1488

    
1489
       Include /etc/collectd/ganeti-stats.conf
1490

    
1491
   In the latter case, make sure to configure collectd to send the collected
1492
   stats to your collectd server (via the network plugin). For more details on
1493
   how to do this, check the collectd example config file provided by the
1494
   package and the collectd documentation.
1495

    
1496
snf-cyclades-app configuration
1497
``````````````````````````````
1498

    
1499
At this point, stats collecting should be enabled and working. You can check
1500
that everything is ok by checking the contents of ``/var/lib/collectd/rrd/``
1501
directory (it will gradually get populated with directories containing RRD
1502
files / stats for every Synnefo instances).
1503

    
1504
You should also check that gunicorn and Apache2 are configured correctly by
1505
accessing the graph URLs for a VM (whose stats have been populated in
1506
``/var/lib/collectd/rrd``).
1507

    
1508
Cyclades uses the ``CYCLADES_STATS_SECRET_KEY`` setting in
1509
``20-snf-cyclades-app`` to encrypt the instance hostname in the stats graph
1510
URL. This settings should be set to a random value and match the
1511
``STATS_SECRET_KEY`` on the Stats host.
1512

    
1513
Cyclades (snf-cyclades-app) fetches the stat graphs for VMs based on four
1514
settings in ``20-snf-cyclades-app-api.conf``. The settings are:
1515

    
1516
 * CPU_BAR_GRAPH_URL = 'https://stats.host/stats/v1.0/cpu-bar/%s'
1517
 * CPU_TIMESERIES_GRAPH_URL = 'https://stats.host/stats/v1.0/cpu-ts/%s'
1518
 * NET_BAR_GRAPH_URL = 'https://stats.host/stats/v1.0/net-bar/%s'
1519
 * NET_TIMESERIES_GRAPH_URL = 'https://stats.host/stats/v1.0/net-ts/%s'
1520

    
1521
Make sure that you change this settings to match your ``STATS_BASE_URL``
1522
(and generally the Apache2 / gunicorn deployment on your stats host).
1523

    
1524
Cyclades will pass these URLs to the Cyclades UI and the user's browser will
1525
fetch them when needed.
1526

    
1527

    
1528
Helpdesk
1529
--------
1530

    
1531
Helpdesk application provides the ability to view the virtual servers and
1532
networks of all users, along with the ability to perform some basic actions
1533
like administratively suspending a server. You can perform look-ups by
1534
user UUID or email, by server ID (vm-$id) or by an IPv4 address.
1535

    
1536
If you want to activate the helpdesk application you can set to `True` the
1537
`HELPDESK_ENABLED` setting. Access to helpdesk views (under
1538
`$BASE_URL/helpdesk`) is only to allowed to users that belong to Astakos
1539
groups defined in the `HELPDESK_PERMITTED_GROUPS` setting, which by default
1540
contains the `helpdesk` group. For example, to allow <user_id>
1541
to access helpdesk view, you should run the following command in the Astakos
1542
node:
1543

    
1544
.. code-block:: console
1545

    
1546
 snf-manage group-add helpdesk
1547
 snf-manage user-modify --add-group=helpdesk <user_id>
1548

    
1549

    
1550
Cyclades internals
1551
------------------
1552

    
1553
Asynchronous communication with Ganeti backends
1554
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1555
Synnefo uses Google Ganeti backends for VM cluster management. In order for
1556
Cyclades to be able to handle thousands of user requests, Cyclades and Ganeti
1557
communicate asynchronously. Briefly, requests are submitted to Ganeti through
1558
Ganeti's RAPI/HTTP interface, and then asynchronous notifications about the
1559
progress of Ganeti jobs are being created and pushed upwards to Cyclades. The
1560
architecture and communication with a Ganeti backend is shown in the graph
1561
below:
1562

    
1563
.. image:: images/cyclades-ganeti-communication.png
1564
   :width: 40%
1565
   :target: _images/cyclades-ganeti-communication.png
1566

    
1567
The Cyclades API server is responsible for handling user requests. Read-only
1568
requests are directly served by looking up the Cyclades DB. If the request
1569
needs an action in the Ganeti backend, Cyclades submit jobs to the Ganeti
1570
master using the `Ganeti RAPI interface
1571
<http://docs.ganeti.org/ganeti/2.8/html/rapi.html>`_.
1572

    
1573
While Ganeti executes the job, `snf-ganeti-eventd`, and `snf-progress-monitor`
1574
are monitoring the progress of the job and send corresponding messages to the
1575
RabbitMQ servers. These components are part of `snf-cyclades-gtools` and must
1576
be installed on all Ganeti nodes. Specially:
1577

    
1578
* *snf-ganeti-eventd* sends messages about operations affecting the operating
1579
  state of instances and networks. Works by monitoring the Ganeti job queue.
1580
* *snf-progress_monitor* sends messages about the progress of the Image deployment
1581
  phase which is done by the Ganeti OS Definition `snf-image`.
1582

    
1583
Finally, `snf-dispatcher` consumes messages from the RabbitMQ queues, processes
1584
these messages and properly updates the state of the Cyclades DB. Subsequent
1585
requests to the Cyclades API, will retrieve the updated state from the DB.
1586

    
1587

    
1588
List of all Synnefo components
1589
==============================
1590

    
1591
They are also available from our apt repository: ``apt.dev.grnet.gr``
1592

    
1593
 * `snf-common <http://www.synnefo.org/docs/snf-common/latest/index.html>`_
1594
 * `snf-webproject <http://www.synnefo.org/docs/snf-webproject/latest/index.html>`_
1595
 * `snf-astakos-app <http://www.synnefo.org/docs/astakos/latest/index.html>`_
1596
 * `snf-pithos-backend <http://www.synnefo.org/docs/pithos/latest/backends.html>`_
1597
 * `snf-pithos-app <http://www.synnefo.org/docs/pithos/latest/index.html>`_
1598
 * `snf-pithos-webclient <http://www.synnefo.org/docs/pithos-webclient/latest/index.html>`_
1599
 * `snf-cyclades-app <http://www.synnefo.org/docs/snf-cyclades-app/latest/index.html>`_
1600
 * `snf-cyclades-gtools <http://www.synnefo.org/docs/snf-cyclades-gtools/latest/index.html>`_
1601
 * `astakosclient <http://www.synnefo.org/docs/astakosclient/latest/index.html>`_
1602
 * `snf-vncauthproxy <https://code.grnet.gr/projects/vncauthproxy>`_
1603
 * `snf-image <http://www.synnefo.org/docs/snf-image/latest/index.html/>`_
1604
 * `snf-image-creator <http://www.synnefo.org/docs/snf-image-creator/latest/index.html>`_
1605
 * `snf-occi <http://www.synnefo.org/docs/snf-occi/latest/index.html>`_
1606
 * `snf-cloudcms <http://www.synnefo.org/docs/snf-cloudcms/latest/index.html>`_
1607
 * `nfdhcpd <https://code.grnet.gr/projects/nfdhcpd>`_
1608

    
1609

    
1610
Synnefo management commands ("snf-manage")
1611
==========================================
1612

    
1613
Each Synnefo service, Astakos, Pithos and Cyclades are controlled by the
1614
administrator using the "snf-manage" admin tool. This tool is an extension of
1615
the Django command-line management utility. It is run on the host that runs
1616
each service and provides different types of commands depending the services
1617
running on the host. If you are running more than one service on the same host
1618
"snf-manage" adds all the corresponding commands for each service dynamically,
1619
providing a unified admin environment.
1620

    
1621
To run "snf-manage" you just type:
1622

    
1623
.. code-block:: console
1624

    
1625
   # snf-manage <command> [arguments]
1626

    
1627
on the corresponding host that runs the service. For example, if you have all
1628
services running on different physical hosts you would do:
1629

    
1630
.. code-block:: console
1631

    
1632
   root@astakos-host # snf-manage <astakos-command> [argument]
1633
   root@pithos-host # snf-manage <pithos-command> [argument]
