2013 linux days final

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Rick Ashford Systems Engineer [email protected] Linux Days 2013 Tampa, FL May 16, 2013 Cameron Seader Systems Engineer [email protected]

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SUSE Linux Days, June 2013

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Page 1: 2013 linux days final

Rick AshfordSystems Engineer

[email protected]

Linux Days 2013Tampa, FLMay 16, 2013

Cameron SeaderSystems Engineer

[email protected]

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Agenda

8:30 – 9:00 Breakfast

9:00 – 9:15 Welcome and Introductions

9:15 – 10:15 SUSE® Linux Enterprise Update

10:15 – 10:30 Break

10:30 – 12:00 SUSE Cloud 101

12:00 – 12:30 Lunch

12:30 – 2:00 SUSE Cloud 202

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SUSE® at a Glance

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Where SUSE® Leads

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Comprehensive Portfolio

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Broad Ecosystem

Solution Providers(VADs/VARs) and System Integrators

TrainingPartners

Technology Partners(ISVs/IHVs)

Certified SUSE Linux Enterpriseproducts

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Open Source Community Leadership

kernel.org

OPEN VIRTUALIZATION ALLIANCE

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SUSE Linux Enterprise Update

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2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 Notes

SLE 9

SLE10 x x

SLE 11 x x

SLE 12 x

CR: SLE 9 SP4 (2007) EOGS: 08/2011 EOSS: Q3 2014

CR: SLE 10 SP4 (2011) EOGS: Q3 2013 EOSS: Q3 2016

CR: SLE 11 SP2 (2012) EOGS: Q2 2016 EOSS: Q2 2019

CR: SLE 12 GA (2014) EOGS: 2021 EOSS: 2024

Current Platform LifecycleSUSE® Linux Enterprise

SP4

GA SP3

GA

SP3

SP1

• SUSE product lifecycle with dependable release timing‒ 10-year lifecycle (seven years general support, three years extended support)‒ Service Packs are released every ~18 months with five years lifetime

‒ ~two years general support per service pack‒ six month upgrade window after release of the next service pack

• All product lifecycles at http://support.novell.com/lifecycle

SP2

today

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General

Hardware Enablement

Systems Management

Virtualization

Security and Certifications

Technology Preview

High Availability

Technology HighlightsSUSE Linux Enterprise 11 SP3 Server and Desktop

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General Highlights

• LAMP Stack‒ Updated PHP to 5.3.17

‒ Updated MySQL to 5.5.30

• Java‒ Removed IBM Java 1.4.2

‒ Keeping IBM Java 6

‒ Added IBM Java 7 (1.7.0 sr4)

• Lustre 2.1 base kernel enablement‒ Requested by a number of customers and partners

‒ Included kernel patches enable building Lustre modules

‒ Supported by SUSE deployment partners

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Hardware EnablementHardware Partners

• Worked closely with Intel, AMD and IBM to include features for recent and upcoming processors and chipsets

‒ The work with IBM is for the Power and System z architectures

• Worked closely with OEMs to support their recently released and upcoming systems

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Hardware EnablementNetworking and Storage

• Networking‒ Update the open Fibre Channel over Ethernet (FCoE) stack

‒ Required kernel changes to sysfs and FC libraries and userspace management tools

‒ Update OFED userspace to 1.5.4.1

• Storage‒ LVM thin provisioning

‒ Over commit physical storage to more effectively use storage

‒ ext4 runtime switch for write capability

‒ RO supported for data migration; RW not supported by SUSE

‒ Replaces the SUSE Linux Enterprise 11 SP2 ext4-writable-KMP

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Systems Management

• ZYpp Transaction Auditing‒ Benefits

‒ Investigate reasons for problem in software stack after a change

‒ Easier ITIL auditing

‒ SUSE Manager will use this information in a future release

• Snapper‒ Role-based, non-root snapshots/rollback with dbus

‒ Other people can manage snapshots for specific subvolumes (not "/")

‒ Updated capabilities in the YaST2 snapper module

‒ Faster comparison of snapshots on btrfs

‒ After SP3: Snapper cleanup rules based on age and free space

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Virtualization

• Release Virtual Machine Driver Pack (VMDP) 2.1‒ Windows Server 2012 and Windows 8 support

