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OpenStack Cloud Computing Cookbook, Third Edition

You're reading from   OpenStack Cloud Computing Cookbook, Third Edition Over 110 effective recipes to help you build and operate OpenStack cloud computing, storage, networking, and automation

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Product type Paperback
Published in Aug 2015
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781782174783
Length 436 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Cody Bunch Cody Bunch
Author Profile Icon Cody Bunch
Cody Bunch
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Toc

Table of Contents (13) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Keystone – OpenStack Identity Service 2. Glance – OpenStack Image Service FREE CHAPTER 3. Neutron – OpenStack Networking 4. Nova – OpenStack Compute 5. Swift – OpenStack Object Storage 6. Using OpenStack Object Storage 7. Administering OpenStack Object Storage 8. Cinder – OpenStack Block Storage 9. More OpenStack 10. Using the OpenStack Dashboard 11. Production OpenStack Index

Introduction

The OpenStack Identity service, known as Keystone, provides services for authenticating and managing user accounts and role information for our OpenStack cloud environment. It is a crucial service that underpins the authentication and verification between all of our OpenStack cloud services and is the first service that needs to be installed within an OpenStack environment. The OpenStack Identity service authenticates users and tenants by sending a validated authorization token between all OpenStack services. This token is used for authentication and verification so that you can use that service, such as OpenStack Storage and Compute. Therefore, configuration of the OpenStack Identity service must be completed first, consisting of creating appropriate roles for users and services, tenants, the user accounts, and the service API endpoints that make up our cloud infrastructure.

In Keystone, we have the concepts of tenants, roles and users. A tenant is like a project and has resources such as users, images, and instances, as well as networks in it that are only known to that particular project. A user can belong to one or more tenants and is able to switch between these projects to gain access to those resources. Users within a tenant can have various roles assigned. In the most basic scenario, a user can be assigned either the role of admin or just be a member. When a user has admin privileges within a tenant, they are able to utilize features that can affect the tenant (such as modifying external networks), whereas a normal user is assigned the member role, which is generally assigned to perform user-related roles, such as spinning up instances, creating volumes, and creating tenant only networks.

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