Get OpenStack
Contents
How to get OpenStack
OpenStack is a large and fast moving project. We are also an upstream project, with a large community of packagers and distributions who redistribute our work.
The best way to install OpenStack is to rely on one of the downstream distributions, which will take care of many of the details for you. There are also source code installers oriented towards developers.
Also, you don't have to install OpenStack - there are Cloud services that can provide OpenStack, without ever installing the software.
The current release of OpenStack is 2013.1 Grizzly
Get the source code
Refer to Getting The Code
Linux Distributions Including OpenStack
OpenStack is available for all major Linux Distributions.
Debian GNU/Linux wheezy
All core OpenStack Essex components are officially supported and available in the Main wheezy archive:
Essex can be deployed with a HOWTO and puppet modules.
More details about Debian packaging can be found on the Packaging/Debian wiki page.
Fedora / Red Hat Enterprise Linux / CentOS / Scientific Linux
- RDO ships the latest released OpenStack version (currently Grizzly) for Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) 6.4 and equivalent versions of RHEL-based Linux distributions, and Grizzly packages for Fedora 18
- Fedora 20 will ship with OpenStack Havana
- Fedora 19 ships with OpenStack Grizzly
- Fedora 18 ships with OpenStack Folsom
- Fedora 17 ships with OpenStack Essex
openSUSE / SLES
- openSUSE 12.2 ships OpenStack Diablo
- openSUSE 12.3 ships OpenStack Folsom
- openSUSE Factory ships the lastest (Havanna)
Packages for SLES are available via SUSE-Cloud. Additional packages are available from the Open Build Service for all supported distributions (currently openSUSE 12.2 / 12.3 / Factory and SLES-11 SP2 / SP3):
The lastest development packages (currently Havanna) are available here. You can find all details about the repositories on our packaging site in the wiki: Packaging/SUSE
Ubuntu 12.04 LTS (Precise Pangolin)
All core OpenStack Essex components are officially supported and available in the Main Precise Ubuntu archive:
Note: Horizon and Keystone are currently located in Universe as they undergo a security review before promotion to Main for the 12.04 Precise release (April 26th 2012)-~
Incubated projects Quantum and Melange are available for Precise in Universe
Essex can be deployed on Ubuntu Server using MAAS and Juju.
Martin Loschwitz has written a wonderful step-by-step guide for manually installing Essex on Ubuntu 12.04
More details about Ubuntu packages can be found on the Packaging/Ubuntu wiki page.
DevOps Installers
For those that deploy rather than install, there are several DevOps options for automating your installation of OpenStack.
Chef
See Opscode's Welcome to Chef for OpenStack for a starting point.
There are multiple Chef cookbooks.
- Matt Ray from Opscode maintains a set of OpenStack cookbooks on github at opscode/openstack-chef-repo
- Rackspace Cloud Builders maintain a set of repositories with openstack-related chef cookbooks on github at rcbops/chef-cookbooks
- Dell Crowbar is an OpenStack deployment solution built on top of Chef. They maintain their Chef recipes on github at crowbar/crowbar
Puppet
- Puppet Labs maintains a set of puppet modules for OpenStack at puppetlabs/puppetlabs-openstack.
- NII developed a Puppet-based tool called dodai-deploy. It is available for download on github at nii-cloud/dodai-deploy. Documentation for dodai-deploy can be found on the wiki at its github site, as well as in the OpenStack Compute admin guide.
Juju
- Canonical maintains a collection of Juju charms for OpenStack, see the Juju charm browser.
Developer Installers
For developers, there are installers that create a core development environment.
OpenStack as a Service
- TryStack is an easy way to try OpenStack.
- RackSpace Cloud is powered by OpenStack
- HPCloud is powered by OpenStack
Commercial Distributions
- Piston Cloud Computing offers a free trial of their Piston Enterprise OpenStack product.
- Nebula is developing an OpenStack appliance.
- Cloudscaling is an enterprise grade Open Cloud System built with OpenStack.
- StackOps provides StackOps Enterprise Edition for IT Professionals, Hosters and Services Providers. It also offers a free version for small Private Clouds and Testing Labs StackOps Community Edition.
- SUSE provides SUSE Cloud based on SUSE Linux Enterprise Server (SLES)
Miscellaneous Notes
If you're a packager looking for packaging tips, see PackagerResources.
For Quantum, see QuantumPackages.