1634
   root@cyclades-host # snf-manage <cyclades-command> [argument]
1635

    
1636
If you have all services running on the same host you would do:
1637

    
1638
.. code-block:: console
1639

    
1640
   root@synnefo-host # snf-manage <{astakos,pithos,cyclades}-command> [argument]
1641

    
1642
Note that you cannot execute a service's command on a host that is not running
1643
this service. For example, the following will return an error if Astakos and
1644
Cyclades are installed on different physical hosts:
1645

    
1646
.. code-block:: console
1647

    
1648
   root@astakos-host # snf-manage <cyclades-command> [argument]
1649
   Unknown command: 'cyclades-command'
1650
   Type 'snf-manage help' for usage.
1651

    
1652
This is the complete list of "snf-manage" commands for each service.
1653

    
1654
Astakos snf-manage commands
1655
---------------------------
1656

    
1657
============================  ===========================
1658
Name                          Description
1659
============================  ===========================
1660
fix-superusers                Transform superusers created by syncdb into AstakosUser instances
1661
cleanup-full                  Cleanup sessions and session catalog
1662
commission-list               List pending commissions
1663
commission-show               Show details for a pending commission
1664
component-add                 Register a component
1665
component-list                List components
1666
component-modify              Modify component attributes
1667
component-show                Show component details
1668
project-control               Manage projects and applications
1669
project-list                  List projects
1670
project-show                  Show project details
1671
quota-list                    List user quota
1672
quota-verify                  Check the integrity of user quota
1673
reconcile-resources-astakos   Reconcile resource usage of Quotaholder with Astakos DB
1674
resource-list                 List resources
1675
resource-modify               Modify a resource's default base quota and boolean flags
1676
service-export-astakos        Export Astakos services and resources in JSON format
1677
service-import                Register services
1678
service-list                  List services
1679
service-show                  Show service details
1680
term-add                      Add approval terms
1681
user-activation-send          Send user activation
1682
user-add                      Add user
1683
authpolicy-add                Create a new authentication provider policy profile
1684
authpolicy-list               List existing authentication provider policy profiles
1685
authpolicy-remove             Remove an authentication provider policy
1686
authpolicy-set                Assign an existing authentication provider policy profile to a user or group
1687
authpolicy-show               Show authentication provider profile details
1688
group-add                     Create a group with the given name
1689
group-list                    List available groups
1690
user-list                     List users
1691
user-modify                   Modify user
1692
user-show                     Show user details
1693
oauth2-client-add             Create an oauth2 client
1694
oauth2-client-list            List oauth2 clients
1695
oauth2-client-remove          Remove an oauth2 client along with its registered redirect urls
1696
============================  ===========================
1697

    
1698
Pithos snf-manage commands
1699
--------------------------
1700

    
1701
============================  ===========================
1702
Name                          Description
1703
============================  ===========================
1704
reconcile-commissions-pithos  Display unresolved commissions and trigger their recovery
1705
service-export-pithos         Export Pithos services and resources in JSON format
1706
reconcile-resources-pithos    Detect unsynchronized usage between Astakos and Pithos DB resources and synchronize them if specified so.
1707
file-show                     Display object information
1708
============================  ===========================
1709

    
1710
Cyclades snf-manage commands
1711
----------------------------
1712

    
1713
============================== ===========================
1714
Name                           Description
1715
============================== ===========================
1716
backend-add                    Add a new Ganeti backend
1717
backend-list                   List backends
1718
backend-modify                 Modify a backend
1719
backend-update-status          Update backend statistics for instance allocation
1720
backend-remove                 Remove a Ganeti backend
1721
enforce-resources-cyclades     Check and fix quota violations for Cyclades resources
1722
server-create                  Create a new server
1723
server-show                    Show server details
1724
server-list                    List servers
1725
server-modify                  Modify a server
1726
server-import                  Import an existing Ganeti VM into synnefo
1727
server-inspect                 Inspect a server in DB and Ganeti
1728
network-create                 Create a new network
1729
network-list                   List networks
1730
network-modify                 Modify a network
1731
network-inspect                Inspect network state in DB and Ganeti
1732
network-remove                 Delete a network
1733
flavor-create                  Create a new flavor
1734
flavor-list                    List flavors
1735
flavor-modify                  Modify a flavor
1736
image-list                     List images
1737
image-show                     Show image details
1738
pool-create                    Create a bridge or mac-prefix pool
1739
pool-show                      Show pool details
1740
pool-list                      List pools
1741
pool-modify                    Modify a pool
1742
pool-remove                    Delete a pool
1743
port-create                    Create a port connecting a server to a network
1744
port-inspect                   Inspect the state of a port in DB and Ganeti
1745
port-list                      List ports
1746
port-remove                    Delete a port
1747
floating-ip-create             Create a new floating IP
1748
floating-ip-attach             Attach a floating IP to a server
1749
floating-ip-detach             Detach a floating IP from a server
1750
floating-ip-list               List floating IPs
1751
floating-ip-remove             Delete a floating IP
1752
queue-inspect                  Inspect the messages of a RabbitMQ queue
1753
queue-retry                    Resend messages from Dead Letter queues to original exchanges
1754
service-export-cyclades        Export Cyclades services and resources in JSON format
1755
subnet-create                  Create a subnet
1756
subnet-inspect                 Inspect a subnet in DB
1757
subnet-list                    List subnets
1758
subnet-modify                  Modify a subnet
1759
reconcile-servers              Reconcile servers of Synnefo DB with state of Ganeti backend
1760
reconcile-networks             Reconcile networks of Synnefo DB with state of Ganeti backend
1761
reconcile-pools                Check consistency of pool resources
1762
reconcile-commissions-cyclades Detect and resolve pending commissions to Quotaholder
1763
reconcile-resources-cyclades   Reconcile resource usage of Astakos with Cyclades DB.
1764
============================== ===========================
1765

    
1766

    
1767
