[Openstack] VPNaaS: vpn-service-create stays in PENDING_CREATE
Paul Michali (pcm)
pcm at cisco.com
Thu Oct 2 10:50:42 UTC 2014
Great! Glad to see it working out.
Regards,
PCM (Paul Michali)
MAIL …..…. pcm at cisco.com
IRC ……..… pcm_ (irc.freenode.com)
TW ………... @pmichali
GPG Key … 4525ECC253E31A83
Fingerprint .. 307A 96BB 1A4C D2C7 931D 8D2D 4525 ECC2 53E3 1A83
On Oct 2, 2014, at 5:40 AM, Stinner, Thomas <Thomas.Stinner at schweickertgruppe.de> wrote:
> I had not installed the neutron-vpn package. Now it’s working.
>
> Thank you.
>
>
> Von: Paul Michali (pcm) [mailto:pcm at cisco.com]
> Gesendet: Mittwoch, 1. Oktober 2014 17:48
> An: Stinner, Thomas
> Cc: openstack at lists.openstack.org
> Betreff: Re: [Openstack] VPNaaS: vpn-service-create stays in PENDING_CREATE
>
> You probably want to look to see if you have the VPN service_provider is set in neutron.conf file and make sure that the vpn_device_driver is uncommented in vpn_agent.ini (both files in /etc/neutron/).
>
> When those are set up, then you’ll have the service and device drivers running and talking to one another. In devstack we confirm that by looking at the screen-q-svc.log and screen-q-vpn.log to make sure the two are hooked up and talking (otherwise it just writes to the database). Not sure where these logs are with openstack (maybe syslog?).
>
> HTHs,
>
> PCM (Paul Michali)
>
> MAIL …..…. pcm at cisco.com
> IRC ……..… pcm_ (irc.freenode.com)
> TW ………... @pmichali
> GPG Key … 4525ECC253E31A83
> Fingerprint .. 307A 96BB 1A4C D2C7 931D 8D2D 4525 ECC2 53E3 1A83
>
>
>
> On Oct 1, 2014, at 9:37 AM, Stinner, Thomas <Thomas.Stinner at schweickertgruppe.de> wrote:
>
>
> Hi Paul,
>
> thanks for the tipp. However, even after adding a vpn connection nothing changes. No openswan files are created and I also do not see any vpnaas log files.
>
> The vpn connection itself also stays in “PENDING_CREATE” state.
>
> Greetings
> Thomas
>
>
> Von: Paul Michali (pcm) [mailto:pcm at cisco.com]
> Gesendet: Mittwoch, 1. Oktober 2014 13:16
> An: Stinner, Thomas
> Cc: openstack at lists.openstack.org
> Betreff: Re: [Openstack] VPNaaS: vpn-service-create stays in PENDING_CREATE
>
> Hi Thomas,
>
> It’ll stay in that state, until you add a VPN connection to the service (can’t recall if just adding will make it active or if the connection needs to be up - I think it is just the former for the reference VPN implementation). There’s not much for info on VPN, but here’s a how-to page that may help a bit…
>
> https://wiki.openstack.org/wiki/Neutron/VPNaaS/HowToInstall
>
>
> PCM (Paul Michali)
>
> MAIL …..…. pcm at cisco.com
> IRC ……..… pcm_ (irc.freenode.com)
> TW ………... @pmichali
> GPG Key … 4525ECC253E31A83
> Fingerprint .. 307A 96BB 1A4C D2C7 931D 8D2D 4525 ECC2 53E3 1A83
>
>
>
> On Oct 1, 2014, at 3:44 AM, Stinner, Thomas <Thomas.Stinner at schweickertgruppe.de> wrote:
>
>
>
> Hi,
>
> i have a small lab environment with one controller node, one network node and two compute nodes.
>
> I’d like to try out VPNaaS (among other things) and therefore enabled the vpnaas service plugin in neutron.conf.
>
> However, when issuing a vpn-service-create the service keeps in state PENDING_CREATE und I actually do not have any idea where to start debugging this.
>
> Any advice on this? What is the normal workflow that should happen after issuing vpn-service-create?
>
> Thanks
> Thomas
> _______________________________________________
> Mailing list: http://lists.openstack.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/openstack
> Post to : openstack at lists.openstack.org
> Unsubscribe : http://lists.openstack.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/openstack
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://lists.openstack.org/pipermail/openstack/attachments/20141002/3f907807/attachment.html>
-------------- next part --------------
A non-text attachment was scrubbed...
Name: signature.asc
Type: application/pgp-signature
Size: 842 bytes
Desc: Message signed with OpenPGP using GPGMail
URL: <http://lists.openstack.org/pipermail/openstack/attachments/20141002/3f907807/attachment.sig>
More information about the Openstack
mailing list