VMware Integrated OpenStack 4.1.2.3 | 29 AUG 2019 | Build 14459238

Check for additions and updates to these release notes.

What's in the Release Notes

The release notes cover the following topics:

About VMware Integrated OpenStack

VMware Integrated OpenStack greatly simplifies deploying an OpenStack cloud infrastructure by streamlining the integration process. VMware Integrated OpenStack delivers out-of-the-box OpenStack functionality and an easy configuration workflow through a deployment manager vApp that runs directly in vCenter Server.

Compatibility

See the VMware Product Interoperability Matrices for details about the compatibility of VMware Integrated OpenStack with other VMware products, including vSphere components.

Upgrading to Version 4.1.2.3

The upgrade to VMware Integrated OpenStack 4.1.2.3 is a patch process. The process varies depending upon your current installed version of VMware Integrated OpenStack.

Patch Process

If you are running VMware Integrated OpenStack 4.1, 4.1.1, 4.1.2, 4.1.2.1, or 4.1.2.2, you can apply the patch directly to your existing deployment. To do so, perform the following steps:

  1. Verify that your OpenStack deployment is either running or not yet deployed. If the VMware Integrated OpenStack deployment is in any other state, the upgrade will fail.
    NOTE: If you are patching from version 4.1.0 and you have not yet deployed OpenStack, you must run the viopatch install command twice. Ignore the error displayed when you run the command for the first time and run the command again.
  2. In the vSphere Web Client, take a snapshot of the OpenStack Management Server virtual machine.

  3. On the OpenStack Management Server virtual machine, take a snapshot by running the following command:
    sudo viopatch snapshot take
    This command stops OpenStack services. Services will be started again when the patch is installed.
    NOTE: If the command fails, see "For deployments using a remote vCenter Server, the viopatch command fails to take snapshots" in the Known Issues section.

  4. Download the patch file to the OpenStack Management Server virtual machine.

  5. Add the patch file by running the following command:
    sudo viopatch add -l path/vio-patch-4.1.2.3_4.1.2.14459238_all.deb

  6. Install the patch file by running the following command:
    sudo viopatch install -p vio-patch-4.1.2.3 -v 4.1.2.14459238
    NOTE: Infrastructure services will be restarted during the patch process.
    During the patch installation, the API endpoint is automatically turned off. As a result, any API calls during installation will return a 503 error.

  7. Log out of the vSphere Web Client and log back in. Any error messages encountered during login can be ignored.

NOTE: The viopatch uninstall action is deprecated and cannot be used to revert to the previous version. The snapshots created in the patch process are therefore necessary for reversion. Do not remove these snapshots until all validation tasks have been completed and you are certain that you will not need to revert to the previous version.

After you have validated that the patched version is operating correctly, you can run sudo viopatch snapshot remove to delete the snapshot. This action is destructive and cannot be reversed.

If you need to revert to the previous version after installing the patch, perform the following steps.

  1. On the OpenStack Management Server virtual machine, revert to the previous snapshot by running the following command:
    sudo viopatch snapshot revert

  2. In the vSphere Web Client, revert the OpenStack Management Server virtual machine to the previous snapshot.

  3. On the OpenStack Management Server virtual machine, restart the OpenStack service by running the following command:
    sudo service oms restart

  4. On the vCenter Server virtual machine, stop the vSphere client service, delete residual files, and restart the service:
    • For vSphere 6.5 or later, run the following commands:
      service-control --stop vsphere-client
      cd /etc/vmware/vsphere-client/vc-packages/vsphere-client-serenity/
      rm -rf *
      cd /usr/lib/vmware-vsphere-client/server/work
      rm -rf *
      service-control --start vsphere-client

    • For vSphere 6.0, run the following commands:
      service vsphere-client stop
      cd /etc/vmware/vsphere-client/vc-packages/vsphere-client-serenity/
      rm -rf *
      service vsphere-client start

    • For vSphere 5.5, run the following commands:
      service vsphere-client stop
      cd /var/lib/vmware/vsphere-client/vc-packages/vsphere-client-serenity/
      rm -rf *
      service vsphere-client start

  5. Log out of the vSphere Web Client and log back in.

Older Versions

To upgrade from VMware Integrated OpenStack 4.0 to VMware Integrated OpenStack 4.1.2.3, perform the following steps:

  1. Upgrade to VMware Integrated OpenStack 4.1 as described in Patch VMware Integrated OpenStack.
  2. Apply the VMware Integrated OpenStack 4.1.2.3 patch as described above.