Astakos helper scripts
1768
======================
1769

    
1770
Astakos includes two scripts to facilitate the installation procedure.
1771
Running:
1772

    
1773
.. code-block:: console
1774

    
1775
   snf-component-register [<component_name>]
1776

    
1777
automates the registration of the standard Synnefo components (astakos,
1778
cyclades, and pithos) in astakos database. It internally uses the script:
1779

    
1780
.. code-block:: console
1781

    
1782
   snf-service-export <component_name> <base_url>
1783

    
1784
which simulates the export of service and resource definitions of the
1785
standard Synnefo components.
1786

    
1787

    
1788
Pithos managing accounts
1789
========================
1790

    
1791
Pithos provides a utility tool for managing accounts.
1792
To run you just type:
1793

    
1794
.. code-block:: console
1795

    
1796
   # pithos-manage-accounts <command> [arguments]
1797

    
1798
This is the list of the available commands:
1799

    
1800
============================  ===========================
1801
Name                          Description
1802
============================  ===========================
1803
delete                        Remove an account from the Pithos DB
1804
export-quota                  Export account quota in a file
1805
list                          List existing/dublicate accounts
1806
merge                         Move an account contents in another account
1807
set-container-quota           Set container quota for all or a specific account
1808
============================  ===========================
1809

    
1810

    
1811
The "kamaki" API client
1812
=======================
1813

    
1814
To upload, register or modify an image you will need the **kamaki** tool.
1815
Before proceeding make sure that it is configured properly. Verify that
1816
*image.url*, *file.url*, *user.url* and *token* are set as needed:
1817

    
1818
.. code-block:: console
1819

    
1820
   $ kamaki config list
1821

    
1822
To change a setting use ``kamaki config set``:
1823

    
1824
.. code-block:: console
1825

    
1826
   $ kamaki config set cloud.default.url https://example.com/identity/v2.0
1827
   $ kamaki config set cloud.default.token ...
1828

    
1829
To test that everything works, try authenticating the current account with
1830
kamaki:
1831

    
1832
.. code-block:: console
1833

    
1834
  $ kamaki user authenticate
1835

    
1836
This will output user information.
1837

    
1838
Upload Image
1839
------------
1840

    
1841
By convention, images are stored in a container called ``images``. Check if the
1842
container exists, by listing all containers in your account:
1843

    
1844
.. code-block:: console
1845

    
1846
   $ kamaki file list /images
1847

    
1848
If the container ``images`` does not exist, create it:
1849

    
1850
.. code-block:: console
1851

    
1852
  $ kamaki container create images
1853

    
1854
You are now ready to upload an image to container ``images``. You can upload it
1855
with a Pithos client, or use kamaki directly:
1856

    
1857
.. code-block:: console
1858

    
1859
   $ kamaki file upload ubuntu.iso /images
1860

    
1861
You can use any Pithos client to verify that the image was uploaded correctly,
1862
or you can list the contents of the container with kamaki:
1863

    
1864
.. code-block:: console
1865

    
1866
  $ kamaki file list /images
1867

    
1868
The full Pithos URL for the previous example will be
1869
``pithos://u53r-un1qu3-1d/images/ubuntu.iso`` where ``u53r-un1qu3-1d`` is the
1870
unique user id (uuid).
1871

    
1872
Register Image
1873
--------------
1874

    
1875
To register an image you will need to use the full or the relative Pithos URL.
1876
To register as a public image the one from the previous example use:
1877

    
1878
.. code-block:: console
1879

    
1880
   $ kamaki image register --name=Ubuntu --location=/images/ubuntu.iso --public
1881

    
1882
The ``--public`` flag is important, if missing the registered image will not
1883
be listed by ``kamaki image list``.
1884

    
1885
Use ``kamaki image register`` with no arguments to see a list of available
1886
options. A more complete example would be the following:
1887

    
1888
.. code-block:: console
1889

    
1890
   $ kamaki image register --name Ubuntu --location /images/ubuntu.iso \
1891
            --public --disk-format diskdump --property kernel=3.1.2
1892

    
1893
To verify that the image was registered successfully use:
1894

    
1895
.. code-block:: console
1896

    
1897
   $ kamaki image list --name-like ubuntu
1898

    
1899

    
1900
Miscellaneous
1901
=============
1902

    
1903
.. _branding:
1904

    
1905
Branding
1906
--------
1907

    
1908
Since Synnefo v0.14, you are able to adapt the Astakos, Pithos and Cyclades Web
1909
UI to your company’s visual identity. This is possible using the snf-branding
1910
component, which is automatically installed on the nodes running the API
1911
servers for Astakos, Pithos and Cyclades.
1912

    
1913
Configuration
1914
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1915

    
1916
This can be done by modifing the settings provided by the snf-branding component
1917
to match your service identity. The settings for the snf-branding application
1918
can be found inside the configuration file ``/etc/synnefo/15-snf-branding.conf``
1919
on the nodes that have Astakos, Pithos and Cyclades installed.
1920

    
1921
By default, the global service name is "Synnefo" and the company name is
1922
"GRNET". These names and their respective logos and URLs are used throughout
1923
the Astakos, Pithos and Cyclades UI.
1924

    
1925
**Names and URLs:**
1926

    
1927
The first group of branding customization refers to the service's and company's
1928
information.
1929

    
1930
You can overwrite the company and the service name and URL respectively by
1931
uncommenting and setting the following:
1932

    
1933
.. code-block:: python
1934

    
1935
  # setting used in Astakos Dashboard/Projects pages
1936
  BRANDING_SERVICE_NAME = 'My cloud'
1937
  BRANDING_SERVICE_URL = 'http://www.mycloud.synnefo.org/'
1938

    
1939
  # settings used in Astakos, Pithos, Cyclades footer only if
1940
  # BRANDING_SHOW_COPYRIGHT is set to True
1941
  BRANDING_SHOW_COPYRIGHT = True
1942
  BRANDING_COMPANY_NAME = 'Company LTD'
1943
  BRANDING_COMPANY_URL = 'https://www.company-ltd.synnefo.org/'
1944

    
1945

    
1946
**Copyright and footer options:**
1947

    
1948
By default, no Copyright message is shown in the UI footer. If you want to make
1949
it visible in the footer of Astakos, Pithos and Cyclades UI, you can uncomment
1950
and set to ``True`` the ``BRANDING_SHOW_COPYRIGHT`` setting:
1951

    
1952
.. code-block:: python
1953

    
1954
  #BRANDING_SHOW_COPYRIGHT = False
1955

    
1956
Copyright message defaults to 'Copyright (c) 2011-<current_year>
1957
<BRANDING_COMPANY_NAME>.' but you can overwrite it to a completely custom one by
1958
setting the following option:
1959

    
1960
.. code-block:: python
1961

    
1962
  BRANDING_COPYRIGHT_MESSAGE = 'Copyright (c) 2011-2013 GRNET'
1963

    
1964
If you want to include a custom message in the footer, you can uncomment and
1965
set the ``BRANDING_FOOTER_EXTRA_MESSAGE`` setting. You can use html markup.
1966
Your custom message will appear  above Copyright message at the Compute
1967
templates and the Dashboard UI.
1968

    
1969
.. code-block:: python
1970

    
1971
  #BRANDING_FOOTER_EXTRA_MESSAGE = ''
1972

    
1973

    
1974
**Images:**
1975

    
1976
The Astakos, Pithos and Cyclades Web UI has some logos and images.
