Skip to content

skamithi/install-rhev-using-vagrant

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

34 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Basic RHEV Install Demo using Vagrant-Libvirt

This install includes 2 RHEL 7.4 VMs, the first is the RHEV Manager and the second one is the RHEV hypervisor. The vagrant install does the following:

  • Install RHEL7.4 from a Vagrant box
  • Add the necessary RHEL subscriptions to install RHEV
  • Install RHEVM on one VM and using Ovirt Ansible modules create a RHEV Hypervisor on the 2nd VM.
  • Download the Openstack Cirros VM and install it as a RHEV template
  • Deploy 1 VM based on the cirros vm template.

Requirements

  • Fast internet connection. RHEV wants to download alot of packages from the internet.
  • PC with at least 8GB of RAM, 50G of disk.
  • RHEL 7.4 iso
  • Red Hat Subscriptions that can install RHEV Manager and RHEV Hypervisor code.

Build a RHEL Vagrant Box

Build a RHEL vagrant box.

Create a packer var file pointing to the location where the RHEL iso exists on your server/laptop.

Topology

+---------------+             +----------------+
|               |             |                |
|    RHEV       |             |  RHEV          |
|    Manager    |eth1       eth1 Hypervisor    |
|               +-----------+ |                |
|               |             |                |
|               |             |                |
+-----eth0------+             +------eth0------+
        |                              |
+-----------+------------------------------+------------+
|                                                       |
|               Vagrant hyperVisor                      |
+-------------------------------------------------------+

Create a RHEL vagrant box

# cd git/bento/rhel
# cat rhel_local.json

{
  "mirror": "file://",
  "mirror_directory": "/home/linuxsimba/isos"
}
# packer build -only qemu -var-file rhel_local.json rhel-7.4-x86_64.json
qemu output will be in this color.

==> qemu: Downloading or copying ISO
    qemu: Downloading or copying: file:///home/linuxsimba/isos/rhel-server-7.4-x86_64-dvd.iso
==> qemu: Creating hard drive...
...
.....
[ after 10-15 minutes]
....
....
==> Builds finished. The artifacts of successful builds are:
--> qemu: 'libvirt' provider box: ../builds/rhel-7.4.libvirt.box

  • Upload the new RHEL box into your default vagrant box store
 vagrant box add ../builds/rhel-7.4.libvirt.box --name rhel74

Download RHEV Vagrant libvirt Git Repo

git clone https://github.com/linuxsimba/install-rhev-using-vagrant

Install Ansible

Use your system package manager or PIP to install Ansible 2.4 or higher.

Create Secret Info file

Create the file group_vars/all/vault.yml in the rhev vagrant directory Pool IDs are Red Hat subscription pools that contain the Red Hat Virtualization repos. Review the RHEV Install Docs for more details on how to get find the right Pool IDs

# cd $HOME/git/install-rhev-using-vagrant
# echo "

vault_subscription_pass: [access_redhat_password]
vault_subscription_user: [access_redhat_username]
vault_pool_ids:
  - 1234523423434
  - 23423234234
vault_ovirt_password: [rhevm admin password]

" > ./group_vars/all/vault.yml

# ansible-vault encrypt ./group_vars/all/vault.yml
Password: [create_a_vault_password]
Confirm Password: [confirm_vault_password]

# echo "[password_used_to_encrypt_vault_file]" > v_pass

Run Vagrant Up

run vagrant in non parallel mode because the RHEVM must come up first before the single hypervisor

vagrant up rhevm rhevh1 --no-parallel

After several minutes a RHEV test environment is up and running. Ready for you to some basic testing. I needed to do this because I wanted to kick the tires on the ovirt Ansible modules

Accessing the UI from the Vagrant hypervisor

From your laptop or server, you neeed to modify the /etc/hosts file with the IP of the rhevm management port (eth0). So something like this

...
192.168.100.1 rhevm.test.local rhevm
....

The reason for this is that RHEVM does not allow you to connect by IP. Must be by name. Weird, but that's how it works.

After that from your browser type https://rhevm.test.local/ovirt-engine. Click on the Administration Portal. The username is admin and the password is whatever you set in vault_ovirt_password in your vault file.

VM Console

The default Native Client console does not work due to the networking in the VM. Instead of doing vagrant port masquerading, go to the Console Options for the VM (right click the VM to see this) and change the Console invocation to SPICE HTML5.

You will see a message saying the following:

Can't connect to websocket proxy server wss://rhevm.test.local:6100. Please check that:
websocket proxy service is running,
firewalls are properly set,
websocket proxy certificate is trusted by your browser. Default CA certificate.

Click on the Default CA Certificate and install the CA Certificate into your browser. Close the console browser window and bring up the console again in a new window. The console should now be visible on your browser.

Troubleshooting

RHEV seems to have issues rendering the login page and adminstrative portal pages. Recommend using Incognito/Private Window modes in either Chrome or Firefox. Seems to resolve all those page loading issues.

Each time you rebuild this environment the CA certificate will change so you will need to update your browser CA certs as well.

This setup requires a reliable internet connection. To save on bandwidth you could consider building a RHEL golden image vagrant box with the appropriate subscriptions and Yum update completed.

About

vagrant setup to install test rhev environment.

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages