[Openstack-operators] [openstack-dev] [nova] [neutron] Re: How do your end users use networking?

Fox, Kevin M Kevin.Fox at pnnl.gov
Wed Jun 17 15:55:23 UTC 2015


The biggest issue we have run into with multiple public networks is restricting which users can use which networks. We have the same issue, where we may have an internal public network for the datacenter, but also, say, a DMZ network we want to put some vm's on, but can't currently extend that network easily there because too many tenants will be able to launch vm's attached to the DMZ that don't have authorization. Quota's or acls or something on public networks are really needed.

Thanks,
Kevin
________________________________________
From: Neil Jerram [Neil.Jerram at metaswitch.com]
Sent: Wednesday, June 17, 2015 4:28 AM
To: Jay Pipes; openstack-operators at lists.openstack.org; openstack-dev at lists.openstack.org; Kyle Mestery
Subject: Re: [openstack-dev] [Openstack-operators] [nova] [neutron] Re: How do your end users use networking?

Couple more dumb comments here - sorry that I'm processing this thread
backwards!

On 16/06/15 15:20, Jay Pipes wrote:
> Adding -dev because of the reference to the Neutron "Get me a network
> spec". Also adding [nova] and [neutron] subject markers.
>
> Comments inline, Kris.
>
> On 05/22/2015 09:28 PM, Kris G. Lindgren wrote:
>> During the Openstack summit this week I got to talk to a number of other
>> operators of large Openstack deployments about how they do networking.
>>   I was happy, surprised even, to find that a number of us are using a
>> similar type of networking strategy.  That we have similar challenges
>> around networking and are solving it in our own but very similar way.
>>   It is always nice to see that other people are doing the same things
>> as you or see the same issues as you are and that "you are not crazy".
>> So in that vein, I wanted to reach out to the rest of the Ops Community
>> and ask one pretty simple question.
>>
>> Would it be accurate to say that most of your end users want almost
>> nothing to do with the network?
>
> That was my experience at AT&T, yes. The vast majority of end users
> could not care less about networking, as long as the connectivity was
> reliable, performed well, and they could connect to the Internet (and
> have others connect from the Internet to their VMs) when needed.
>
>> In my experience what the majority of them (both internal and external)
>> want is to consume from Openstack a compute resource, a property of
>> which is it that resource has an IP address.  They, at most, care about
>> which "network" they are on.  Where a "network" is usually an arbitrary
>> definition around a set of real networks, that are constrained to a
>> location, in which the company has attached some sort of policy.  For
>> example, I want to be in the production network vs's the xyz lab
>> network, vs's the backup network, vs's the corp network.  I would say
>> for Godaddy, 99% of our use cases would be defined as: I want a compute
>> resource in the production network zone, or I want a compute resource in
>> this other network zone.

Kris - this looks like the answer to my question why you define multiple
networks.  If that's right, no need to answer that question there.

>>  The end user only cares that the IP the vm
>> receives works in that zone, outside of that they don't care any other
>> property of that IP.  They do not care what subnet it is in, what vlan
>> it is on, what switch it is attached to, what router its attached to, or
>> how data flows in/out of that network.  It just needs to work.

Agreed.  I'm not a deployer, but my team is in contact with many
deployers who say similar things.

Regards,
        Neil

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