1977

    
1978
The branding-related images are presented in  the following table:
1979

    
1980
===============  ============================  =========
1981
Image            Name/extension  convention    Usage
1982
===============  ============================  =========
1983
Favicon          favicon.ico                   Favicon for all services
1984
Dashboard logo   dashboard_logo.png            Visible in all Astakos UI pages
1985
Compute logo     compute_logo.png              Visible in all Cyclades UI pages
1986
Console logo     console_logo.png              Visible in the Cyclades Console Window
1987
Storage logo     storage_logo.png              Visible in all Pithos UI pages
1988
===============  ============================  =========
1989

    
1990
There are two methods  available for replacing all, or individual,
1991
branding-related images:
1992

    
1993
1. Create a new directory inside ``/usr/share/synnefo/static/`` (e.g.
1994
   ``mybranding``) and place there some or all of your images.
1995

    
1996
   If you want to replace all of your images, keep the name/extension
1997
   conventions as indicated in the above table and change the
1998
   ``BRANDING_IMAGE_MEDIA_URL`` setting accordingly:
1999

    
2000
   .. code-block:: python
2001

    
2002
      # using relative path
2003
      BRANDING_IMAGE_MEDIA_URL= '/static/mybranding/images/'
2004

    
2005
      # or if you already host them in a separate domain (e.g. cdn)
2006
      BRANDING_IMAGE_MEDIA_URL= 'https://cdn.synnefo.org/branding/images/'
2007

    
2008

    
2009
   If you wish to replace individual images, **do not uncomment**
2010
   ``BRANDING_IMAGE_MEDIA_URL``, but instead provide a relative path, pointing to
2011
   the file inside your directory for each ``BRANDING_<image>_URL`` that you wish
2012
   to replace.
2013

    
2014
2. Upload some or all of your images to a server and replace each
2015
   ``BRANDING_<image>_URL`` with the absolute url of the image (i.e.
2016
   ``BRANDING_DASHBOARD_URL = 'https://www.synnefo.com/images/my_dashboard.jpg'``).
2017

    
2018
   Note that the alternative text  for each image tag inside html documents is
2019
   alt=“BRANDING_SERVICE_NAME {Dashboard, Compute. Console, Storage}” respectively.
2020

    
2021
.. note:: Retina optimized images:
2022

    
2023
   Synnefo UI is optimized for Retina displays. As far as images are concerned,
2024
   `retina.js <http://retinajs.com/>`_ is used.
2025

    
2026
   Retina.js checks each image on a page to see if there is a high-resolution
2027
   version of that image on your server. If a high-resolution variant exists,
2028
   the script will swap in that image in-place.
2029

    
2030
   The script assumes you use  `Apple's prescribed high-resolution modifier (@2x)
2031
   <http://developer.apple.com/library/ios/#documentation/2DDrawing/Conceptual/
2032
   DrawingPrintingiOS/SupportingHiResScreensInViews/SupportingHiResScreensInViews
2033
   .html#//apple_ref/doc/uid/TP40010156-CH15-SW1>`_ to denote high-resolution
2034
   image variants on your server.
2035

    
2036
   For each of the images that you wish the script to  replace, you must have a
2037
   high-resolution variant in the same folder  named correctly and it will be
2038
   detected automatically. For example if your image is in <my_directory> and is
2039
   named "my_image.jpg" the script will look in the same directory for an image
2040
   named "my_image@2x.jpg".
2041

    
2042
   In case that you don’t want to use a high-resolution image, the
2043
   normal-resolution image will be visible.
2044

    
2045
More branding
2046
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2047

    
2048
Although, it is not 100% branding-related, further verbal customization is
2049
feasible.
2050

    
2051
**EMAILS**
2052

    
2053
The output of all email `*`.txt files will be already customized to contain your
2054
company and service names but you can further alter their content if you feel it
2055
best fits your needs.
2056

    
2057
In order to overwrite one or more email-templates you need to place your
2058
modified <email-file>.txt files respecting the following structure:
2059

    
2060
  **/etc/synnefo/templates/**
2061
      **im/**
2062
          | activation_email.txt
2063
          | email.txt
2064
          | invitation.txt
2065
          | switch_accounts_email.txt
2066
          | welcome_email.txt
2067
          **projects/**
2068
              | project_approval_notification.txt
2069
              | project_denial_notification.txt
2070
              | project_membership_change_notification.txt
2071
              | project_membership_enroll_notification.txt
2072
              | project_membership_leave_request_notification.txt
2073
              | project_membership_request_notification.txt
2074
              | project_suspension_notification.txt
2075
              | project_termination_notification.txt
2076
      **registration/**
2077
          | email_change_email.txt
2078
          | password_email.txt
2079

    
2080
Feel free to omit any of the above files you do not wish to overwrite.
2081

    
2082
Below is a list of all emails sent by Synnefo to users along with a short
2083
description and a link to their content:
2084

    
2085
* ``snf-astakos-app/astakos/im/templates/im/email.txt``
2086
  Base email template. Contains a contact email and a “thank you” message.
2087
  (`Link <https://code.grnet.gr/projects/synnefo/repository/revisions/master/changes/snf-astakos-app/astakos/im/templates/im/email.txt>`_)
2088
* ``snf-astakos-app/astakos/im/templates/im/activation_email.txt`` Email sent to
2089
  user that prompts  him/her to click on a link provided to activate the account.
2090
  Extends “email.txt” (`Link <https://code.grnet.gr/projects/synnefo/repository/revisions/master/changes/snf-astakos-app/astakos/im/templates/im/activation_email.txt>`_)
2091
* ``snf-astakos-app/astakos/im/templates/im/invitation.txt`` Email sent to an
2092
  invited user. He/she has to click on a link provided to activate the account.
2093
  Extends “email.txt” (`Link <https://code.grnet.gr/projects/synnefo/repository/revisions/master/changes/snf-astakos-app/astakos/im/templates/im/invitation.txt>`_)
2094
* ``snf-astakos-app/astakos/im/templates/im/switch_accounts_email.txt`` Email
2095
  sent to user upon his/her request to associate this email address with a
2096
  shibboleth account. He/she has to click on a link provided to activate the
2097
  association. Extends “email.txt” (`Link <https://code.grnet.gr/projects/synnefo/repository/revisions/master/changes/snf-astakos-app/astakos/im/templates/im/switch_accounts_email.txt>`_)
2098
* ``snf-astakos-app/astakos/im/templates/im/welcome_email.txt`` Email sent to
2099
  inform the user that his/ her account has been activated. Extends “email.txt”
2100
  (`Link <https://code.grnet.gr/projects/synnefo/repository/revisions/master/changes/snf-astakos-app/astakos/im/templates/im/welcome_email.txt>`_)
2101
* ``snf-astakos-app/astakos/im/templates/registration/email_change_email.txt``
2102
  Email sent to user when he/she has requested new email address assignment. The
2103
  user has to click on a link provided to validate this action. Extends
2104
  “email.txt” (`Link <https://code.grnet.gr/projects/synnefo/repository/revisions/master/changes/snf-astakos-app/astakos/im/templates/registration/email_change_email.txt>`_)
2105
* ``snf-astakos-app/astakos/im/templates/registration/password_email.txt`` Email
2106
  sent for resetting password purpose. The user has to click on a link provided
2107
