Cisco-quantum
Contents
A Cisco Plugin Framework for Quantum L2 Network Overlays Spanning Multiple Physical Switches (Grizzly Release)
README for Quantum v2.0 Cisco plugin
Introduction
This plugin implementation provides the following capabilities:
- A reference implementation for a Quantum Plugin Framework (For details see: http://wiki.openstack.org/quantum-multi-switch-plugin)
- Supports multiple switches in the network
- Supports multiple models of switches concurrently
- Supports use of multiple L2 technologies
- Supports the Cisco Nexus family of switches (Verified with Nexus 3000, 5000 and 7000 series)
Overlay Architecture
The Cisco plugin overlay architecture uses model layers to overlay the Nexus plugin on top of the Openvswitch plugin. It supports two segmentation methods for the Openvswitch plugin: VLAN and GRE tunnels.
Pre-requisites
(The following are necessary only when using the Nexus devices in your system. If you plan to just leverage the plugin framework, you do not need these.)
If you are using a Nexus switch in your topology, you'll need the following NX-OS version and packages to enable Nexus support:
- NX-OS 5.2.1 (Delhi) Build 69 or above.
- paramiko library - SSHv2 protocol library for python
- ncclient v0.3.1 - Python library for NETCONF clients
- You need a version of ncclient modified by Cisco Systems. To get it, from your shell prompt do:
git clone git@github.com:CiscoSystems/ncclient.git sudo python ./setup.py install
- For more information of ncclient, see: http://schmizz.net/ncclient/
- OS supported:
- RHEL 6.1 or above
- Ubuntu 11.10 or above
- Package: python-configobj-4.6.0-3.el6.noarch (or newer)
- Package: python-routes-1.12.3-2.el6.noarch (or newer)
- Package: pip install mysql-python
Module Structure
- quantum/plugins/cisco/ - Contains the Network Plugin Framework
- /client - CLI module for core and extensions API
- /common - Modules common to the entire plugin
- /conf - All configuration files
- /db - Persistence framework
- /models - Class(es) which tie the logical abstractions to the physical topology
- /nexus - Nexus-specific modules
- /tests - Tests specific to this plugin
Basic Plugin configuration
1. Make a backup copy of /etc/quantum/quantum.conf
2. Edit /etc/quantum.conf and edit the "core_plugin" for v2 API
core_plugin = quantum.plugins.cisco.network_plugin.PluginV2
3. MySQL database setup:
- 3a. Create quantum_l2network database in mysql with the following command -
mysql -u<mysqlusername> -p<mysqlpassword> -e "create database quantum_l2network"
- 3b. Enter the quantum_l2network database configuration info in the
- /etc/quantum/plugins/cisco/db_conn.ini file.
4. Configure the model layer to use Openvswitch as the vswitch plugin:
- Edit the [PLUGINS] section of /etc/quantum/plugins/cisco/cisco_plugins.ini to say:
vswitch_plugin=quantum.plugins.openvswitch.ovs_quantum_plugin.OVSQuantumPluginV2
Cisco plugin overlay in Openvswitch GRE tunnel mode
In this mode the Nexus switch doesn't configure anything and acts as a simple passthrough.
