On 2-9-2013 16:32, Itamar Heim wrote:
On 09/02/2013 05:29 PM, NOC wrote:
On 08/21/2013 12:11 PM, Itamar Heim wrote:
On 08/21/2013 02:40 AM, Joop van de Wege wrote:

What I would like to see in the ! next version is pxe boot of the nodes.
Probably not easy to achieve because of dependency on dhcp.

Hi Joop,

can you please give a bit more information on the use case / how you
envision this?

current thinking around bare metal provisioning of hosts is to extend
the functionality around the foreman provider for this, but you may
have other suggestions?

I think Joop means to be able to add hosts (nodes) to a cluster by
adding their MAC address to the dhcp list for PXE boot into ovirt-node
and thus join the cluster. This would make it easy to add new physical
nodes without any spinning disks or other local storage requirements.

we started adding foreman integration in 3.3:
http://www.ovirt.org/Features/ForemanIntegration

adding ohad and oved for their thoughts on this.


I suppose this may not be easy with complex network connections (bonds
on mgmt network, mgmt network on a tagged vlan, etc), but it should be
possible if the management network interface is plain and physical.

/Simon

PS, Perhaps Joop can confirm this idea, we've talked about it IRL.
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This isn't about provisioning with Foreman. Its about having the compute nodes NOT having any spinning disks. So the only way to start a node is to pxeboot it and then let it (re)connect with the engine. Then it will be identified by engine as either a new node or a reconnecting node and it will get its configuration from the engine. For reference: thats how VirtualIron works. It has a managment network, just like ovirt, and on that it runs a tftp and dhcp server. Nodes are plugged into the managment network, without disk, and then pxe booted after which they appear in the webui as new unconfigured nodes. You then can set various settings and upon rebooting the nodes will recieve these settings because it is recognised by its mac address. The advantage of this construct is that you can place a new server into a rack, cable it, power on and go back to you office where you'll find the new node waiting to be configured. No messing around with CDs to install an OS, not being in the datacenter for hours on end, just in and out.

Yes, disks are cheap but they brake down, need maintenance, means downtime and in general more admin time then when you don't have them. ( its a shame to have a raid1 of 2 1Tb disk just to install an OS of less then 10G)

Regards,

Joop




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