‒ SCSI pass-through support

• Virtual Machine OS support (XEN and KVM)‒ SUSE Linux Enterprise 10 SP4, 11 SP1, 11 SP2, 11 SP3 (L3)

‒ Windows 2003 SP2+, 2008 SP2+, 2008 R2+, 2012+ (L3)

‒ OES 2 SP3, OES 11+, NetWare 6.5 SP8 (32bit only) (L3)

‒ RHEL 4.9+, 5.8+, 6.3+ (L2 or L3 with expanded support)

‒ SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop 11 SP3 (Tech Preview with L2)

‒ Windows XP SP3+, Vista SP2+, 7 SP1+, 8+ (L2)

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VirtualizationXEN and KVM

• XEN 4.2.1‒ Large VT-d pages

‒ APIC virtualization feature for recent Intel CPUs

• KVM 1.4.0‒ Like XEN, large VT-d pages and APICv support

‒ HBA pass-through

‒ KVM hypervisor install scenario in YaST installer

‒ Export Platform Power Management Capability (S3 and S4) through libvirt Framework

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VirtualizationHyper-V and LXC

• Hyper-V‒ Memory ballooning support

‒ Updated framebuffer driver

‒ Allows for screen resolution up 1920x1080 on Windows Server 2012 host and 1600x1200 on Windows Server 2008 R2 or earlier

‒ Solves the double mouse cursor issue of the emulated

‒ Host initiated backup

‒ Ensure that a backup will be file system consistent by “freeze/thaw” filesystem

• Linux Containers (LXC)‒ Update LXC to its latest version (0.8.0)

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Security and Certifications

• Include third-party Apache Module mod_security2 in SUSE Linux Enterprise Server

‒ L3 Supported

• Certifications‒ Common Criteria certification in Evaluation Assurance Level 4 with

Augmentation (CC OSPP EAL 4+) achieved for SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 11 SP2

‒ FIPS 140-2 certification achieved for OpenSSL 0.9.8j in SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 11 SP2

‒ Updated openssh to 6.1p1 which works in FIPS mode (not validated yet)

‒ Considering FIPS certification of further modules

‒ Researching compliance with NIST SP800-131a

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Security and CertificationsUnified Extensible Firmware Interface (UEFI)

• Extensive information about implementation

‒ https://www.suse.com/blogs/uefi-secure-boot-details/

• Secure Boot support

• Ship a Secure Boot UEFI compatible bootloader (grub2) and shim loader

• Bootloader, kernel and kernel modules must be signed

• UEFI Secure boot limitations‒ kexec and kdump are disabled

‒ Limitations assumed to be removed in SUSE Linxux Enterprise12

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• Unattended, automated migration from SUSE Linux Enterprise 10 to SUSE Linux Enterprise 11

‒ Reduced administration cost and downtime

‒ Reduced application impact

‒ See: http://www.suse.com/documentation/sles11/book_sle_deployment/?page=/documentation/sles11/book_sle_deployment/data/cha_update_auto.html

• Remote Desktop Protocol RDP (used in Windows environments)

‒ Support xrdp remote access (open source RDP server) x86_64

‒ Compatible with Microsoft Terminal Services Client

‒ Introduce FreeRDP client (Linux:) better performance and Interoperability

Improved Systems Management with 11SP2+

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Technology Preview

• KVM on System z (s390x)

• KVM nested virtualization with Intel VT‒ Will provide feature parity with AMD-V and Xen

• Include virtio-blk-data-plane (qemu)‒ Enables a high-performance code path for I/O requests

coming from KVM guests

Important• Remember:

‒ Not officially supported by SUSE

‒ Please test any of these features in the lab!

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High Availability

All maintenance updates released post SP2

Key Use Cases‒ Achieve high availability of mission-critical services

‒ Active/active services‒ OCFS2, Databases, Samba File Servers

‒ Active/passive service fail-over‒ Traditional databases, SAP setups, most regular services

‒ Private Cloud‒ HA, automation and orchestration for managed VMs

‒ High availability across guests‒ Build HA on top of a non-HA cloud

‒ Remote clustering‒ Local (GA), Metro (SP1), and Geographical (SP2) area clusters

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Thank you.