- Configure the OVS plugin with the following settings in /etc/quantum/plugins/openvswitch/ovs_quantum_plugin.ini:
[OVS] tenant_network_type = gre enable_tunneling = True tunnel_id_ranges = 1:1000 local_ip = 172.29.74.73
- Configure the Cisco plugin with the following settings (/etc/quantum/plugins/cisco/l2network_plugin.ini):
[MODEL] model_class=quantum.plugins.cisco.models.virt_phy_sw_v2.VirtualPhysicalSwitchModelV2
- Modify the [DRIVER] section of the /etc/quantum/plugins/cisco/nexus.ini to add the fake nexus driver:
[DRIVER] name=quantum.plugins.cisco.tests.unit.v2.nexus.fake_nexus_driver.CiscoNEXUSFakeDriver
Cisco plugin overlay in Openvswitch VLAN mode
- Configure the OVS plugin with the following settings in /etc/quantum/plugins/openvswitch/ovs_quantum_plugin.ini:
[OVS] bridge_mappings = physnet1:br-eth1 network_vlan_ranges = physnet1:1000:1100 tenant_network_type = vlan
- Configure the [PLUGINS] of /etc/quantum/plugins/cisco/cisco_plugins.ini:
[PLUGINS] nexus_plugin=quantum.plugins.cisco.nexus.cisco_nexus_plugin_v2.NexusPlugin vswitch_plugin=quantum.plugins.openvswitch.ovs_quantum_plugin.OVSQuantumPluginV2
- Configure the Nexus switch information in /etc/quantum/plugins/cisco/nexus.ini. The format should include the IP address of the switch, a host that's connected to the switch and the port on the switch that host is connected to. You can configure multiple switches as well as multiple hosts per switch as shown in the example below:
[SWITCH] # Ip address of the switch [[1.1.1.1]] # Hostname of the node [[[compute-1]]] # Port this node is connected to on the nexus switch ports=1/1 # Hostname of the node [[[compute-2]]] # Port this node is connected to on the nexus switch ports=1/2 # Port number where the SSH will be running at the Nexus Switch, e.g.: 22 (Default) [[[ssh_port]]] ssh_port=22 [[2.2.2.2]] # Hostname of the node [[[compute-3]]] # Port this node is connected to on the nexus switch ports=1/15 # Hostname of the node [[[compute-4]]] # Port this node is connected to on the nexus switch ports=1/16 # Port number where the SSH will be running at the Nexus Switch, e.g.: 22 (Default) [[[ssh_port]]] ssh_port=22 [DRIVER] name=quantum.plugins.cisco.nexus.cisco_nexus_network_driver_v2.CiscoNEXUSDriver
- 4c. Make sure that SSH host key of all Nexus switches is known to the
- host on which you are running the Quantum service. You can do this simply by logging in to your Quantum host as the user that Quantum runs as and SSHing to the switches at least once. If the host key changes (e.g. due to replacement of the supervisor or clearing of the SSH config on the switch), you may need to repeat this step and remove the old hostkeys from ~/.ssh/known_hosts.
7. Verify that you have the correct credentials for each IP address listed
- in quantum/plugins/cisco/credentials.ini. Example:
# Provide the Nexus credentials, if you are using Nexus switches. # If not this will be ignored. [1.1.1.1] username=admin password=mySecretPasswordForNexus [2.2.2.2] username=admin password=mySecretPasswordForNexus
- In general, make sure that every Nexus switch used in your system, has a credential entry in the above file. This is required for the system to be able to communicate with those switches.
9. Start the Quantum service. If something doesn't work, verify the
- your configuration of each of the above files.
How to test the installation
The unit tests are located at quantum/plugins/cisco/tests/unit/v2. They can be executed from the top level Quantum directory using the run_tests.sh script.
1. Testing the core API (without UCS/Nexus/RHEL device sub-plugins configured):
- By default all the device sub-plugins are disabled (commented out) in etc/quantum/plugins/cisco/cisco_plugins.ini
./run_tests.sh quantum.plugins.cisco.tests.unit.v2.test_api_v2 ./run_tests.sh quantum.plugins.cisco.tests.unit.v2.test_network_plugin
2. For testing the Nexus device sub-plugin perform the following configuration:
- Edit etc/quantum/plugins/cisco/cisco_plugins.ini to add: In the [PLUGINS] section add:
nexus_plugin=quantum.plugins.cisco.nexus.cisco_nexus_plugin_v2.NexusPlugin
- Edit the etc/quantum/plugins/cisco/nexus.ini file. When not using Nexus hardware use the following dummy configuration verbatim:
[SWITCH] [[1.1.1.1]] # Hostname of the node [[[compute-1]]] # Port this node is connected to on the nexus switch ports=1/1 # Port number where the SSH will be running at the Nexus Switch, e.g.: 22 (Default) [[[ssh_port]]] ssh_port=22 [DRIVER] name=quantum.plugins.cisco.tests.unit.v2.nexus.fake_nexus_driver.CiscoNEXUSFakeDriver
A Cisco Plugin Framework for Quantum L2 Network Overlays Spanning Multiple Physical Switches (Havana Release and newer)
In the Havana release, Quantum has been renamed to "Neutron". Information on Havana and newer releases may be found here:
https://wiki.openstack.org/wiki/Cisco-neutron
Pre-grizzly support information
The Cisco UCS plugin has been deprecated in the grizzly release (to be bought back in a later release) and support for intelligent multiple switch configuration has been added. If you are using the any release before grizzly then the following information would be of relevance.
