tree: bbd90cc2d66212a334a291c34e422aae924292ca [path history] [tgz]
  1. Makefile
  2. README.md
  3. docker-compose.yml
xos/configurations/devel/README.md

XOS development environment

This configuration can be used to do basic end-to-end development of XOS. It launches XOS in three Docker containers (development GUI, Synchronizer, database) and configures XOS to talk to an OpenStack backend. docker-compose is used to manage the containers.

How to run it

The configuration can be either run on CloudLab (controlling an OpenStack backend set up by a CloudLab profile) or used with a basic DevStack configuration.

CloudLab

To get started on CloudLab:

  • Create an experiment using the OpenStack profile. Choose Kilo and disable security groups.
  • Wait until you get an email from CloudLab with title "OpenStack Instance Finished Setting Up".
  • Login to the ctl node of your experiment and run:
ctl:~$ git clone https://github.com/open-cloud/xos.git
ctl:~$ cd xos/xos/configurations/devel/
ctl:~/xos/xos/configurations/devel$ make cloudlab

DevStack

The following instructions can be used to install DevStack and XOS together on a single node. This setup has been run successfully in a VirtualBox VM with 2 CPUs and 4096 GB RAM.

First, if you happen to be installing DevStack on a CloudLab node, you can configure about 1TB of unallocated disk space for DevStack as follows:

~$ sudo mkdir -p /opt/stack
~$ sudo /usr/testbed/bin/mkextrafs /opt/stack

To install DevStack and XOS:

~$ git clone https://github.com/open-cloud/xos.git
~$ git clone https://git.openstack.org/openstack-dev/devstack
~$ cd devstack
~/devstack$ cp ../xos/xos/configurations/common/devstack/local.conf .
~/devstack$ ./stack.sh
~/devstack$ cd ../xos/xos/configurations/devel/
~/xos/xos/configurations/devel$ make devstack

What you get

XOS will be set up with a single Deployment and Site. It should be in a state where you can create slices and associate instances with them.

Note that there are some issues with the networking setup in this configuration: VMs do not have a working DNS configuration in /etc/resolv.conf. If you fix this manually then everything should work.

Docker Helpers

Stop the containers: make stop

Restart the containers: make stop; make [cloudlab|devstack]

Delete the containers and relaunch them: make rm; make [cloudlab|devstack]

Build the containers from scratch using the local XOS source tree: make containers

View logs: make showlogs

See what containers are running: make ps

Open a shell on the XOS container: make enter-xos

Open a shell on the Synchronizer container: make enter-synchronizer