23

It's SHOWTIME!

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Thank you.

25

Break

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What is Cloud Computing

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A Conversation Before Cloud Computing

Business Executive

IT Manager

We need faster rollout of servicesThat’ll cost you

How much?I can’t say

Isn’t there unused capacity on systems we paid for?

Possibly, but it’s all part of a virtual pool of servers

I’d rather pay by user

Not going to happen

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Promise of Private Cloud Computing for Enterprises

• Lower costs‒ Reduce upfront capital expense

‒ Automation to reduce ongoing administration costs

• Increased agility‒ Dynamic configuration of IT resources

‒ Respond quickly to business demands

‒ Self-service provisioning

• Greater control and security‒ Data remains inside the firewall

‒ Standard enterprise security

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81%

79%

63%

36%

31%

80%

80%

60%

29%

28%

79%

77%

61%

23%

18%

2011 (N=1.240)

2010 (N=1.037)

2009 (N=1.020)

Consolidate IT infrastructure via server consolidation, data center consolidation, or server virtualizationMaintain or implement broad use of server virtualization as the standard server deployment model

Automate the management of virtualized servers to gain flexibility and resiliency

Build an internal private cloud operated by IT (not a service provider)

Use cloud infrastructure-as-a-service (IaaS) at a service provider

Enterprises Recognize the BenefitsPrivate Cloud Priority Increasing

Which of the following initiatives are likely to be your firm's / organization's top hardware / IT infrastructure priorities over the next 12 months ?

Percentage of respondents who answered "high" or "critical" priority

Base: North American and European IT decision makers at enterprise firms with 1.000+ employees

Source: Enterprise and SMB Hardware Survey, North America and Europe, Q3 2009Forrsight Hardware Survey, Q3 2010Forrsight Hardware Survey, Q3 2011

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A Conversation After Cloud Computing

Business Executive

IT Manager

We need faster rollout of services.Is later today OK?

How much?$1.50/hour.

What if I have to expand or shrink the user base?

No problem. You're in control.

I love you!Not going to happen. Cloud

Provider

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Cloud Computing Models: IT “as a Service”

SaaSGoogle Apps, Salesforce.com

IaaSAmazon EC2, Rackspace Cloud

SUSE Cloud,VMware vCloud

PaaSWindows Azure, Google App Engine

Windows AzurePlatform Appliance

Public Private

Storage / Servers / Networks

PeopleSoft,Intranet software

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Public Cloud Responsibilities

Data

Runtime

Middleware

OS

Virtual Machine

Servers

Storage

Networking

Applications

Data

Runtime

Middleware

OS

Virtual Machine

Servers

Storage

Networking

Applications

Data

Runtime

Middleware

OS

Virtual Machine

Servers

Storage

Networking

Applications

Infrastructure (IaaS) Platform (PaaS) Software (SaaS)

Ser

vice

Pro

vide

r

Ser

vice

Pro

vide

rC

usto

mer

Ser

vice

Pro

vide

rC

usto

mer

Hypervisor HypervisorHypervisor

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Private Cloud Responsibilities

Data

Runtime

Middleware

OS

Virtual Machine

Servers

Storage

Networking

Applications

Data

Runtime

Middleware

OS

Virtual Machine

Servers

Storage

Networking

Applications

Data

Runtime

Middleware

OS

Virtual Machine

Servers

Storage

Networking

Applications

Infrastructure (IaaS) Platform (PaaS) Software (SaaS)

IT

Line

of B

usin

ess

Hypervisor HypervisorHypervisor

IT

ITLi

ne o

f Bus

ines

s

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SUSE Strategy for Cloud Computing

Public Cloud:‒ Broadly deploy SUSE Linux Enterprise

Server through SUSE Cloud Service Provider Program

Private Cloud:‒ Deliver cloud infrastructure solution

powered by OpenStack

Hybrid Cloud:‒ Tightly integrate SUSE Studio and SUSE

Manager with SUSE Cloud to deliver a platform and tools that enable enterprise hybrid clouds

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Why OpenStack?

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How is SUSE Participating?

• Joined the OpenStack Foundation as a platinum member, which means we offer:

‒ Financial support

‒ Engineering support

‒ Legal support (helped to draft the bylaws)

• Alan Clark, SUSE, is chairman of the OpenStack Foundation Board

• Technical contributions focused on making OpenStack production ready

‒ Hardening and securing

‒ Making deployment and ongoing maintenance easier

‒ Improved Xen Hypervisor support

‒ Ongoing code contributions

• Promoting OpenStack in openSUSE Community

• Delivering an OpenStack distribution product

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Billing VM Mgmt Image ToolApp

Monitor Sec & Perf

Management

Portal

Why an OpenStack Distribution?

Compute(Nova)

Imag

es(G

lanc

e)

Au

then

tica

tio

n(K

eyst

one)

Ob

ject

(Sw

ift)

EC2 API Dashboard(Horizon)

OpenStack APIs

OpenStack Component

InstallFramework

SMTCrowbar

DHCPTFTPCHEF

Install Framework

Required ServicesRabbitMQ

PostgreSQL

Operating System

Physical Infrastructure: x86-64 server with virtualization

Hypervisor

Required Components

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DaysHours

Why an Install Framework?

Parameters

Components

782

11

2

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SUSE Cloud 101

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SUSE Cloud

SUSE Cloud is an open source software solution based on the OpenStack and Crowbar projects that provides the fundamental capabilities for enterprises to deploy an Infrastructure-as-a-Service Private Cloud

End Users

Self Service Portal

Image Repository

APIs

Automated● Configuration● Optimized

Deployment

APIsPool of Virtualized Servers(Compute Storage Nodes)

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SUSE Cloud 1.0

SUSE Cloud

RabbitMQ

PostgreSQL

Operating System: SUSE Linux Enterprise Server

Physical Infrastructure: Any x86-64 server certified on SUSE Linux Enterprise 11 SP2

Compute(Nova Essex)

Imag

es(G

lanc

e)

Au

then

tica

tio

n(K

eyst

one)

Ob

ject

(Sw

ift)

EC2 API

BillingCloudCruiser

VM MgmtSUSE Manager

Image ToolSUSE Studio App Monitor Sec & Perf

Dashboard(Horizon) OpenStack Cloud APIs

Admin Server

SMTCrowbarDHCPTFTPChef

Object(RADOS)

Block(RBD)

OpenStack Component SUSE Cloud Enhancement SUSE Product Partner Product

PortalRightScale

Hypervisor (Xen, KVM)

API Clients

RequiredServices

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Why SUSE Cloud?

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SUSE Studio™

• Award-winning image software customization tool and appliance builder

• Simplifies application deployment

• Build software appliances‒ Physical, virtual or cloud

‒ In minutes, not days

• Integrated deployment to SUSE Cloud

• Easy public cloud deployment

• http://susestudio.com

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• Manage both SUSE Linux Enterprise and Red Hat Enterprise Linux servers with a single centralized solution

• Automated and cost-effective software management, system provisioning/configuration/auditing and monitoring capabilities

• Manage Linux server deployments across physical, virtual and cloud environments

SUSE® Manager

SUSE Manager

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SUSE® Cloud-centric Lifecycle Management

Build

ImageCreation

Provision and Deploy

Manage andMonitor

Repositories

API

Test and QA

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Service-centric Lifecycle ManagementSUSE® Vision

Repositories

API

Build

ImageCreation

Test and QA

Provision and Deploy

Manage andMonitor

ServicesCreation

Services

API

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Integration Directions

• Goals‒ Cloud optimized workflow

‒ Single web portal into SUSE Cloud, SUSE Manager, SUSE Studio

• SUSE Studio‒ Create images for private and public clouds with single build

‒ Automatic insertion of management scripts and agents

• SUSE Manager‒ Visibility of VMs across cloud boundaries

‒ Controlled patching of thousands of VMs and images

‒ Physical – virtual correlation

• Image management options‒ Appliance or pre-deploy configuration

‒ Minimal OS + scripting or post deploy configuration

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Datacenter

SUSE Studio

The Demo

SUSE Manager Workflow Engine

Public CloudsSUSE Cloud

“Systems Engine”

Management

Provisioning

Monitoring

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Thank you.

49

It's SHOWTIME!

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SUSE Implement• SUSE Linux - High Availability

• SUSE Linux - Retail Design

• SUSE Manager Solution

• SUSE Linux core build

• Unix to SUSE Linux Enterprise Migration

• Nagios Monitoring Solution

• SAP on SUSE Linux Enterprise Sever

SUSE Consulting Solutions

• SUSE Linux Expert (Staff Aug)

• SUSE Start: SUSE Manager

• SUSE Start: SUSE Studio

• SUSE Start: SUSE Cloud

• SUSE Linux Health Check

SUSE Optimize

SUSE Start

SUSE Assist

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1. Two week rapid deployment of SUSE product

2. Rapid value realization of your new SUSE product investment

3. An out-of-the box installation and configuration of the SUSE product

4. Knowledge transfer

SUSE Start: SUSE Manager

SUSE Start: SUSE Studio

SUSE Start: SUSE Cloud

SUSE Start

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SUSE Cloud Training

• Custom Training

• Public Online Training

• On-demand Training

• Self-study Kits

• Introduction to SUSE Cloud (Free) - Course 1410

This course is designed for current and future cloud architects and administrators who are tasked with making their IT organization the cloud services provider of first resort for their enterprise. It covers the concept of Cloud Computing, provides a SUSE Cloud OpenStack Architecture overview, then takes you through a default setup of SUSE Cloud.

https://www.suse.com/training/suse-cloud/

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Consider a Proof Of Concept

3-5 days typical

On-site in your facility

Meet us after today's meeting to discuss your specific goals

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Thank you.

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Lunch

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SUSE Cloud 202

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SUSE Cloud Features Explained

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SUSE Cloud 1.0

SUSE Cloud

RabbitMQ

PostgreSQL

Operating System: SUSE Linux Enterprise Server

Physical Infrastructure: Any x86-64 server certified on SUSE Linux Enterprise 11 SP2

Compute(Nova Essex)

Imag

es(G

lanc

e)

Au

then

tica

tio

n(K

eyst

one)

Ob

ject

(Sw

ift)

EC2 API

BillingCloudCruiser

VM MgmtSUSE Manager

Image ToolSUSE Studio App Monitor Sec & Perf

Dashboard(Horizon) OpenStack Cloud APIs

Admin Server

SMTCrowbarDHCPTFTPChef

Object(RADOS)

Block(RBD)

OpenStack Component SUSE Cloud Enhancement SUSE Product Partner Product

PortalRightScale

Hypervisor (Xen, KVM)

API Clients

RequiredServices

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SUSE Cloud Install FrameworkAdmin Node

• Crowbar

‒ Open source project started by Dell

‒ Server discovery

‒ Firmware upgrades

‒ OS installation via PXE Boot

‒ Application deployment via Chef

• DHCP, DNS, TFTP, NTP, PXE

• SMT

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SUSE Cloud Install FrameworkTopology Workflow

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SUSE Cloud Controller

• PostgreSQL database

• Image Service (Glance) for managing virtual images

• Identity (Keystone), providing authentication and authorization for all SUSE Cloud services

• Dashboard (Horizon), providing the Dashboard, which is a user Web interface for the SUSE Cloud services

• Nova API and scheduler

• Message broker (RabbitMQ)

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SUSE Cloud Compute Nodes

• Pool of machines where instances run

• Equiped with RAM and CPU

• SUSE Cloud Compute (nova) service‒ Setting up, starting, stopping, migration of VM's

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SUSE Cloud Storage Nodes

• Pool of machines providing storage

• Object storage provided by swift‒ optional

• Block storage provided by Nova Volume‒ Multiple backends

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SUSE Cloud Logical Network Diagram

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Building a cloudThings to think about before you make the jump

Authentication Backend

Hypervisor(s)

Storage‒ Compute – on-node vs off-node, shared vs individual

‒ Block Storage - Local vs Network

‒ Object Storage – Ceph/Swift/none

Networking‒ 1 GB vs 10 GB, bonded vs individual data paths

‒ How public is your cloud?