Module Structure
- quantum/plugins/cisco/ - Contains the Network Plugin Framework
- /client - CLI module for core and extensions API
- /common - Modules common to the entire plugin
- /conf - All configuration files
- /db - Persistence framework
- /models - Class(es) which tie the logical abstractions to the physical topology
- /nova - Scheduler and VIF-driver to be used by Nova
- /nexus - Nexus-specific modules
- /segmentation - Implementation of segmentation manager, e.g. VLAN Manager
- /services - Set of orchestration libraries to insert In-path Networking Services
- /ucs - UCS-specific modules
Plugin Installation Instructions
1. Make a backup copy of quantum/etc/quantum.conf
2. Edit quantum/etc/quantum.conf and edit the "core_plugin" for v2 API
`core_plugin = quantum.plugins.cisco.network_plugin.PluginV2`
3. MySQL database setup:
- 3a. Create quantum_l2network database in mysql with the following command -
`mysql -u<mysqlusername> -p<mysqlpassword> -e "create database quantum_l2network"`
- 3b. Enter the quantum_l2network database configuration info in the
- quantum/plugins/cisco/db_conn.ini file.
4. If you want to turn on support for Cisco Nexus switches:
- 4a. Uncomment the nexus_plugin property in
- etc/quantum/plugins/cisco/cisco_plugins.ini to read:
[PLUGINS] nexus_plugin=quantum.plugins.cisco.nexus.cisco_nexus_plugin_v2.NexusPlugin
- 4b. Enter the relevant configuration in the
- etc/quantum/plugins/cisco/nexus.ini file. Example:
[SWITCH] # Change the following to reflect the IP address of the Nexus switch. # This will be the address at which Quantum sends and receives configuration # information via SSHv2. nexus_ip_address=10.0.0.1 # Port numbers on the Nexus switch to each one of the compute nodes are connected # Use shortened interface syntax, e.g. "1/10" not "Ethernet1/10" and "," between ports. ports=1/10,1/11,1/12 #Port number where SSH will be running on the Nexus switch. Typically this is 22 #unless you've configured your switch otherwise. nexus_ssh_port=22 [DRIVER] name=quantum.plugins.cisco.nexus.cisco_nexus_network_driver.CiscoNEXUSDriver
- 4c. Make sure that SSH host key of the Nexus switch is known to the
- host on which you are running the Quantum service. You can do this simply by logging in to your Quantum host as the user that Quantum runs as and SSHing to the switch at least once. If the host key changes (e.g. due to replacement of the supervisor or clearing of the SSH config on the switch), you may need to repeat this step and remove the old hostkey from ~/.ssh/known_hosts.
5. If your are using UCS blade servers with M81KR Virtual Interface Cards and
- want to leverage the VM-FEX features, 5a. Uncomment the ucs_plugin propertes in
- etc/quantum/plugins/cisco/cisco_plugins.ini to read:
[PLUGINS] ucs_plugin=quantum.plugins.cisco.ucs.cisco_ucs_plugin_v2.UCSVICPlugin [INVENTORY] ucs_plugin=quantum.plugins.cisco.ucs.cisco_ucs_inventory_v2.UCSInventory 5b. Enter the relevant configuration in the etc/quantum/plugins/cisco/ucs.ini file. Example: [UCSM] #change the following to the appropriate UCSM IP address #if you have more than one UCSM, enter info from any one ip_address=<put_ucsm_ip_address_here> default_vlan_name=default default_vlan_id=1 max_ucsm_port_profiles=1024 profile_name_prefix=q- [DRIVER] name=quantum.plugins.cisco.ucs.cisco_ucs_network_driver.CiscoUCSMDriver
- 5c. Configure the UCS systems' information in your deployment by editing the
- quantum/plugins/cisco/conf/ucs_inventory.ini file. You can configure multiple UCSMs per deployment, multiple chassis per UCSM, and multiple blades per chassis. Chassis ID and blade ID can be obtained from the UCSM (they will typically be numbers like 1, 2, 3, etc.). Also make sure that you put the exact hostname as nova sees it (the host column in the services table of the nova DB will give you that information).
