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I am working on understanding the pieces that I am missing in being able to deploy Juju across the other MAAS nodes. I don't know If I have a step out of place, or missing a few.

The MaaS server handles the DHCP and DNS. The router (which is at 10.0.0.0) has DHCP turned off. Any assistance is greatly appreciated. When I am at the end I will either get a 409 error, or arbitrary pick tools 1.16.0 error. It is worth mentioning that local, and aws works fine. Hopefully with all of these steps spelled out it will help someone else along the way too.

Updated Nov 3 2013 In this scenario for the POC, there are three physical servers. One is a HP DL 140 with 2 cpu 8gb ram, the second server is a DELL Power Edge 860 Server 1 cpu w 4 cores and 8 gb ram, and the third is a rackable systems sp5000psl with two cpus and 8gb of ram. They are all able to be on their own seperate network with access to the internet or can be on the first network. (second network is 10.0.0.0, and the first is 192.168.1.0)

Steps

Setting Up MAAS and JUJU - 12.04 LTS Clean install SSH only from the package selection during install

sudo apt-get install software-properties-common python-software-properties
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:maas-maintainers/stable      
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:juju/stable   
sudo apt-get update     
sudo apt-get dist-upgrade
sudo reboot     
sudo apt-get install maas maas-dns maas-dhcp    
sudo ufw disable    
sudo reboot

- edit /etc/dhcp/dhcpd.conf

authoritive
subnet 10.0.0.0 netmask 255.255.255.0 {
next-server 10.0.0.2;
filename "pxelinux.0";
}

sudo maas createsuperuser
sudo maas-import-pxe-files

Login to MAAS http://10.x.x.x/MAAS


  • cluster controller configuration for eth0
  • manage dhcp and dns
  • IP 10.0.0.2
  • subnet 255.255.255.0
  • broadcast 10.0.0.0
  • routerip 10.0.0.1
  • ip low 10.0.0.5
  • ip high 10.0.0.180

Commissioning default and distro is set at 12.04

default domain is at local

sudo maas-cli login maas http://10.x.x.x/MAAS/api/1.0 api-key
ssh-keygen -t rsa -b 2048 - enter - no password  - cat id_rsa.pub and enter key into MAAS ssh 
sudo maas-cli maas nodes accept-all (interestingly enough I only get back [] when executing this )

PXE one machine, accept and commision, start and deploy.

sudo apt-get install juju-core juju-local

MAAS config:

maas:
    type: maas
    maas-server: '://10.x.x.x:80/MAAS'
    maas-oauth: 'MAAS_API_KEY'
    admin-secret: 'nothing'
    default-series: 'precise'

juju switch maas
sudo juju bootstrap --show-log
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  • 2
    Hi John, can you move the content under the question into a new answer? That way we can keep improving it, thanks! Oct 15, 2013 at 21:44
  • My first attempt to move a question into an answer so it can be improved upon. This is as far as I get in the steps posted. It seems with this configuration that Juju never sees the other machines added to the MAAS cluster.
    – John75077
    Oct 15, 2013 at 23:17
  • @JorgeCastro As far as I can see this is all information about the question/issue John has here. I am not able to spot an answer/solution in the question body...
    – gertvdijk
    Oct 15, 2013 at 23:24
  • The problem is that juju wont bootstrap with a maas configuration. Correct me if I'm wrong, the way I understand this is that i can have as many nodes as I like. With the nodes configured with MAAS and JUJU then the controller would help utilize resources. (whether by deploy to a physical machine by name or dynamic allocation)
    – John75077
    Oct 18, 2013 at 0:33
  • Do you just have the one server that you installed MaaS on? You said "The server owns the router". I don't get if you mean that the server you installed MaaS on needs to do DNS and DHCP? What hardware do you have plugged into this server (switch, router, other computers?)
    – Azendale
    Oct 27, 2013 at 23:33

2 Answers 2

3

From what I understand in the comments, it sounds like you just have one server, which you have installed MaaS on.

Having MaaS installed on a server doesn't just let you run VM's on the server using the MaaS API (interface). What MaaS does is let you manage other physical servers from the MaaS server, using the MaaS API.

You can build a setup where the MaaS server manages virtual machines and you can use those virtual machines using the MaaS API, but this would be used more for testing MaaS out than for production -- there are better systems (that don't involve MaaS) to use for running a bunch of virtual servers on one physical machine (like LibVirt and KVM or even LXC, which I hear Juju has and is continuing to work on their support for).

You might look at How do I configure juju for local usage? if you are wanting to just be able to deploy Juju charms That method would bypass using MaaS, and instead use something called containers (also referred to as LXC) that should let you deploy charms to the local computer but with the charm in it's own sandbox.

3
  • Lets say I spin up 3 servers. I use MAAS and JUJU in conjuction. Server 1 is a i386 server and handles MAAS requests, DHCP requests, etc. Server 2 and 3 are 64bit servers. Maybe I have this all wrong in my little brain, I should have a server become the conductor of these other servers and how resources are allocated using the MAAS API. I have the conductor spin up the juju-gui, I should be able to deploy various charms to server 2 and 3?
    – John75077
    Nov 1, 2013 at 1:36
  • 1
    @JohnS One server would be your MaaS server, and then servers 2 and 3 would boot from that. Then when you use juju, juju needs a bootstrap node. So that would take up another server, say server2. Then if you deployed the juju-gui, that would take a third machine, say server3. If you tried to deploy anything more, you would get the 409 Conflict error because there are no more servers to allocate. Basically, MaaS, the Juju bootstrap, and the juju-gui would each take up their own machine. If you had more than 3 machines though, you could deploy charms to servers 4, 5, 6, (etc..)
    – Azendale
    Nov 1, 2013 at 16:54
  • it sounds like then I will NOT be able to make my POC due to limited funding, and we did try to solve this whole process. I want to thank you and everyone else's inputs to this question. Hopefully everyone gets a little recognition.
    – John75077
    Nov 1, 2013 at 22:48
2

Installing Local Cloud Infrastructure using Ubuntu 14.04 LTS MAAS

1
  • Whilst this may theoretically answer the question, it would be preferable to include the essential parts of the answer here, and provide the link for reference.
    – guntbert
    Oct 5, 2015 at 14:53

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