From Bare Metal to Cloud: Introduction to OpenStack Nova 1

從裸機到雲端:OpenStack Nova 介紹

Last week’s article provided a high-level overview of OpenStack’s architecture. Today, we begin diving deeper into its individual components. We’ll start with the most fundamental service offered by OpenStack: the Compute Service, also known as the virtual machine (VM) functionality, which is Nova.

What is Nova?

Nova is one of OpenStack’s core components, responsible for providing a way to provision (create) virtual machines. Currently, it primarily supports both virtual machines and bare metal servers (via Ironic). Nova runs as a set of daemons on existing Linux servers, offering this service. In upcoming sections, we’ll explore the specific roles of each Nova daemon.

To use Nova’s basic features, you need to set up the following OpenStack services:

  • Keystone
  • Glance
  • Neutron
  • Placement

The Placement service was not covered in the previous article, so here’s a quick introduction.
Placement is a separate service extracted from Nova, primarily responsible for tracking available resources and their usage across different types, such as CPU, RAM, and so on.

For users

You can use the tools or APIs provided by Nova to create and manage computing resources.

Tools for using Nova

  • Horizon: Mentioned earlier, it is the OpenStack Web UI
  • OpenStack Client: The official CLI provided by OpenStack, which supports most OpenStack features
  • Nova Client: Some more advanced or administrative functions may require extensive use, but most features can be handled via the OpenStack Client

If you have some familiarity with Infrastructure as Code (IaC), you can also use:

Besides the Nova Client, which is Nova’s dedicated tool, other commonly used tools can also manage services provided by other OpenStack components. Therefore, in later sections when we cover other components, we’ll briefly touch on these tools.

Nova API

All Nova user functions can be accessed via REST API, commonly referred to as the OpenStack Compute API. Users can use the API to perform complex operations or automate workflows through Infrastructure as Code. Users can either directly call the relevant API endpoints or use SDKs in different programming languages.

Summary

This article has introduced Nova’s features and usage methods. The next article will explore its architecture and the roles of each daemon (process).


Copyright Notice: All articles in this blog are licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 unless otherwise stated.

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