NOTE: Upgrading from VMware Integrated OpenStack 3.1 directly to 4.1.2.1 or later is not supported. You must first migrate to version 4.1.2 and then patch to the desired version.

To upgrade from VMware Integrated OpenStack 3.1 to VMware Integrated OpenStack 4.1.2.3, perform the following steps:

  1. Deploy the VMware Integrated OpenStack 4.1 OVA as described in Install the New Version.
  2. On the new 4.1 deployment, apply the VMware Integrated OpenStack 4.1.2 patch as described in the VMware Integrated OpenStack 4.1.2 Release Notes.
  3. Migrate to the patched deployment as described in Migrate to the New VMware Integrated OpenStack Deployment.
  4. Apply the VMware Integrated OpenStack 4.1.2.3 patch as described above.

NOTE: If you have configured floating IP addresses on a router with source NAT disabled, enable source NAT or remove the floating IP addresses before upgrading to version 4.1.2.3. Floating IP addresses are no longer supported on routers with source NAT disabled.

Internationalization

VMware Integrated OpenStack 4.1.2.3 is available in English and seven additional languages: Simplified Chinese, Traditional Chinese, Japanese, Korean, French, German, and Spanish.

The following items must contain only ASCII characters:

  • Names of OpenStack resources (such as projects, users, and images)
  • Names of infrastructure components (such as ESXi hosts, port groups, data centers, and datastores)
  • LDAP and Active Directory attributes

Open Source Components for VMware Integrated OpenStack

The copyright statements and licenses applicable to the open source software components distributed in VMware Integrated OpenStack 4.1.2.2 are available on the Open Source tab of the product download page. You can also download the disclosure packages for the components of VMware Integrated OpenStack that are governed by the GPL, LGPL, or other similar licenses that require the source code or modifications to source code to be made available.

Resolved Issues

  • Additional parameters have been added to the custom.yml file.

    The following items can now be configured in custom.yml:

    • cinder_vmware_image_transfer_timeout_secs - sets the timeout in seconds for transferring a VMDK volume between Cinder and Glance.
  • After an interface is removed from a virtual machine in vSphere, its logical ports cannot be deleted in OpenStack.

    If you use vSphere to remove an interface from a virtual machine corresponding to an OpenStack instance, OpenStack becomes unable to detach the Neutron ports on that interface.

    This issue has been resolved in this release.

  • A disk resize failure on an instance may prevent subsequent disk resize operations from succeeding on the instance.

    After a disk resize operation fails, it is possible that a stale disk may remain on the instance. This causes later resize operations to fail.

    This issue has been resolved in this release.

  • Concurrent operations on a virtual machine may fail.

    If an OpenStack operation and a vSphere operation are performed at the same time on the same virtual machine, the OpenStack operation may fail.

    This issue has been resolved in this release.

  • A DRS conflict may prevent OpenStack instances from booting.

    If a DRS conflict occurs while an instance is being launched, ports might not be cleaned up and the launch process may time out.

    This issue has been resolved in this release.

  • Serial console logs are not rotated and may occupy excessive disk space.

    Log files generated by the Virtual Serial Port Concentrator (vSPC), located in the /var/log/vspc directory on the compute node, are not rotated and can eventually take up too much disk space.

    This issue has been resolved in this release.

Known Issues

The known issues are grouped as follows.

VMware Integrated OpenStack
  • After an instance and shadow virtual machine are migrated to a different availability zone, the availability zone of the volume is not updated accordingly.

    Because shadow virtual machines are migrated out of band, the availability zone of the volume is not automatically changed during the migration.

    Workaround: Manually update the availability zone.