  to validate this action. Extends “email.txt” (`Link <https://code.grnet.gr/projects/synnefo/repository/revisions/master/changes/snf-astakos-app/astakos/im/templates/registration/password_email.txt>`_)
2108
* ``snf-astakos-app/astakos/im/templates/im/projects/project_approval_notification.txt``
2109
  Informs  the project owner that his/her project has been approved. Extends
2110
  “email.txt” (`Link <https://code.grnet.gr/projects/synnefo/repository/revisions/master/changes/snf-astakos-app/astakos/im/templates/im/projects/project_approval_notification.txt>`_)
2111
* ``snf-astakos-app/astakos/im/templates/im/projects/project_denial_notification.txt``
2112
  Informs the project owner that his/her  project application has been denied
2113
  explaining the reasons. Extends “email.txt” (`Link <https://code.grnet.gr/projects/synnefo/repository/revisions/master/changes/snf-astakos-app/astakos/im/templates/im/projects/project_denial_notification.txt>`_)
2114
* ``snf-astakos-app/astakos/im/templates/im/projects/project_membership_change_notification.txt``
2115
  An email is sent to a user containing information about his project membership
2116
  (whether he has been accepted, rejected or removed). Extends “email.txt” (`Link
2117
  <https://code.grnet.gr/projects/synnefo/repository/revisions/master/changes/snf-astakos-app/astakos/im/templates/im/projects/project_membership_change_notification.txt>`_)
2118
* ``snf-astakos-app/astakos/im/templates/im/projects/project_membership_enroll_notification.txt``
2119
  Informs a user that he/she  has been enrolled to a project. Extends
2120
  “email.txt” (`Link <https://code.grnet.gr/projects/synnefo/repository/revisions/master/changes/snf-astakos-app/astakos/im/templates/im/projects/project_membership_enroll_notification.txt>`_)
2121
* ``snf-astakos-app/astakos/im/templates/im/projects/project_membership_leave_request_notification.txt``
2122
  An email is sent to the project owner to make him aware of a  user having
2123
  requested to leave his project. Extends “email.txt” (`Link <https://code.grnet.gr/projects/synnefo/repository/revisions/master/changes/snf-astakos-app/astakos/im/templates/im/projects/project_membership_leave_request_notification.txt>`_)
2124
* ``snf-astakos-app/astakos/im/templates/im/projects/project_membership_request_notification.txt``
2125
  An email is sent to the project owner to make him/her aware of a user having
2126
  requested to join  his project. Extends “email.txt” (`Link <https://code.grnet.gr/projects/synnefo/repository/revisions/master/changes/snf-astakos-app/astakos/im/templates/im/projects/project_membership_request_notification.txt>`_)
2127
* ``snf-astakos-app/astakos/im/templates/im/projects/project_suspension_notification.txt``
2128
  An email is sent to the project owner to make him/her aware of his/her project
2129
  having been suspended. Extends “email.txt” (`Link <https://code.grnet.gr/projects/synnefo/repository/revisions/master/changes/snf-astakos-app/astakos/im/templates/im/projects/project_suspension_notification.txt>`_)
2130
* ``snf-astakos-app/astakos/im/templates/im/projects/project_termination_notification.txt``
2131
  An email is sent to the project owner to make him/her aware of his/her project
2132
  having been terminated. Extends “email.txt” (`Link <https://code.grnet.gr/projects/synnefo/repository/revisions/master/changes/snf-astakos-app/astakos/im/templates/im/projects/project_termination_notification.txt>`_)
2133

    
2134
.. warning:: Django templates language:
2135

    
2136
  If you choose to  overwrite these email templates, be mindful of the necessary
2137
  information contained in django template variables that must not be omitted,
2138
  such as the activation link for activating one’s account and many more.
2139
  These variables are contained into {{}} inside the templates.
2140

    
2141
**Astakos landing page**
2142

    
2143
Astakos generates sensible default values used to display component-
2144
specific details in several places across views (dashboard, cloudbar
2145
etc.). One of these places is Astakos landing page where Synnefo components are
2146
featured.
2147

    
2148
In case those values doesn't seem to suit your deployment, Astakos allows
2149
you to override any of them using ``ASTAKOS_COMPONENTS_META`` setting
2150
in your ``/etc/synnefo/20-snf-astakos-app-settings.conf`` configuration file.
2151

    
2152
So, for example if you want to add your own image for Astakos service and in the
2153
same time hide Cyclades service from Astakos landing page you can
2154
add the following line to your configuration file:
2155

    
2156
.. code-block:: python
2157

    
2158
  ASTAKOS_COMPONENTS_META = {
2159
    'astakos': {
2160
      'dashboard': {
2161
        'icon': '<path-to-your-icon>'
2162
      }
2163
    },
2164
    'cyclades': {
2165
      'dashboard': {
2166
        'show': False
2167
      }
2168
    }
2169
  }
2170

    
2171
A complete list of available keys is shown below:
2172

    
2173
.. code-block:: python
2174

    
2175
  '<component-name>' = {
2176
    'order': 1,
2177
    'dashboard': {
2178
      'order': 1,
2179
      'show': True,
2180
      'description': '<component-description>',
2181
      'icon': '<component-icon-path>',
2182
    },
2183
    'cloudbar': {
2184
      'show': True
2185
    }
2186
  }
2187

    
2188

    
2189
**403, 404 and 500 pages**
2190

    
2191
Feel free to add your own 403 (HTTP Forbidden), 404 (Page not found) and
2192
500 (server error) pages.
2193
To override the default Synnefo error views, you must write and include any of
2194
the files 403.html, 404.html and 500.html in your
2195
**/etc/synnefo/templates/** directory.
2196

    
2197
Their content is up to you, but you may use as guides the default error pages
2198
found in:
2199

    
2200
  **/synnefo/snf-webproject/synnefo/webproject/templates/**
2201
    | 403.html
2202
    | 404.html
2203
    | 500.html
2204

    
2205

    
2206

    
2207
.. RabbitMQ
2208

    
2209
RabbitMQ Broker
2210
---------------
2211

    
2212
Queue nodes run the RabbitMQ sofware, which provides AMQP functionality. To
2213
guarantee high-availability, more than one Queue nodes should be deployed, each
2214
of them belonging to the same `RabbitMQ cluster
2215
<http://www.rabbitmq.com/clustering.html>`_. Synnefo uses the RabbitMQ
2216
active/active `High Available Queues <http://www.rabbitmq.com/ha.html>`_ which
2217
are mirrored between two nodes within a RabbitMQ cluster.
2218

    
2219
The RabbitMQ nodes that form the cluster, are declared to Synnefo through the
2220
`AMQP_HOSTS` setting. Each time a Synnefo component needs to connect to
2221
RabbitMQ, one of these nodes is chosen in a random way. The client that Synnefo
2222
uses to connect to RabbitMQ, handles connection failures transparently and
2223
tries to reconnect to a different node. As long as one of these nodes are up
2224
and running, functionality of Synnefo should not be downgraded by the RabbitMQ
2225
node failures.
2226

    
2227
All the queues that are being used are declared as durable, meaning that
2228
messages are persistently stored to RabbitMQ, until they get successfully
2229
processed by a client.
2230

    
2231
Currently, RabbitMQ is used by the following components:
2232

    
2233
* `snf-ganeti-eventd` and `snf-progress-monitor`:
2234
  These components send messages concerning the status and progress of
2235
  jobs in the Ganeti backend.
2236
* `snf-dispatcher`: This daemon, consumes the messages that are sent from
2237
  the above components, and updates the Cyclades DB accordingly.
2238

    
2239

    
2240
Installation
2241
~~~~~~~~~~~~
2242

