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OpenStack Essentials

You're reading from   OpenStack Essentials Demystify the cloud by building your own private OpenStack cloud

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Product type Paperback
Published in May 2015
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781783987085
Length 182 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Dan Radez Dan Radez
Author Profile Icon Dan Radez
Dan Radez
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Table of Contents (15) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Architecture and Component Overview 2. RDO Installation FREE CHAPTER 3. Identity Management 4. Image Management 5. Network Management 6. Instance Management 7. Block Storage 8. Object Storage 9. Telemetry 10. Orchestration 11. Scaling Horizontally 12. Monitoring 13. Troubleshooting Index

Neutron

Neutron is the network management component. With Keystone, we're authenticated, and from Glance, a disk image will be provided. The next resource required for launch is a virtual network. Neutron is an API frontend (and a set of agents) that manages the Software Defined Networking (SDN) infrastructure for you. When an OpenStack deployment is using Neutron, it means that each of your tenants can create virtual isolated networks. Each of these isolated networks can be connected to virtual routers to create routes between the virtual networks. A virtual router can have an external gateway connected to it, and external access can be given to each instance by associating a floating IP on an external network with an instance. Neutron then puts all configuration in place to route the traffic sent to the floating IP address through these virtual network resources into a launched instance. This is also called Networking as a Service (NaaS). NaaS is the capability to provide networks and network resources on demand via software.

By default, the OpenStack distribution we will install uses Open vSwitch to orchestrate the underlying virtualized networking infrastructure. Open vSwitch is a virtual managed switch. As long as the nodes in your cluster have simple connectivity to each other, Open vSwitch can be the infrastructure configured to isolate the virtual networks for the tenants in OpenStack. There are also many vendor plugins that would allow you to replace Open vSwitch with a physical managed switch to handle the virtual networks. Neutron even has the capability to use multiple plugins to manage multiple network appliances. As an example, Open vSwitch and a vendor's appliance could be used in parallel to manage virtual networks in an OpenStack deployment. This is a great example of how OpenStack is built to provide flexibility and choice to its users.

Networking is the most complex component of OpenStack to configure and maintain. This is because Neutron is built around core networking concepts. To successfully deploy Neutron, you need to understand these core concepts and how they interact with one another. In Chapter 5, Network Management, we'll spend time covering these concepts while building the Neutron infrastructure for an OpenStack deployment.

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