    1. Log in to the controller as viouser.
    2. Run the following command:
      sudo -u cinder cinder-manage volume update_volume_host --volume_id volume-uuid --newhost cinder-volume-host --zone az-name
  • VMware Integrated OpenStack cannot connect to NSX-T after the NSX-T password is changed.

    If you change the NSX-T password while the Neutron server is running, VMware Integrated OpenStack might fail to connect to NSX-T.

    Workaround: Before changing the NSX-T password, log in to the active controller node and run the systemctl stop neutron-server command to stop the Neutron server service. The service will be restarted after you update the NSX-T password in VMware Integrated OpenStack.

  • For deployments using a remote vCenter Server, the viopatch command fails to take snapshots

    In a deployment where all control virtual machines are deployed in a management vCenter Server instance and use a Nova compute node deployed in a remote vCenter Server instance, the viopatch snapshot take command cannot obtain information about the management vCenter Server instance. The command fails with the error "AttributeError: 'NoneType' object has no attribute 'snapshot'."

    Workaround: On the OpenStack Management Server virtual machine, manually set the IP address, username, and password of the management vCenter Server by running the following commands:

    export VCENTER_HOSTNAME = mgmt-vc-ip-address
    export VCENTER_USERNAME = mgmt-vc-username
    export VCENTER_PASSWORD = mgmt-vc-password
  • The OpenStack GUI only exports the original value of the public virtual IP address.

    If the public virtual IP address is changed and the VMware Integrated OpenStack or OpenStack configuration is exported and reloaded on setup, the exported configuration will contain the public virtual IP address of the original configuration, not the updated value.

    Workaround: Update the public virtual IP address in the exported and saved configuration file before reloading the OpenStack configuration. Alternatively, update the public virtual IP address in the GUI when confirming the redeployment.

  • The public load balancer IP address conflicts with the OpenStack API access network.

    If configured outside of the GUI, the IP address of the public load balancer might overlap with the OpenStack API access network. When the configuration is exported and re-applied to the OpenStack or VMware Integrated OpenStack setup, the IP address overlap will not be allowed.

    Workaround: When providing or configuring IP addresses, ensure that the public load balancer IP address does not overlap with the OpenStack API access network.

  • A load balancer goes into the ERROR state.

    If a load balancer is created using a subnet that is not connected to a tier-1 network router, the load balancer cannot be successfully created and will enter the ERROR state.

    Workaround: Attach a tier-1 network router to the subnet before creating a load balancer.

  • Certificate verification may fail on the OpenStack Management Server.

    When you use the viocli command-line utility, the following error may occur:

    ssl.SSLError: [SSL: CERTIFICATE_VERIFY_FAILED] certificate verify failed (_ssl.c:590)

    Workaround: On the OpenStack Management Server, disable verification of the vCenter Server certificate by running the following commands:

    sudo su -
    export VCENTER_INSECURE=True
    
  • When you remove a gateway of a BGP-enabled shared router, a brief network outage may occur on other BGP-enabled shared routers.

    In an environment with shared routers, multiple routers may be hosted on the same edge. If BGP is enabled, the gateway IP address of one of those routers is used as the router id. When the gateway of a router is cleared, the plugin selects the gateway of another BGP-enabled router as the new value of router id. This process causes a temporary disruption in peering because the advertised routes for the other BGP-enabled routers hosted on that edge are lost.

    Workaround: Use an exclusive router.

  • Service disruption occurs during refresh of Nova or Neutron services.

    If VMware Integrated OpenStack detects an OpenStack setting that does not meet license requirements, it tries to correct the setting by restarting Nova or Neutron services.

    Workaround: None. Assign your license before deploying OpenStack to ensure that OpenStack settings meet license requirements.

  • For NSX-T deployments, a new tier-0 router does not connect to tier-1 routers during router-gateway-set.

    If you create a tier-0 router when you already have one configured, the UUID of the new router is not automatically written to the nsxv3.ini file. Tier-1 routers that you create afterward do not connect to your new tier-0 router.

    Workaround: Manually update the nsxv3.ini file and recreate your external network.

