Operators will use the parameter_defaults section of any Heat
environment to set per service parameters.
+Apart from sevice specific inputs, there are few default parameters for all
+the services. Following are the list of default parameters:
+
+ * ServiceNetMap: Mapping of service_name -> network name. Default mappings
+ for service to network names are defined in
+ ../network/service_net_map.j2.yaml, which may be overridden via
+ ServiceNetMap values added to a user environment file via
+ parameter_defaults.
+
+ * EndpointMap: Mapping of service endpoint -> protocol. Contains a mapping of
+ endpoint data generated for all services, based on the data included in
+ ../network/endpoints/endpoint_data.yaml.
+
+ * DefaultPasswords: Mapping of service -> default password. Used to pass some
+ passwords from the parent templates, this is a legacy interface and should
+ not be used by new services.
+
+ * RoleName: Name of the role on which this service is deployed. A service can
+ be deployed in multiple roles. This is an internal parameter (should not be
+ set via environment file), which is fetched from the name attribute of the
+ roles_data.yaml template.
+
+ * RoleParameters: Parameter specific to a role on which the service is
+ applied. Using the format "<RoleName>Parameters" in the parameter_defaults
+ of user environment file, parameters can be provided for a specific role.
+ For example, in order to provide a parameter specific to "Compute" role,
+ below is the format::
+
+ parameter_defaults:
+ ComputeParameters:
+ Param1: value
+
+
Config Settings
---------------
5) Service activation (Pacemaker)
+It is also possible to use Mistral actions or workflows together with
+a deployment step, these are executed before the main configuration run.
+To describe actions or workflows from within a service use:
+
+ * workflow_tasks: One or more workflow task properties
+
+which expects a map where the key is the step and the value a list of
+dictionaries descrbing each a workflow task, for example::
+
+ workflow_tasks:
+ step2:
+ - name: echo
+ action: std.echo output=Hello
+ step3:
+ - name: external
+ workflow: my-pre-existing-workflow-name
+ input:
+ workflow_param1: value
+ workflow_param2: value
+
+The Heat guide for the `OS::Mistral::Workflow task property
+<https://docs.openstack.org/developer/heat/template_guide/openstack.html#OS::Mistral::Workflow-prop-tasks>`_
+has more details about the expected dictionary.
+
Batch Upgrade Steps
-------------------
upgrade sequence, defined as ansible tasks with a tag e.g "step1" for the first
step, "step2" for the second, etc.
- Steps/tages correlate to the following:
+ Steps/tags correlate to the following:
+
+ 1) Stop all control-plane services.
- 1) Quiesce the control-plane, e.g disable LoadBalancer, stop pacemaker cluster
+ 2) Quiesce the control-plane, e.g disable LoadBalancer, stop
+ pacemaker cluster: this will stop the following resource:
+ - ocata:
+ - galera
+ - rabbit
+ - redis
+ - haproxy
+ - vips
+ - cinder-volumes
+ - cinder-backup
+ - manilla-share
+ - rbd-mirror
- 2) Stop all control-plane services, ready for upgrade
+ The exact order is controlled by the cluster constraints.
3) Perform a package update and install new packages: A general
upgrade is done, and only new package should go into service
puppet which does any reconfiguration required for the new version, then starts
the services.
+Update Steps
+------------
+
+Each service template may optionally define a `update_tasks` key, which is a
+list of ansible tasks to be performed during the minor update process.
+
+Similar to the upgrade_tasks, we allow a series of steps for the per-service
+update sequence, but note update_task selects the steps via a conditional
+referencing the step variable e.g when: step == 2, which is different to the
+tags based approach used for upgrade_tasks (the two may be aligned in future).
+
+
Nova Server Metadata Settings
-----------------------------