‒ HTTP vs HTTPS

‒ Determine appropriate subnets

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SUSE Cloud IdentityOpenStack “Keystone”

• Central directory of users for OpenStack services

• Common authentication system

• Integrates with existing directories like LDAP

‒ eDirectory, Active Directory

‒ openLDAP

• Supports multiple forms of authentication

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SUSE Cloud Image Service OpenStack “Glance”

• Delivery service for the images

• Ability to copy, snapshot and store images

• Stored images can be used as a template

• Move images between object storage and compute nodes

• API available to gather information about the images

• One-click application deployment from SUSE Studio

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SUSE Cloud Compute OpenStack “Nova”

• Hypervisor (KVM, Xen)

‒ As of SUSE Cloud 1.0 choosing more than one hypervisor is not supported.

‒ Hyper-V, VMware planned in future

• Device for nova-volume storage volume group

‒ Runs on Controller

‒ Make sure you have enough disk space

• Security Attributes (HTTP, HTTPS)

• Nova-multi-controller

‒ Distributing and scheduling the instances

• Nova-multi-compute

‒ Provides the hypervisor and tools needed to manage instances

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SUSE Cloud DashboardOpenStack “Horizon”

• Graphical interface for administrators and users

• Provides

‒ Access

‒ Provisioning

‒ Automation

• Built to be extensible for third-party products (billing, monitoring)

• Provides OpenStack API and EC2 compatibility API

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SUSE Cloud Storage ConceptsEphemeral Storage

• Used for running operating system and scratch space

• Accessed via a file system

• Accessible from within a VM

• Managed by SUSE Cloud Compute

• Persists until VM is terminated

• Sizing is determined by known flavors defined by the administrator

• Typically you can have a 10GB first disk and 30GB second disk

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SUSE Cloud Storage ConceptsBlock Storage

• Used for adding additional persistent storage to a VM

• Accessed via a block device, which can be partitioned formatted and mounted.

• Accessible from within a VM

• Managed by SUSE Cloud Block Storage (Cinder)

• Persists until its deleted by the user

• Sizing is specified by user in initial request

• Typically you could request any size block device for your use case

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SUSE Cloud Storage ConceptsObject Storage

• Used for storing data, including VM images

• Accessed via a REST API

• Accessible from anywhere

• Managed by SUSE Cloud Object Storage (swift)

• Persists until its deleted by the user

• Sizing determined by amount of available storage

• Typically you would have 10s of Tbs of dataset storage

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SUSE Cloud Object StorageOpenStack “Swift”

• Redundant storage system

• Objects and files are written to multiple disks spread to different servers in the data center

• Scales horizontally

• Content replication to all active nodes

• Integrates with SUSE Cloud Identity, and works with SUSE Cloud Dashboard interface

• Commodity / Inexpensive

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SUSE Cloud Block StorageOpenStack “Cinder”

• Persistent block level storage

• Manages creating attaching and detaching of block devices for VMs

• Integrated into OpenStack Compute allowing users to manage their own storage from the Dashboard

• Supports a variety of storage solutions through vendor provided plug-ins

• Provides snapshot management

• Also includes Ceph (Tech Preview)

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SUSE Cloud Object and Block StorageCeph Project

• Ceph Overview‒ Unified cloud storage ‒ object and block in a

single system

‒ An alternative for Swift, integrated with SUSE Cloud Block Storage (Cinder)

• SUSE Cloud and Ceph‒ Native Cinder block provider for object, image

and volume storage

‒ Integrates with Nova for provisioning

‒ ReSTful API

‒ SUSE Cloud Technical Preview

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SUSE Cloud Object and Block StorageConsiderations

Your Choice

‒ Do my users need block storage?

‒ Do my users need object storage?

‒ Do I need to support live migration?

Object Storage (Swift)

‒ Unified authentication for compute and object storage

‒ Control your object storage with the dashboard

‒ More mature project

Ceph

‒ Greater flexibility of data distribution and replication strategies.

‒ Fast provisioning of boot-from-volume instances

‒ Manage your object and block storage within a single system

See Deployment Guide:

https://www.suse.com/documentation/suse_cloud10/

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SUSE Cloud Logical Network Diagram

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SUSE Cloud Network OpenStack “Network”

• Networking as a service

• Scalable network management

• API Provided to build rich network topologies

‒ Example: create multi-tier application topology

• Build advanced network services

‒ Examples: LB-aaS, VPN-aaS, Firewall-aaS, IDS-aaS etc.