    1. Find the UUID of your new tier-0 router.
    2. Open the  /etc/neutron/plugin/vmware/nsxv3.ini file and update the UUID for the new tier-0 router.
    3. Restart the Neutron server.
    4. Delete your external network and create a new one.
  • Deleting a router interface times out.

    When concurrent Heat stacks are deployed with shared NSX routers, router interface deletion can time out. The following might be displayed: neutron_client_socket_timeout, haproxy_neutron_client_timeout, or haproxy_neutron_server_timeout.

    Workaround: Do not use shared routers in environments where network resources frequently change. If NAT/FIP is required, use an exclusive router. Otherwise, use a distributed router.

  • For NSX-V deployments, after you attach a gateway to a metadata proxy router, the OpenStack deployment cannot access the metadata server.

    If you attach a gateway to a metadata proxy router, the NSX E dge vnic0 index changes from VM Network to a gateway network port group. This may prevent the OpenStack deployment from accessing the metadata server.

    Workaround: Do not attach a gateway to a metadata proxy router.

  • For NSX-T deployments, if you attach a firewall to a router without a gateway, firewall rules are added to the NSX router.

    Firewall as a Service rules are added to a router without a gateway, even though there is no relevant traffic to match those rules.

    Workaround: To activate the rules, configure a gateway for the router.

  • A Nova instance fails to boot with the error "no valid host found".

    Under stress conditions, booting an instance using the tenant_vdc property may fail.

    Workaround: Boot the instance when system load is lighter.

  • BGP tenant networks are lost on service gateway edges.

    After the BGP peering between a BGP speaker and the service gateway is established, running the neutron bgp-speaker-network-remove command to disassociate the BGP speaker from the external or provider network may cause the tenant routes on the service gateway to be lost. Restoring the external or provider network to the BGP speaker using neutron bgp-speaker-network-add will not recreate the routes.

    Workaround: In the nsxv.ini file, change the value of ecmp_wait_time to 5 seconds.

  • iBGP peering between the DLR tenant edge (PLR) and provider gateway edge fails to properly advertise the tenant network and breaks external communication.

    When iBGP peering is used, advertised routes are installed on peers without modifying the next hop. As a result, the provider gateway edge installs routes between tenant networks with the next hop IP address in the transit network range instead of the tenant's PLR edge uplink. Since the gateway edge cannot resolve the route to the transit network, communication is interrupted.

    Workaround: Use eBGP peering when working with distributed routers.

  • For NSX-V deployments, the admin_state parameter has no effect.

    Changing the admin_state parameter to False for a Nova port does not take effect. This parameter is not supported with NSX-V.

    Workaround: None.

  • The cloud services router contains the IP address but not the FQDN.

    During VMware Integrated OpenStack deployment, the public hostname in the load balancer configuration was not specified or did not conform to requirements for public access. The public hostname is used for external access to the VMware Integrated OpenStack dashboard and APIs.

    Workaround: To change or edit the public hostname after deployment, see KB 2147624.

  • When you attach a firewall to a router without a gateway, firewall rules are not added to the NSX router.

    Firewall as a Service rules are added only to a router when it has a gateway. These rules have no effect on routers without a gateway because there is no relevant traffic.

    Workaround: Configure a gateway for the router before attaching a firewall.

  • Metadata agent HTTP communication with the Nova server experiences security risk.

    The metadata agent on the edge appliance serves as a reverse proxy and communicates with an upstream Nova server to gather metadata information about the NSX environment on OpenStack. The nginx reverse proxy configuration also supports plaintext communication. The lack of TLS encryption exposes sensitive data to disclosure, and attackers on the network can also modify data from the site in transit.

    Workaround: To ensure secure communication between the metadata proxy server and the Nova server, use HTTPS with CA support instead of HTTP.

