OCCI Service Configuration Guide 2.0

Overview

The OpenNebula OCCI is a web service that enables you to launch and manage virtual machines in your OpenNebula installation using the latest draft of the OGF OCCI API specification. The OpenNebula OCCI service is implemented upon the new OpenNebula Cloud API (OCA) layer that exposes the full capabilities of an OpenNebula private cloud; and Sinatra, a widely used light web framework.

The current implementation includes all the resource referenced in the latest draft of the OGF OCCI API specification, namely:

The following sections explain how to install and configure the OCCI service on top of a running OpenNebula cloud.

:!: The OpenNebula OCCI service provides an OCCI interface to your cloud instance, that can be used alongside the native OpenNebula CLI, the libvirt interface or even the EC2 Query API
:!: The OpenNebula distribution includes the tools needed to use the OpenNebula OCCI service

Requirements & Installation

You must have an OpenNebula site properly configured and running to install the OpenNebula OCCI service, be sure to check the OpenNebula Installation and Configuration Guides to set up your private cloud first. This guide also assumes that you are familiar with the configuration and use of OpenNebula.

The OpenNebula OCCI service was installed during the OpenNebula installation, so you just need to install the following packages to meet the runtime dependencies:

<xterm>$ sudo gem install thin $ sudo gem install sinatra</xterm>

<xterm> $ sudo gem install curb $ sudo gem install multipart-post $ apt-get install ruby-sqlite3 $ apt-get install libopenssl-ruby </xterm>

:!: curb is just neccessary to upload files faster. If not installed, upload file with occi-storage -M that uses the multipart-post library

Configuration

The service is configured through the $ONE_LOCATION/etc/occi-server.conf file, where you can set up the basic operational parameters for the OCCI service, namely:

The following table summarizes the available options:

VARIABLE VALUE
ONE_XMLRPC oned xmlrpc service, http://localhost:2633/RPC2
SERVER FQDN for your cloud
PORT for incoming connections
BRIDGE Name of the bridge needed to create Networks
VM_TYPE The Computes types for your cloud

:!: The SERVER must be a FQDN, do not use IP's here

:!: Preserve bash syntax in the occi-server.conf file

Example:

# OpenNebula server contact information
ONE_XMLRPC=http://localhost:2633/RPC2

# Host and port where OCCI service will run
SERVER=cloud.opennebula.org
PORT=4567

# Configuration for OpenNebula's Virtual Networks
BRIDGE=eth0

# VM types allowed and its template file (inside templates directory)
VM_TYPE=[NAME=small,  TEMPLATE=small.erb]
VM_TYPE=[NAME=medium, TEMPLATE=medium.erb]
VM_TYPE=[NAME=large,  TEMPLATE=large.erb]

Configuring a SSL proxy

OpenNebula OCCI runs natively just on normal HTTP connections. If the extra security provided by SSL is needed, a proxy can be set up to handle the SSL connection that forwards the petition to the OCCI Service and takes back the answer to the client.

This set up needs:

If you want to try out the SSL setup easily, you can find in the following lines an example to set a self-signed certificate to be used by a lighttpd configured to act as an HTTP proxy to a correctly configured OCCI Service.

Let's assume the server were the lighttpd proxy is going to be started is called cloudserver.org. Therefore, the steps are:

1. Snakeoil server certificate

We are going to generate a snakeoil certificate. If using an Ubuntu system follow the next steps (otherwise your milleage may vary, but not a lot):

<xterm> $ sudo apt-get install ssl-cert </xterm>

<xterm> $ sudo /usr/sbin/make-ssl-cert generate-default-snakeoil </xterm>

<xterm> $ sudo cat /etc/ssl/private/ssl-cert-snakeoil.key /etc/ssl/certs/ssl-cert-snakeoil.pem > /etc/lighttpd/server.pem </xterm>

2. lighttpd as a SSL HTTP proxy

You will need to edit the /etc/lighttpd/lighttpd.conf configuration file and

server.port               = 8443
#### proxy module
## read proxy.txt for more info
proxy.server               = ( "" =>
                                ("" =>
                                 (
                                   "host" => "127.0.0.1",
                                   "port" => 4567
                                 )
                                 )
                             )


#### SSL engine
ssl.engine                 = "enable"
ssl.pemfile                = "/etc/lighttpd/server.pem"

The host must be the server hostname of the computer running the EC2Query Service, and the port the one that the EC2Query Service is running on.

3.OCCI Service configuration

The occi.conf needs to define the following:

# Host and port where the occi server will run
SERVER=<FQDN OF OCCI SERVER>
PORT=4567

# SSL proxy that serves the API (set if is being used)
SSL_SERVER=https://localhost:443

Once the lighttpd server is started, OCCI petitions using HTTPS uris can be directed to https://cloudserver.org:8443, that will then be unencrypted, passed to localhost, port 4567, satisfied (hopefully), encrypted again and then passed back to the client.

Defining Compute types

You can define as many Compute types as you want, just:

CPU    = 1
MEMORY = 1024

OS = [ kernel     = /vmlinuz,
       initrd     = /initrd.img,
       root       = sda1,
       kernel_cmd = "ro xencons=tty console=tty1"]

:!: The templates are processed by the OCCI service to include specific data for the instance, you should not need to modify the <%= … %> compounds inside the common.erb file.

Starting the Cloud Service

To start the OCCI service just issue the following command <xterm> occi-server start </xterm> You can find the OCCI server log file in $ONE_LOCATION/var/occi-server.log if OpenNebula has been installed in standalone, or in /var/log/one/occi-server.log if installed in system-wide.

To stop the OCCI service: <xterm> occi-server stop </xterm>

Cloud Users

The cloud users have to be created in the OpenNebula system by oneadmin using the oneuser utility. Once a user is registered in the system, using the same procedure as to create private cloud users, they can start using the system. The users will authenticate using the HTTP basic authentication with user-ID their OpenNebula's username and password their OpenNebula's password.