    
2243
Please check the RabbitMQ documentation which covers extensively the
2244
`installation of RabbitMQ server <http://www.rabbitmq.com/download.html>`_ and
2245
the setup of a `RabbitMQ cluster <http://www.rabbitmq.com/clustering.html>`_.
2246
Also, check out the `web management plugin
2247
<http://www.rabbitmq.com/management.html>`_ that can be useful for managing and
2248
monitoring RabbitMQ.
2249

    
2250
For a basic installation of RabbitMQ on two nodes (node1 and node2) you can do
2251
the following:
2252

    
2253
On both nodes, install rabbitmq-server and create a Synnefo user:
2254

    
2255
.. code-block:: console
2256

    
2257
  $ apt-get install rabbitmq-server
2258
  $ rabbitmqctl add_user synnefo "example_pass"
2259
  $ rabbitmqctl set_permissions synnefo  ".*" ".*" ".*"
2260

    
2261
Also guarantee that both nodes share the same cookie, by running:
2262

    
2263
.. code-block:: console
2264

    
2265
  $ scp node1:/var/lib/rabbitmq/.erlang.cookie node2:/var/lib/rabbitmq/.erlang.cookie
2266

    
2267
and restart the nodes:
2268

    
2269
.. code-block:: console
2270

    
2271
  $ /etc/init.d/rabbitmq-server restart
2272

    
2273

    
2274
To setup the RabbitMQ cluster run:
2275

    
2276
.. code-block:: console
2277

    
2278
  root@node2: rabbitmqctl stop_app
2279
  root@node2: rabbitmqctl reset
2280
  root@node2: rabbitmqctl cluster rabbit@node1 rabbit@node2
2281
  root@node2: rabbitmqctl start_app
2282