    1. Enable Nova metadata HTTPS support by adding the following parameters to nova.conf:
      [DEFAULT]
      enabled_ssl_apis = metadata
      [wsgi]
      ssl_cert_file = nova-md-https-server-cert-file
      ssl_key_file = nova-md-https-server-private-key-file
    2. On the NSX Manager, select System Trust CERTIFICATES and import a CA certificate or chain of certificates. Record the UUIDs of the certificates imported.
    3. Prepare the https_mdproxy.json file in the following format: 
      {
      	"display_name" : "https_md_proxy",
      	"resource_type" : "MetadataProxy",
      	"metadata_server_url" : "https://md-server-url",
      	"metadata_server_ca_ids": ["ca-id"],
      	"secret": "secret",
      	"edge_cluster_id" : "edge-cluster-id"
      }
    4. Deploy the HTTPS metadata proxy server by using the REST API.
      curl -i -k -u nsx-mgr-admin:nsx-mgr-passwd
       -H "content-type: application/json"
       -H "Accept: application/json"
       -X POST https://nsx-mgr-ip/api/v1/md-proxies
       -d "`cat ./https_mdproxy.json`"
    5. Configure VMware Integrated OpenStack with the UUID of the metadata proxy server created. Communication between the metadata proxy server and Nova server is now secured by HTTPS with certificate authentication.
  • Policy file customizations are not synchronized to the VMware Integrated OpenStack dashboard.

    The GUI does not honor changes to the policy specified in the custom playbook.

    Workaround: If you use the custom playbook to edit policy files, make the same changes in the VMware Integrated OpenStack dashboard policy files to ensure consistency.

  • Tenant traffic might be blocked after you enable NSX policies in Neutron.

    After you enable security-group-policy in the Neutron plugin, the NSX firewall sections might be listed in the wrong order. The correct order is as follows:

    1. NSX policies
    2. Tenant security groups
    3. Default sections

    Workaround: In the vSphere Web Client, open the NSX Firewall page and move the sections to the correct position. To prevent this issue from occurring, create the first NSX policy before configuring VMware Integrated OpenStack.

  • The router size drop-down menu is not displayed on the VMware Integrated OpenStack dashboard.

    When you create an exclusive router on the VMware Integrated OpenStack dashboard, you can specify its size. However, when you change a router from shared to exclusive, the router size drop-down menu does not appear, preventing you from specifying the router size.

    Workaround: Restore the default value for the router and modify the type to exclusive again. The drop-down menu should appear.

  • SQL-configured users cannot be modified on the VMware Integrated OpenStack dashboard.
    If your VMware Integrated OpenStack deployment is configured to use LDAP for user authentication, you cannot modify any user definitions in the VMware Integrated OpenStack dashboard, even those that are sourced from a SQL database.

    Workaround: None.

  • Recovery after a vSphere HA event shows synchronization and process startup failures.

    vSphere HA events can affect your VMware Integrated OpenStack deployment. After vSphere recovers, run the viocli deployment status command on the OpenStack Management server. If the resulting report shows any synchronization or process startup failures, use the workaround below.

    Workaround: Manually restart all OpenStack services by running the viocli services stop command and then the viocli services start command. After the OpenStack services have restarted, run the viocli deployment status command again and confirm that there are no errors.

  • Images must be VMX version 10 or later.

    This issue affects stream-optimized images and OVAs. If the hardware version of an image is earlier than VMX 10, OpenStack instances created from the image will not function. This is typically experienced when OpenStack compute nodes are deployed on older ESXi versions, such as 5.5. You cannot correct such an image by modifying the image metadata (vmware_hw_version) or flavor metadata (vmware:hw_version).

    Workaround: Use a newer image.

  • Metadata service is not accessible on subnets created with the no-gateway option.

    When a subnet is created with the the no-gateway option, there is no router edge to capture the metadata traffic.

    Workaround: For networks with the no-gateway option, configure a route for 169.254.169.254/32 to forward traffic to the DHCP edge IP address.

  • High availability may be compromised if a controller virtual machine reboots.

    When a controller fails in a high availability setup, the second controller continues to provide services. However, when the initial controller reboots, it might not begin to provide services. The deployment would then be unable to switch back to the initial controller if the second controller failed.

    Workaround: After a failed controller reboots in a high availability setup, review your deployment to ensure that both controllers are providing services. For more information about how to start and stop VMware Integrated OpenStack deployments, see KB 2148892.

  • Special characters in datastore names are not supported by Glance.
    If a datastore name includes certain non-alphanumeric characters, the datastore cannot be added to the Glance service. The following characters are reserved for other purposes and not permitted in Glance datastore names: colons (:), commas (,), slashes (/), and dollar signs ($).