• Plugin enabled to extend capabilities

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78

It's SHOWTIME!

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SUSE Cloud Future / Roadmap

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SUSE Cloud Roadmap Q1 2013 Q2 2013 Q3 2013 Q4 2013 Q1 2014 Q2 2014

SUSE Cloud

SUSE Cloud 2.0• OpenStack Grizzly

– Nova– Glance– Dashboard– Keystone– Swift– Cinder (RBD, EMC)– Network (OpenVSwitch, Cisco,

bridging)• Crowbar 1.5• Ceph

– RBD/Rados/RadosGW– Full support (target)

• Xen, KVM, HyperV (Crowbar install), ESXi (target)

• Themes– Grizzly– Multi-hypervisor

SUSE Cloud 3.0 (target)• OpenStack Havana

– Ceilometer (metering)– Network (more plugins) – Heat

• HA– Control Plane– Guest– Availability zones– Upgrade

• SUSE Studio/Manager– Full integration (TBD)

• Xen, KVM, ESXi, HyperV• Themes

– HA– Havana– Multi-hypervisor– Life Cycle management

GA GAβ

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SUSE Cloud 1.0

SUSE Cloud

RabbitMQ

PostgreSQL

Operating System: SUSE Linux Enterprise Server

Physical Infrastructure: Any x86-64 server certified on SUSE Linux Enterprise 11 SP2

Compute(Nova Essex)

Imag

es(G

lanc

e)

Au

then

tica

tio

n(K

eyst

one)

Ob

ject

(Sw

ift)

EC2 API

BillingCloudCruiser

VM MgmtSUSE Manager

Image ToolSUSE Studio App Monitor Sec & Perf

Dashboard(Horizon) OpenStack Cloud APIs

Admin Server

SMTCrowbarDHCPTFTPChef

Object(RADOS)

Block(RBD)

OpenStack Component SUSE Cloud Enhancement SUSE Product Partner Product

PortalRightScale

Hypervisor (Xen, KVM)

API Clients

RequiredServices

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SUSE Cloud 2.0 (target 3Q2013)

SUSE Cloud

RequiredServicesRabbitMQ

PostgreSQL

Operating System: SUSE Linux Enterprise Server

Physical Infrastructure: Any x86-64 server certified on SUSE Linux Enterprise 11 SP2

Compute(Nova Grizzly)

Imag

es(G

lanc

e)

Au

then

tica

tio

n(K

eyst

one)

Ob

ject

(Sw

ift)

EC2 API

BillingCloudCruiser

VM MgmtSUSE Manager

Image ToolSUSE Studio App Monitor Sec & Perf

Dashboard(Horizon) OpenStack Cloud APIs

Admin Server

SMTCrowbar 2

DHCPTFTPChef

OpenStack Component SUSE Cloud Enhancement SUSE Product Partner Product

PortalRightScale

Hypervisor(Xen, KVM)

API Clients

Hypervisor(HyperV)

Object(RADOS)

Block(RBD)

Vo

lum

e

Net

wo

rk(N

etw

ork

ing)

(Cin

de

r)

S3(RGW)

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SUSE Implement• SUSE Linux - High Availability

• SUSE Linux - Retail Design

• SUSE Manager Solution

• SUSE Linux core build

• Unix to SUSE Linux Enterprise Migration

• Nagios Monitoring Solution

• SAP on SUSE Linux Enterprise Sever

SUSE Consulting Solutions

• SUSE Linux Expert (Staff Aug)

• SUSE Start: SUSE Manager

• SUSE Start: SUSE Studio

• SUSE Start: SUSE Cloud

• SUSE Linux Health Check

SUSE Optimize

SUSE Start

SUSE Assist

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1. Two week rapid deployment of SUSE product

