Hi,
During the recent kolla PTG discussions [1], we covered CentOS 8 in some detail. For kolla there are several aspects to CentOS 8 support:
* kolla-build execution host * container images * kolla-ansible execution host * kolla-ansible remote hosts
In this context I am discussing the last of these - kolla-ansible remote hosts, i.e. the OS on the controllers and computes etc. Given that this could be quite a thorny problem, I'd like to propose that we collaborate between deployment projects.
It is my understanding that upgrades from CentOS 7 to 8 will not be supported, and a reinstall is required. We set out some goals for the migration:
* Migrate hosts from CentOS 7 to CentOS 8 * Upgrade from Train CentOS 7 containers to Ussuri CentOS 8 containers * Note: this means Ussuri containers (CentOS 8) don't land on CentOS 7 * Decouple the CentOS 7 to 8 and OpenStack upgrades, to avoid operator pain * Avoid excessive downtime
There is a Red Hat policy [2] that suggests that if you mix host and container OS versions, it is safer for the host to be ahead of the container. This makes sense if you think about userland accessing kernel features.
This leads us to the following migration path:
* Start with Train release, CentOS 7 containers * Redeploy (rolling) hosts with CentOS 8 * Provision * Configure host OS * Redeploy Train containers with CentOS 7 * Upgrade to Ussuri release, CentOS 8 containers
The logic we used to come up with this procedure is as follows:
* Host must be upgraded to CentOS 7 before containers (going on policy) * Train containers don't support CentOS 8 base due to RDO * Ussuri containers don't support CentOS 7 base due to RDO * Want to separate CentOS 7 -> 8 migration from OpenStack upgrade
This leads us to the conclusion that at least one release of kolla-ansible must bridge these worlds, since we will be deploying Train containers on CentOS 8. We could do either of:
1. Train k-a supports CentOS 8 hosts 2. Ussuri k-a supports deploying Train containers
While 1. may require us to backport more than we would like, supporting deployment of multiple OpenStack releases could be challenging, so we expect to go with 1 here.
There are some risks involved, including:
* some Train services may not work on CentOS 8 * ceph? * OVS & neutron agents? * libvirt? * Ansible minimum version 2.8 for CentOS 8 (ref?)
Hopefully we can save ourselves some effort and solve this together.
[1] https://etherpad.openstack.org/p/kolla-ussuri-ptg [2] https://access.redhat.com/support/policy/rhel-container-compatibility
Thanks, Mark