Thanks for the information, I have a few questions: What packages are you referring to? Did I install the wrong spice packages to make spice run? You note installers are popular, but I was under the impression the only installer was the "single machine" developer installer, and not one for a controller node, five compute nodes and a block storage node. Am I missing something? Is there an installer where I can just install Openstack "controller" on the controller, "compute" on the compute nodes and say "swift" or "cinder" on my storage node, and it will all be configured to work together? That would save me some real configuration time. I have already installed it three times by hand (Rocky, Pike, Victoria), and that is a fair amount of work. Thanks. On 2021-08-09 02:21, Matthias Runge wrote:
On Sat, Aug 07, 2021 at 10:10:20AM -0500, number9 wrote:
Are you suggesting that I rebuild my six servers with Debian in order to get spice working?
I thought Ubuntu server was a supported platform (e.g. the docs say RHEL, SuSe, Ubuntu)?
Would moving to Wallaby help? I am hesitant, as I have tried to get vnc and novnc working on Rocky and Pike with the same results. The problem is I really _need_ it to work for next semester so the students can access their vms over the web for some remote classes.
Thanks.
Hi,
from the error description, I can only suspect you may be able to see the error message in Horizon logs. Usually a "Something went wrong" message is the nicer way for a 500 server error.
If I understood correctly what Thomas was trying to suggest is: Ubuntu and Debian packages should work on both systems, i.e. you should be able to use the Debian packages on Ubuntu. Thomas puts a lot of effort in these.
OpenStack is quite easy to misconfigure, and you can waste some time in finding your own typos (or the one in guides). This is why installers are popular.
Matthias