[ucsm-1] ip_address = <put_ucsm_ip_address_here> [[chassis-1]] chassis_id = <put_the_chassis_id_here> [[[blade-1]]] blade_id = <put_blade_id_here> host_name = <put_hostname_here> [[[blade-2]]] blade_id = <put_blade_id_here> host_name = <put_hostname_here> [[[blade-3]]] blade_id = <put_blade_id_here> host_name = <put_hostname_here> [ucsm-2] ip_address = <put_ucsm_ip_address_here> [[chassis-1]] chassis_id = <put_the_chassis_id_here> [[[blade-1]]] blade_id = <put_blade_id_here> host_name = <put_hostname_here> [[[blade-2]]] blade_id = <put_blade_id_here> host_name = <put_hostname_here>
- 5d. Configure your OpenStack installation to use the 802.1qbh VIF driver and
- Quantum-aware scheduler by editing the /etc/nova/nova.conf file with the following entries:
scheduler_driver=quantum.plugins.cisco.nova.quantum_port_aware_scheduler.QuantumPortAwareScheduler quantum_host=127.0.0.1 quantum_port=9696 libvirt_vif_driver=quantum.plugins.cisco.nova.vifdirect.Libvirt802dot1QbhDriver libvirt_vif_type=802.1Qbh
- Note: To be able to bring up a VM on a UCS blade, you should first create a
- port for that VM using the Quantum create port API. VM creation will fail if an unused port is not available. If you have configured your Nova project with more than one network, Nova will attempt to instantiate the VM with one network interface (VIF) per configured network. To provide plugin points for each of these VIFs, you will need to create multiple Quantum ports, one for each of the networks, prior to starting the VM. However, in this case you will need to use the Cisco multiport extension API instead of the Quantum create port API. More details on using the multiport extension follow in the section on multi NIC support.
To support the above configuration, you will need some Quantum modules. It's easiest to copy the entire quantum directory from your quantum installation into: /usr/lib/python2.7/site-packages/ This needs to be done on each nova compute node.
7. Verify that you have the correct credentials for each IP address listed
- in quantum/plugins/cisco/conf/credentials.ini. Example:
# Provide the UCSM credentials, create a separte entry for each UCSM used in your system # UCSM IP address, username and password. [10.0.0.2] username=admin password=mySecretPasswordForUCSM # Provide the Nexus credentials, if you are using Nexus switches. # If not this will be ignored. [10.0.0.1] username=admin password=mySecretPasswordForNexus
- In general, make sure that every UCSM and Nexus switch used in your system, has a credential entry in the above file. This is required for the system to be able to communicate with those switches.
9. Start the Quantum service. If something doesn't work, verify the
- your configuration of each of the above files.
Multi NIC support for VMs
As indicated earlier, if your Nova setup has a project with more than one network, Nova will try to create a virtual network interface (VIF) on the VM for each of those
As indicated earlier, if your Nova setup has a project with more than one network, Nova will try to create a virtual network interface (VIF) on the VM for each of those networks. Before each VM is instantiated, you should create Quantum ports on each of those networks. These ports need to be created using the following rest call:
POST /1.0/extensions/csco/tenants/{tenant_id}/multiport/
with request body:
{'multiport': {'status': 'ACTIVE', 'net_id_list': net_id_list, 'ports_desc': {'key': 'value'
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where,
net_id_list is a list of network IDs: [netid1, netid2, ...]. The "ports_desc" dictionary is reserved for later use. For now, the same structure in terms of the dictionary name, key and value should be used.
The corresponding CLI for this operation is as follows:
`PYTHONPATH=. python quantum/plugins/cisco/client/cli.py create_multiport <tenant_id> <net_id1,net_id2,...>`
- (Note that you should not be using the create port core API in the above case.)
