[Rdo-list] New to openStack

Ganesh Sangle sayganesha at gmail.com
Wed Oct 22 20:27:21 UTC 2014


Thank you all for your replies.
I am a developer trying to setup a dev-environment, and I was just looking
to get the latest version available so that I can take advantage of the new
drivers available with cinder.
Followed the steps mentioned above and I could get the installed
openstack/cinder packages upgraded to Icehouse, which seems to work fine
for my purposes.

On Wed, Oct 22, 2014 at 12:16 PM, Dan Sneddon <dsneddon at redhat.com> wrote:

> On 10/22/2014 12:08 PM, Dan Sneddon wrote:
> > On 10/22/2014 10:26 AM, Ganesh Sangle wrote:
> >> Hi guys,
> >> I am new to openstack and I am trying to install the cinder package on
> >> Scientific Linux release 6.5 (Carbon)
> >>
> >> ran the following commands:
> >> yum install openstack-cinder
> >>
> >> I am unable to figure which version of openstack was installed. Is there
> >> a way to figure it out easily ?
> >> From the documentation, it seems that the version of openstack that was
> >> Folsom.
> >> How to I get the latest supported version ?
> >>
> >> Thanks for helping!
> >> Ganesh
> >>
> >
> > That's quite an old version you have installed. Unfortunately there is
> > no upgrade path from the Folsom version that will allow you to keep your
> > existing cloud. You will have to rebuild OpenStack, create new VMs, and
> > migrate your data manually.
> >
> > The URL that Tim Bell posted will help you get up to speed with a newer
> > version (based on Icehouse) that works on Scientific Linux 6.5. Once you
> > are there, however, it won't be possible to upgrade much further while
> > still using Scientific Linux 6.5. Juno will be the end of the road. The
> > Kilo release requires Python 2.7 and other packages that aren't
> > available on 6.5.
> >
> > Since you would need to start with a new cloud, you might want to
> > consider using Scientific Linux 7, which will give you a clear upgrade
> > path for future versions in the coming years.
> >
>
> One more addendum. I just noticed you asked for the "latest supported
> version." For that, you will want Red Hat Enterprise Linux OpenStack
> Platform, instead of RDO, which is the community version of OpenStack
> that Tim Bell pointed to.
>
> The supported version based on Juno will be available on Scientific
> Linux 6.5 as soon as it's released. The community version based on Juno
> will require 7, unless significant community effort is put in to make it
> work on 6.5 (which may not happen).
>
> Here is the URL for the supported version:
> http://www.redhat.com/en/technologies/linux-platforms/openstack-platform
>
> --
> Dan Sneddon         |  Principal OpenStack Engineer
> dsneddon at redhat.com |  redhat.com/openstack
> 650.254.4025        |  @dxs on twitter
>
>
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>
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