    
2283
You can verify that the cluster is set up correctly by running:
2284

    
2285
.. code-block:: console
2286

    
2287
  root@node2: rabbitmqctl cluster_status
2288

    
2289

    
2290
Logging
2291
-------
2292

    
2293
Logging in Synnefo is using Python's logging module. The module is configured
2294
using dictionary configuration, whose format is described here:
2295

    
2296
http://docs.python.org/release/2.7.1/library/logging.html#logging-config-dictschema
2297

    
2298
The logging configuration dictionary is defined in
2299
``/etc/synnefo/10-snf-webproject-logging.conf``
2300

    
2301
The administrator can have logging control by modifying the ``LOGGING_SETUP``
2302
dictionary, and defining subloggers with different handlers and log levels.
2303

    
2304

    
2305
.. _scale-up:
2306

    
2307
Scaling up to multiple nodes
2308
============================
2309

    
2310
Here we will describe how should a large scale Synnefo deployment look like. Make
2311
sure you are familiar with Synnefo and Ganeti before proceeding with this section.
2312
This means you should at least have already set up successfully a working Synnefo
2313
deployment as described in the :ref:`Admin's Installation Guide
2314
<quick-install-admin-guide>` and also read the Administrator's Guide until this
2315
section.
2316

    
2317
Graph of a scale-out Synnefo deployment
2318
---------------------------------------
2319

    
2320
Each box in the following graph corresponds to a distinct physical node:
2321

    
2322
.. image:: images/synnefo-arch2-roles.png
2323
   :width: 100%
2324
   :target: _images/synnefo-arch2-roles.png
2325

    
2326
The above graph is actually the same with the one at the beginning of this
2327
:ref:`guide <admin-guide>`, with the only difference that here we show the
2328
Synnefo roles of each physical node. These roles are described in the
2329
following section.
2330

    
2331
.. _physical-node-roles:
2332

    
2333
Physical Node roles
2334
-------------------
2335

    
2336
As appears in the previous graph, a scale-out Synnefo deployment consists of
2337
multiple physical nodes that have the following roles:
2338

    
2339
* **WEBSERVER**: A web server running in front of gunicorn (e.g.: Apache, nginx)
2340
* **ASTAKOS**: The Astakos application (gunicorn)
2341
* **ASTAKOS_DB**: The Astakos database (postgresql)
2342
* **PITHOS**: The Pithos application (gunicorn)
2343
* **PITHOS_DB**: The Pithos database (postgresql)
2344
* **CYCLADES**: The Cyclades application (gunicorn)
2345
* **CYCLADES_DB**: The Cyclades database (postgresql)
2346
* **MQ**: The message queue (RabbitMQ)
2347
* **GANETI_MASTER**: The Ganeti master of a Ganeti cluster
2348
* **GANETI_NODE** : A VM-capable Ganeti node of a Ganeti cluster
2349

    
2350
You will probably also have:
2351

    
2352
* **CMS**: The CMS used as a frotend portal for the Synnefo services
2353
* **NS**: A nameserver serving all other Synnefo nodes and resolving Synnefo FQDNs
2354
* **CLIENT**: A machine that runs the Synnefo clients (e.g.: kamaki, Web UI),
2355
              most of the times, the end user's local machine
2356

    
2357
From this point we will also refer to the following groups of roles:
2358

    
2359
* **SYNNEFO**: [ **ASTAKOS**, **ASTAKOS_DB**, **PITHOS**, **PITHOS_DB**, **CYCLADES**, **CYCLADES_DB**, **MQ**, **CMS**]
2360
* **G_BACKEND**: [**GANETI_MASTER**, **GANETI_NODE**]
2361

    
2362
Of course, when deploying Synnefo you can combine multiple of the above roles on a
2363
single physical node, but if you are trying to scale out, the above separation
2364
gives you significant advantages.
2365

    
2366
So, in the next section we will take a look on what components you will have to
2367
install on each physical node depending on its Synnefo role. We assume the graph's
2368
architecture.
2369

    
2370
Components for each role
2371
------------------------
2372

    
2373
When deploying Synnefo in large scale, you need to install different Synnefo
2374
or/and third party components on different physical nodes according to their
2375
Synnefo role, as stated in the previous section.
2376

    
2377
Specifically:
2378

    
2379
Role **WEBSERVER**
2380
    * Synnefo components: `None`
2381
    * 3rd party components: Apache
2382
Role **ASTAKOS**
2383
    * Synnefo components: `snf-webproject`, `snf-astakos-app`
2384
    * 3rd party components: Django, Gunicorn
2385
Role **ASTAKOS_DB**
2386
    * Synnefo components: `None`
2387
    * 3rd party components: PostgreSQL
2388
Role **PITHOS**
2389
    * Synnefo components: `snf-webproject`, `snf-pithos-app`, `snf-pithos-webclient`
2390
    * 3rd party components: Django, Gunicorn
2391
Role **PITHOS_DB**
2392
    * Synnefo components: `None`
2393
    * 3rd party components: PostgreSQL
2394
Role **CYCLADES**
2395
    * Synnefo components: `snf-webproject`, `snf-cyclades-app`, `snf-vncauthproxy`
2396
    * 3rd party components: Django Gunicorn
2397
Role **CYCLADES_DB**
2398
    * Synnefo components: `None`
2399
    * 3rd party components: PostgreSQL
2400
Role **MQ**
2401
    * Synnefo components: `None`
2402
    * 3rd party components: RabbitMQ
2403
Role **GANETI_MASTER**
2404
    * Synnefo components: `snf-cyclades-gtools`
2405
    * 3rd party components: Ganeti
2406
Role **GANETI_NODE**
2407
    * Synnefo components: `snf-cyclades-gtools`, `snf-network`, `snf-image`, `nfdhcpd`
2408
    * 3rd party components: Ganeti
2409
Role **CMS**
2410
    * Synnefo components: `snf-webproject`, `snf-cloudcms`
2411
    * 3rd party components: Django, Gunicorn
2412
Role **NS**
2413
    * Synnefo components: `None`
2414
    * 3rd party components: BIND
2415
Role **CLIENT**
2416
    * Synnefo components: `kamaki`, `snf-image-creator`
2417
    * 3rd party components: `None`
2418