Using an independent plugin as a device sub-plugin
If you would like to use an independent virtual switch plugin as one of the sub-plugins (for eg: the OpenVSwitch plugin) with the nexus device sub-plugin perform the following steps:
(The following instructions are with respect to the OpenVSwitch plugin) 1. Update etc/quantum/plugins/cisco/l2network_plugin.ini
- In the [MODEL] section of the configuration file put the following configuration (note that this should be the only configuration in this section, all other configuration should be either removed or commented)
- `model_class=quantum.plugins.cisco.models.virt_phy_sw_v2.VirtualPhysicalSwitchModelV2`
2. Update etc/quantum/plugins/cisco/cisco_plugins.ini
- In the [PLUGINS] section of the configuration file put the following configuration:
`vswitch_plugin=quantum.plugins.openvswitch.ovs_quantum_plugin.OVSQuantumPluginV2`
3. Set the DB name, the same name has to be configured in three places:
- In etc/quantum/plugins/cisco/conf/db_conn.ini set the "name" value In /etc/quantum/plugins/openvswitch/ovs_quantum_plugin.ini set the "sql_connection" In etc/quantum/plugins/cisco/conf/db_conn.ini set the "name" value In /etc/quantum/plugins/openvswitch/ovs_quantum_plugin.ini set the "sql_connection" In /etc/quantum/dhcp_agent.ini set the "db_connection"
4. The range of VLAN IDs has to be set in the OpenVSwitch configuration file:
- In /etc/quantum/plugins/openvswitch/ovs_quantum_plugin.ini Set:
vlan_min = <lower_id> vlan_max = <higher_id> enable_tunneling = False
5. For Nexus device sub-plugin configuration refer to the above sections
How to test the installation
The unit tests are located at quantum/tests/unit/cisco/. They can be executed from the top level Quantum directory using tox ([sudo] pip install pip testrepository)
1. Testing the core API (without UCS/Nexus/RHEL device sub-plugins configured):
- By default all the device sub-plugins are disabled (commented out) in etc/quantum/plugins/cisco/cisco_plugins.ini
tox -e py27 -- quantum.tests.unit.cisco.test_network_plugin tox -e py27 -- quantum.tests.unit.cisco.test_nexus_plugin
2. For testing the Nexus device sub-plugin perform the following configuration:
- Edit etc/quantum/plugins/cisco/cisco_plugins.ini to add: In the [PLUGINS] section add:
`nexus_plugin=quantum.plugins.cisco.nexus.cisco_nexus_plugin_v2.NexusPlugin`
- Edit the etc/quantum/plugins/cisco/nexus.ini file. When not using Nexus hardware use the following dummy configuration verbatim:
[SWITCH] nexus_ip_address=1.1.1.1 ports=1/10,1/11,1/12 nexus_ssh_port=22 [DRIVER] name=quantum.plugins.cisco.test.nexus.fake_nexus_driver.CiscoNEXUSFakeDriver Or when using Nexus hardware (put the values relevant to your setup): [SWITCH] nexus_ip_address=1.1.1.1 ports=1/10,1/11,1/12 nexus_ssh_port=22 [DRIVER] name=quantum.plugins.cisco.nexus.cisco_nexus_network_driver.CiscoNEXUSDriver
- (Note: Make sure that quantum/plugins/cisco/conf/credentials.ini has an entry for
3. For testing the UCS device sub-plugin perform the following configuration:
- Edit etc/quantum/plugins/cisco/cisco_plugins.ini to add: In the [PLUGINS] section add:
`ucs_plugin=quantum.plugins.cisco.ucs.cisco_ucs_plugin_v2.UCSVICPlugin`
- In the [INVENTORY] section add: When not using UCS hardware:
`ucs_plugin=quantum.plugins.cisco.test.ucs.cisco_ucs_inventory_fake.UCSInventory`
- Or when using UCS hardware:
`ucs_plugin=quantum.plugins.cisco.ucs.cisco_ucs_inventory_v2.UCSInventory`
- Edit the etc/quantum/plugins/cisco/ucs.ini file. When not using UCS hardware:
[DRIVER] name=quantum.plugins.cisco.test.ucs.fake_ucs_driver.CiscoUCSMFakeDriver Or when using UCS hardware: [DRIVER] name=quantum.plugins.cisco.ucs.cisco_ucs_network_driver.CiscoUCSMDriver
- Copyright: 2013 Cisco Systems, Inc.