2. Rapid value realization of your new SUSE product investment

3. An out-of-the box installation and configuration of the SUSE product

4. Knowledge transfer

SUSE Start: SUSE Manager

SUSE Start: SUSE Studio

SUSE Start: SUSE Cloud

SUSE Start

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SUSE Cloud Training

• Custom Training

• Public Online Training

• On-demand Training

• Self-study Kits

• Introduction to SUSE Cloud (Free) - Course 1410

This course is designed for current and future cloud architects and administrators who are tasked with making their IT organization the cloud services provider of first resort for their enterprise. It covers the concept of Cloud Computing, provides a SUSE Cloud OpenStack Architecture overview, then takes you through a default setup of SUSE Cloud.

https://www.suse.com/training/suse-cloud/

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Consider a Proof Of Concept

3-5 days typical

On-site in your facility

Meet us after today's meeting to discuss your specific goals

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Stay In Touch with SUSE – All Year!

• 4 Days Everything Linux

• November 12-15, 2013

• Lake Buena Vista, Florida

• www.susecon.com

SUSE Communities• SUSE Conversations

• Linux Headlines

• Support Forums

• www.suse.com/conmmunities

• Subscriptions

• Training

• Merchandise

• www.suse.com/shop

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Appendix

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Ceph / RBD / RADOS

• RADOS Object Store

‒ Foundation for Ceph Clusters

• RADOS Gateway

‒ Object Store

‒ Provides OSD (object store daemon)

‒ librados for RESTful API to RADOS clusters

‒ Amazon S3 compatible API

‒ Swift compatible

• RBD (RADOS Block Device)

‒ librbd or kernel module interaction (RBD Caching)

‒ Resizable, Snapshotting, Replication and Consistency

‒ Store data striped over multiple OSDs

• Ceph FS

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One-year Subscription Prices

Note: This structure is similar to SUSE Manager

SUSE Cloud Administration Server: $10,000● Also includes first SUSE Cloud Control Node● Includes SUSE Linux Enterprise Server entitlement● Priority support

Additional SUSE Cloud Control Nodes: $2,500/control node● Used for expansion – customers needs to have SUSE Cloud admin server● Includes SUSE Linux Enterprise Server entitlement● Priority Support

SUSE Cloud Compute/Storage Node: $800/socket-pair● Required for every node in the cloud● Does not include SUSE Linux Enterprise Server subscription or entitlement● In future will be required to support other hypervisors● Customer needs to purchase unlimited VM SKU for SUSE Linux Enterprise

Server – can be basic

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SUSE® Cloud Structure

Admin Server

Control Node

Compute /Storage Node

CustomerCenter

Cloud Control

• SLES• Database• Message queue• Self-Service Portal• Image Repository• Centralized Tracking• Scheduler• Identity and Authentication• Storage

• SLES• Xen or KVM• Cloud Compute• Storage proxy

Crowbar + PXE Boot

• SLES• Chef server• Crowbar• Software mirror• TFTP• PXE Server

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Corporate HeadquartersMaxfeldstrasse 590409 NurembergGermany

+49 911 740 53 0 (Worldwide)www.suse.com

Join us on:www.opensuse.org

92

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Unpublished Work of SUSE. All Rights Reserved.This work is an unpublished work and contains confidential, proprietary and trade secret information of SUSE. Access to this work is restricted to SUSE employees who have a need to know to perform tasks within the scope of their assignments. No part of this work may be practiced, performed, copied, distributed, revised, modified, translated, abridged, condensed, expanded, collected, or adapted without the prior written consent of SUSE. Any use or exploitation of this work without authorization could subject the perpetrator to criminal and civil liability.

General DisclaimerThis document is not to be construed as a promise by any participating company to develop, deliver, or market a product. It is not a commitment to deliver any material, code, or functionality, and should not be relied upon in making purchasing decisions. SUSE makes no representations or warranties with respect to the contents of this document, and specifically disclaims any express or implied warranties of merchantability or fitness for any particular purpose. The development, release, and timing of features or functionality described for SUSE products remains at the sole discretion of SUSE. Further, SUSE reserves the right to revise this document and to make changes to its content, at any time, without obligation to notify any person or entity of such revisions or changes. All SUSE marks referenced in this presentation are trademarks or registered trademarks of Novell, Inc. in the United States and other countries. All third-party trademarks are the property of their respective owners.