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Chapter 3. Heat parameters
Each heat template in the director template collection contains a parameters
section. This section contains definitions for all parameters specific to a particular overcloud service. This includes the following:
-
overcloud.j2.yaml
- Default base parameters -
roles_data.yaml
- Default parameters for composable roles -
deployment/*.yaml
- Default parameters for specific services
You can modify the values for these parameters using the following method:
- Create an environment file for your custom parameters.
-
Include your custom parameters in the
parameter_defaults
section of the environment file. -
Include the environment file with the
openstack overcloud deploy
command.
3.1. Example 1: Configuring the time zone
The Heat template for setting the timezone (puppet/services/time/timezone.yaml
) contains a TimeZone
parameter. If you leave the TimeZone
parameter blank, the overcloud sets the time to UTC
as a default.
To obtain lists of timezones run the timedatectl list-timezones
command. The following example command retrieves the timezones for Asia:
$ sudo timedatectl list-timezones|grep "Asia"
After you identify your timezone, set the TimeZone parameter in an environment file. The following example environment file sets the value of TimeZone to Asia/Tokyo:
parameter_defaults: TimeZone: 'Asia/Tokyo'
3.2. Example 2: Configuring RabbitMQ file descriptor limit
For certain configurations, you might need to increase the file descriptor limit for the RabbitMQ server. Use the deployment/rabbitmq/rabbitmq-container-puppet.yaml
heat template to set a new limit in the RabbitFDLimit
parameter. Add the following entry to an environment file:
parameter_defaults: RabbitFDLimit: 65536
3.3. Example 3: Enabling and disabling parameters
You might need to initially set a parameter during a deployment, then disable the parameter for a future deployment operation, such as updates or scaling operations. For example, to include a custom RPM during the overcloud creation, include the following entry in an environment file:
parameter_defaults: DeployArtifactURLs: ["http://www.example.com/myfile.rpm"]
To disable this parameter from a future deployment, it is not sufficient to remove the parameter. Instead, you must set the parameter to an empty value:
parameter_defaults: DeployArtifactURLs: []
This ensures the parameter is no longer set for subsequent deployments operations.
3.4. Example 4: Role-based parameters
Use the [ROLE]Parameters
parameters, replacing [ROLE]
with a composable role, to set parameters for a specific role.
For example, director configures sshd
on both Controller and Compute nodes. To set a different sshd
parameters for Controller and Compute nodes, create an environment file that contains both the ControllerParameters
and ComputeParameters
parameter and set the sshd
parameters for each specific role:
parameter_defaults: ControllerParameters: BannerText: "This is a Controller node" ComputeParameters: BannerText: "This is a Compute node"
3.5. Identifying parameters that you want to modify
Red Hat OpenStack Platform director provides many parameters for configuration. In some cases, you might experience difficulty identifying a certain option that you want to configure, and the corresponding director parameter. If there is an option that you want to configure with director, use the following workflow to identify and map the option to a specific overcloud parameter:
- Identify the option that you want to configure. Make a note of the service that uses the option.
Check the corresponding Puppet module for this option. The Puppet modules for Red Hat OpenStack Platform are located under
/etc/puppet/modules
on the director node. Each module corresponds to a particular service. For example, thekeystone
module corresponds to the OpenStack Identity (keystone).- If the Puppet module contains a variable that controls the chosen option, move to the next step.
- If the Puppet module does not contain a variable that controls the chosen option, no hieradata exists for this option. If possible, you can set the option manually after the overcloud completes deployment.
Check the core heat template collection for the Puppet variable in the form of hieradata. The templates in
deployment/*
usually correspond to the Puppet modules of the same services. For example, thedeployment/keystone/keystone-container-puppet.yaml
template provides hieradata to thekeystone
module.- If the heat template sets hieradata for the Puppet variable, the template should also disclose the director-based parameter that you can modify.
- If the heat template does not set hieradata for the Puppet variable, use the configuration hooks to pass the hieradata using an environment file. See Section 4.5, “Puppet: Customizing hieradata for roles” for more information on customizing hieradata.
Procedure
To change the notification format for OpenStack Identity (keystone), use the workflow and complete the following steps:
-
Identify the OpenStack parameter that you want to configure (
notification_format
). Search the
keystone
Puppet module for thenotification_format
setting:$ grep notification_format /etc/puppet/modules/keystone/manifests/*
In this case, the
keystone
module manages this option using thekeystone::notification_format
variable.Search the
keystone
service template for this variable:$ grep "keystone::notification_format" /usr/share/openstack-tripleo-heat-templates/deployment/keystone/keystone-container-puppet.yaml
The output shows that director uses the
KeystoneNotificationFormat
parameter to set thekeystone::notification_format
hieradata.
-
Identify the OpenStack parameter that you want to configure (
The following table shows the eventual mapping:
Director parameter | Puppet hieradata | OpenStack Identity (keystone) option |
---|---|---|
|
|
|
You set the KeystoneNotificationFormat
in an overcloud environment file, which then sets the notification_format
option in the keystone.conf
file during the overcloud configuration.