    Workaround: Do not use these symbols in datastore names.

  • Long image upload times cause NotAuthenticated failure.
    This is a known OpenStack issue first reported in the Icehouse release. See https://bugs.launchpad.net/glance/+bug/1371121.

  • Volumes may be displayed as attached on the dashboard even if they failed to attach.
    This is a known OpenStack issue first reported in the Icehouse release.

  • Syslog settings cannot be modified after deployment through the VMware Integrated OpenStack vApp.

    The syslog server configuration cannot be modified in VMware Integrated OpenStack > Management Server > Edit Settings > vApp Options after deployment.

    Workaround: Modify the configuration in VMware Integrated OpenStack > OpenStack Cluster > Manage > Syslog Server.

VMware Integrated Openstack with Kubernetes
  • For VDS deployments with an SDDC provider, clusters may appear as ACTIVE but have no external routing after recovery.

    If the Nginx ingress controller pod is in the error state after recovery, no external routing can occur.

    Workaround: Perform the following steps to clear the error state:

    1. Delete the default service account and the affected Nginx ingress controller pod.
      kubectl delete serviceaccount default -n kube-system
      kubectl delete pod nginx-ingress-controller-id -n kube-system
    2. On the VMware Integrated OpenStack with Kubernetes virtual machine, run the vkube cluster update command.
  • Deleted clusters cannot be restored.

    Once the Delete Cluster and Delete Provider commands have been run, the networks, routers, and load balancers that have been deleted cannot be recovered.

    Workaround: None.

  • After the guest operating system of the Kubernetes cluster node is restarted, the flannel pod does not start up correctly.

    Restarting the guest operating system of the Kubernetes cluster node cleans up all IP table rules. As a result, the flannel pod does not start up correctly.

    Workaround: Restart the Kubernetes network proxy. You can stop the kube-proxy process and hyperkube will start a new kube-proxy process automatically.

  • The "No policy assigned" error is displayed when cluster operations are performed.

    A user that is a member of a group assigned to either an exclusive or shared cluster may see "No policy assigned" when performing operations on the cluster, such as running the kubectl utility. This occurs because the group information of the authenticated user is not stored correctly during the user session.

    Workaround: Assign an individual user to the cluster instead of a group.

  • SDDC Cloud Provider creation fails with "dpkg: unrecoverable fatal error, aborting:" message.

    Creating an SDDC cloud provider fails, and the logs of the column-api container on the virtual appliance contain a message similar to the following:

    - docker logs column-api -fTASK [bootstrap-os : Bootstrap | Install python 2.x and pip] *******************172.18.0.2 - - [06/Sep/2017 05:47:32] "GET /runs/46a74449-7123-4574-90c2-3404dfac6641 HTTP/1.1" 200 -fatal: [k8s-node-1-2393e79d-ec6a-4e63-8f63-c6308d72496e]: FAILED! => {"changed": true, "failed": true, "rc": 100, "stderr": "Shared connection to 192.168.0.3 closed.", "stdout": "........"dpkg: unrecoverable fatal error, aborting:", " files list file for package 'python-libxml2' is missing final newline", "E: Sub-process /usr/bin/dpkg returned an error code (2)"]}"

    Workaround: Delete the SDDC cloud provider and re-create it.

  • After cycling power on a VMware Integrated OpenStack with Kubernetes virtual machine with an SDDC provider, OpenStack service containers stop working and do not restart automatically.

    If a VMware Integrated OpenStack with Kubernetes virtual machine with one SDDC provider is powered off and on, the virtual machine is migrated to another host. Subsequent operations on the provider, such as Kubernetes cluster creation and scale-out, will fail.

    Workaround: To refresh the provider, perform the following steps:

    1. On the VMware Integrated OpenStack with Kubernetes virtual machine, login as the root user.
      vkube login --insecure
    2. Refresh the SDDC provider.
      vkube provider refresh sddc provider-id --insecure 

      You can obtain the SDDC provider ID by running the vkube provider list --insecure command.

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