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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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Toc

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

OpenStack architecture

Logically, the components of OpenStack can be divided into three groups:

  • Control
  • Network
  • Compute

The control tier runs the Application Programming Interfaces (API) services, web interface, database, and message bus. The network tier runs network service agents for networking, and the compute node is the virtualization hypervisor. It has services and agents to handle virtual machines. All of the components use a database and/or a message bus. The database can be MySQL, MariaDB, or PostgreSQL. The most popular message buses are RabbitMQ, Qpid, and ActiveMQ. For smaller deployments, the database and messaging services usually run on the control node, but they could have their own nodes if required.

In a simple multi-node deployment, each of these groups is installed onto a separate server. OpenStack could be installed on one node or two nodes, but a good baseline for being able to scale out later is to put each of these groups on their own node. An OpenStack cluster can also scale far beyond three nodes, and we'll look at scaling beyond this basic deployment in Chapter 11, Scaling Horizontally.

Now that a base logical architecture of OpenStack is defined, let's look at what components make up this basic architecture. To do that, we'll first touch on the web interface and then work towards collecting the resources necessary to launch an instance. Finally, we will look at what components are available to add resources to a launched instance.

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