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OpenStack Cloud Computing Cookbook

You're reading from   OpenStack Cloud Computing Cookbook Over 100 practical recipes to help you build and operate OpenStack cloud computing, storage, networking, and automation

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jan 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781788398763
Length 398 pages
Edition 4th Edition
Languages
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Authors (4):
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James Denton James Denton
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James Denton
Egle Sigler Egle Sigler
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Egle Sigler
Cody Bunch Cody Bunch
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Cody Bunch
Kevin Jackson Kevin Jackson
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Kevin Jackson
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Toc

Table of Contents (15) Chapters Close

OpenStack Cloud Computing Cookbook Fourth Edition
Contributors
Preface
Another Book You May Enjoy
1. Installing OpenStack with Ansible FREE CHAPTER 2. The OpenStack Client 3. Keystone – OpenStack Identity Service 4. Neutron – OpenStack Networking 5. Nova – OpenStack Compute 6. Glance – OpenStack Image Service 7. Cinder – OpenStack Block Storage 8. Swift – OpenStack Object Storage 9. OpenStack Orchestration Using Heat and Ansible 10. Using OpenStack Dashboard Index

Using OpenStack Dashboard with LBaaS


The OpenStack Dashboard has the ability to view, create and edit load balancers, add Virtual IPs (VIPs), and add nodes to be behind a load balancer. The dashboard also provides an interface for creating the HA Proxy server load balance service for our instances. We do this first by creating load balancing pool and then adding running instances to those pools.

In this section, we will use two instances running Apache. We will create a HTTP load balancing pool, create a VIP, and configure instances to be part of the pool. The result will be an ability to use the HTTP load balancer pool address to send traffic to two instances running Apache.

Getting ready

Load a web browser, point it to our OpenStack Dashboard address at http://192.168.100.117/, and log in as a user in the default domain, such as the developer user, created in the Common OpenStack identity tasks recipe in Chapter 2, The OpenStack Client with the cookbook4 password. The URL for our dashboard...

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