    
2419
Example scale out installation
2420
------------------------------
2421

    
2422
In this section we describe an example of a medium scale installation which
2423
combines multiple roles on 10 different physical nodes. We also provide a
2424
:ref:`guide <i-synnefo>` to help with such an install.
2425

    
2426
We assume that we have the following 10 physical nodes with the corresponding
2427
roles:
2428

    
2429
Node1:
2430
    **WEBSERVER**, **ASTAKOS**
2431
      Guide sections:
2432
        * :ref:`apt <i-apt>`
2433
        * :ref:`gunicorn <i-gunicorn>`
2434
        * :ref:`apache <i-apache>`
2435
        * :ref:`snf-webproject <i-webproject>`
2436
        * :ref:`snf-astakos-app <i-astakos>`
2437
Node2:
2438
    **WEBSERVER**, **PITHOS**
2439
      Guide sections:
2440
        * :ref:`apt <i-apt>`
2441
        * :ref:`gunicorn <i-gunicorn>`
2442
        * :ref:`apache <i-apache>`
2443
        * :ref:`snf-webproject <i-webproject>`
2444
        * :ref:`snf-pithos-app <i-pithos>`
2445
        * :ref:`snf-pithos-webclient <i-pithos>`
2446
Node3:
2447
    **WEBSERVER**, **CYCLADES**
2448
      Guide sections:
2449
        * :ref:`apt <i-apt>`
2450
        * :ref:`gunicorn <i-gunicorn>`
2451
        * :ref:`apache <i-apache>`
2452
        * :ref:`snf-webproject <i-webproject>`
2453
        * :ref:`snf-cyclades-app <i-cyclades>`
2454
        * :ref:`snf-vncauthproxy <i-cyclades>`
2455
Node4:
2456
    **WEBSERVER**, **CMS**
2457
      Guide sections:
2458
        * :ref:`apt <i-apt>`
2459
        * :ref:`gunicorn <i-gunicorn>`
2460
        * :ref:`apache <i-apache>`
2461
        * :ref:`snf-webproject <i-webproject>`
2462
        * :ref:`snf-cloudcms <i-cms>`
2463
Node5:
2464
    **ASTAKOS_DB**, **PITHOS_DB**, **CYCLADES_DB**
2465
      Guide sections:
2466
        * :ref:`apt <i-apt>`
2467
        * :ref:`postgresql <i-db>`
2468
Node6:
2469
    **MQ**
2470
      Guide sections:
2471
        * :ref:`apt <i-apt>`
2472
        * :ref:`rabbitmq <i-mq>`
2473
Node7:
2474
    **GANETI_MASTER**, **GANETI_NODE**
2475
      Guide sections:
2476
        * :ref:`apt <i-apt>`
2477
        * :ref:`general <i-backends>`
2478
        * :ref:`ganeti <i-ganeti>`
2479
        * :ref:`snf-cyclades-gtools <i-gtools>`
2480
        * :ref:`snf-network <i-network>`
2481
        * :ref:`snf-image <i-image>`
2482
        * :ref:`nfdhcpd <i-network>`
2483
Node8:
2484
    **GANETI_NODE**
2485
      Guide sections:
2486
        * :ref:`apt <i-apt>`
2487
        * :ref:`general <i-backends>`
2488
        * :ref:`ganeti <i-ganeti>`
2489
        * :ref:`snf-cyclades-gtools <i-gtools>`
2490
        * :ref:`snf-network <i-network>`
2491
        * :ref:`snf-image <i-image>`
2492
        * :ref:`nfdhcpd <i-network>`
2493
Node9:
2494
    **GANETI_NODE**
2495
      Guide sections:
2496
        `Same as Node8`
2497
Node10:
2498
    **GANETI_NODE**
2499
      Guide sections:
2500
        `Same as Node8`
2501

    
2502
All sections: :ref:`Scale out Guide <i-synnefo>`
2503

    
2504

    
2505
Upgrade Notes
2506
=============
2507

    
2508
.. toctree::
2509
   :maxdepth: 1
2510

    
2511
   v0.12 -> v0.13 <upgrade/upgrade-0.13>
2512
   v0.13 -> v0.14 <upgrade/upgrade-0.14>
2513
   v0.14 -> v0.14.2 <upgrade/upgrade-0.14.2>
2514
   v0.14.5 -> v0.14.6 <upgrade/upgrade-0.14.6>
2515
   v0.14.7 -> v0.14.8 <upgrade/upgrade-0.14.8>
2516
   v0.14.9 -> v0.14.10 <upgrade/upgrade-0.14.10>
2517
   v0.14 -> v0.15 <upgrade/upgrade-0.15>
2518

    
2519

    
2520
Changelog, NEWS
2521
===============
2522

    
2523

    
2524
* v0.14.10 :ref:`Changelog <Changelog-0.14.10>`, :ref:`NEWS <NEWS-0.14.10>`
2525
* v0.14.9 :ref:`Changelog <Changelog-0.14.9>`, :ref:`NEWS <NEWS-0.14.9>`
2526
* v0.14.8 :ref:`Changelog <Changelog-0.14.8>`, :ref:`NEWS <NEWS-0.14.8>`
2527
* v0.14.7 :ref:`Changelog <Changelog-0.14.7>`, :ref:`NEWS <NEWS-0.14.7>`
2528
* v0.14.6 :ref:`Changelog <Changelog-0.14.6>`, :ref:`NEWS <NEWS-0.14.6>`
2529
* v0.14.5 :ref:`Changelog <Changelog-0.14.5>`, :ref:`NEWS <NEWS-0.14.5>`
2530
* v0.14.4 :ref:`Changelog <Changelog-0.14.4>`, :ref:`NEWS <NEWS-0.14.4>`
2531
* v0.14.3 :ref:`Changelog <Changelog-0.14.3>`, :ref:`NEWS <NEWS-0.14.3>`
2532
* v0.14.2 :ref:`Changelog <Changelog-0.14.2>`, :ref:`NEWS <NEWS-0.14.2>`
2533
* v0.14 :ref:`Changelog <Changelog-0.14>`, :ref:`NEWS <NEWS-0.14>`
2534
* v0.13 :ref:`Changelog <Changelog-0.13>`, :ref:`NEWS <NEWS-0.13>`