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# Developer Environment
If you are developing Kolla on an existing OpenStack cloud
that supports Heat, then follow the Heat template [README][].
Otherwise, follow the instructions below to manually create
your Kolla development environment.
[README]: https://github.com/stackforge/kolla/tree/version-m3/devenv/README.md
In order to run Kolla, it is mandatory to run a version of
`docker-compose` that includes pid: host support. One of the
authors of Kolla has a pull request outstanding that the
docker-compose maintainers have said they would merge shortly.
The pull request is:
https://github.com/docker/compose/pull/1011
Until then, it must be retrieved via git and installed:
sudo pip install -e .
sudo pip install six==1.7.3
The docker-compose version available via the sdake repository has been
rebased on to a master version of docker-compose which requires the
docker API 1.18. the docker API 1.18 is not available in distro
packaging and is only available by building from source. Docker also
distributes pre-built binaries for docker. It is recommended to just run
the docker provided binaries rather then building from source:
If a version of Docker other than 1.5.0-dev is currently running
on your system, stop it:
sudo systemctl stop docker
sudo killall -9 docker
Next, download and run the Docker 1.5.0-dev binary:
wget https://master.dockerproject.com/linux/amd64/docker-1.5.0-dev -O docker
sudo ./docker -d &
The basic starting environment will be created using `docker-compose`.
This environment will start up the openstack services listed in the
compose directory.
To start, setup your environment variables.
$ cd kolla
The `genenv` script will create a compose/openstack.env file
and an openrc file in your current directory. The openstack.env
file contains all of your initialized environment variables, which
you can edit for a different setup.
Next, run the start script.
The `start` script is responsible for starting the containers
using `docker-compose -f <osp-service-container> up -d`.
If you want to start a container set by hand use this template
$ docker-compose -f glance-api-registry.yml up -d
# Debug
All Docker commands should be run from the directory of the Docker binary,
by default this is `/`.
You can follow a container's status by doing
If any of the containers exited you can check the logs by doing
$ sudo ./docker logs <glance-api-container>
$ docker-compose logs <glance-api-container>
If you want to start a individual service like `glance-api` by hand, then use
this template. This is a good method to test and troubleshoot an individual
container.
$ sudo ./docker run --name glance-api -d \
--net=host
--env-file=openstack.env kollaglue/fedora-rdo-glance-api:latest