Pete Birley fdbe8eb60d Gate: Loopback device support
This PS adds loopback device support to the gate scripts.
Rather than using simple loopback devices we use iscsi to
allow is to target the created devices via the bus they are
connected to. An arbitary number of devices of a desired size
can be created, and controlled via env vars.

Change-Id: I05fb7f3a1564bc36903aed2c46ed996bb8cc57c8
2017-07-31 17:12:20 -05:00
2017-07-29 22:16:37 -05:00
2017-07-29 23:51:47 -05:00
2017-06-27 13:42:03 -05:00
2017-07-31 17:12:20 -05:00
2017-06-28 01:31:21 +00:00
2017-04-11 07:03:45 -05:00
2017-06-12 04:38:50 +00:00
2016-11-12 14:26:57 -05:00
2017-07-08 11:47:21 -05:00
2017-06-12 04:38:50 +00:00
2017-05-16 13:34:42 -05:00

OpenStack-Helm

Mission

The goal of OpenStack-Helm is to enable deployment, maintenance, and upgrading of loosely coupled OpenStack services and their dependencies individually or as part of complex environments.

Communication

  • Join us on Slack - #openstack-helm
  • Join us on IRC: #openstack-helm on freenode
  • Community IRC Meetings: [Every Tuesday @ 3PM UTC], #openstack-meeting-5 on freenode
  • Meeting Agenda Items: Agenda

Launchpad

Bugs and blueprints are tracked via OpenStack-Helm's Launchpad.

Installation and Development

Please review our documentation at Read the Docs. For quick installation, evaluation, and convenience, we have a kubeadm based all-in-one solution that runs in a Docker container. The Kubeadm-AIO set up can be found here, and the gate scripts, use are supported on any fresh Ubuntu, CentOS or Fedora machine.

This project is under active development. We encourage anyone interested in OpenStack-Helm to review our Installation documentation. Feel free to ask questions or check out our current Issues and Bugs.

To evaluate a multinode installation, follow the Bare Metal install guide.

Description
Helm charts for deploying OpenStack on Kubernetes
Readme 126 MiB
Languages
Smarty 82.3%
Shell 16%
Python 1.3%
Jinja 0.2%
Makefile 0.2%